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MacBook Pro (Intel-based)

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MacBook Pro (Intel-based)
MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2016)
DeveloperApple Inc.
ManufacturerFoxconn[1]
Pegatron[2]
Product familyMacBook
TypeNotebook
Release date
  • January 10, 2006 (2006-01-10) (Aluminum)
  • October 18, 2008 (2008-10-18) (Unibody)
  • June 11, 2012 (2012-06-11) (Retina)
  • October 27, 2016 (2016-10-27) (Touch Bar)
DiscontinuedNovember 10, 2020 (2020-11-10) (13-inch with two ports)
October 18, 2021 (2021-10-18) (13-inch with four ports, 16-inch)
Operating systemmacOS
CPUIntel Core Duo, 2 Duo, i5, i7, i9
PredecessorPowerBook G4
SuccessorMacBook Pro (Apple silicon)
Related
Websiteapple.com/macbook-pro

The Intel-based MacBook Pro is a discontinued line of Macintosh notebook computers sold by Apple Inc. from 2006 to 2021. It was the higher-end model of the MacBook family, sitting above the low-end plastic MacBook and the ultra-portable MacBook Air, and was sold with 13-inch to 17-inch screens.

The MacBook Pro line launched in 2006 as an Intel-based replacement for the PowerBook line. The first MacBook Pro used an aluminum chassis similar to the PowerBook G4, but replaced the PowerPC G4 chips with Intel Core processors, added a webcam, and introduced the MagSafe power connector. The unibody model debuted in October 2008, so-called because its case was machined from a single piece of aluminum. It had a thinner, flush display, a redesigned trackpad whose entire surface consisted of a single clickable button, and a redesigned keyboard.

The retina MacBook Pro was released in 2012: it is thinner, made solid-state drive (SSD) standard, added HDMI, and included a high-resolution Retina display. It eliminated Ethernet and FireWire ports and the optical drive. The Touch Bar MacBook Pro - so-called because of its Touch Bar strip with a Touch ID sensor - released in October 2016, adopted USB-C for all data ports and power and included a shallower "butterfly"-mechanism keyboard. A November 2019 revision to the Touch Bar MacBook Pro[3] introduced the Magic Keyboard, which used a scissor-switch mechanism.

The Intel-based MacBook Pros was succeeded by Apple silicon MacBook Pros beginning in 2020 as part of the Mac transition to Apple silicon. On November 10, 2020, Apple discontinued the two-port 13-inch model following the release of a new model based on the Apple M1. The 16-inch and four-port 13-inch models were discontinued on October 18, 2021, following the release of 14-inch and 16-inch models based on the M1 Pro and M1 Max.

Aluminum (2006–2008)

[edit]
The MacBook Pro 15" in 2006
First-generation 17-inch MacBook Pro
The 15-inch and 17-inch Aluminum MacBook Pros

The original 15-inch MacBook Pro was announced on January 10, 2006, by Steve Jobs at the Macworld Conference & Expo.[4] The 17-inch model was unveiled on April 24, 2006.[5] The first design was largely a carryover from the PowerBook G4, but uses Intel Core CPUs instead of PowerPC G4 chips.[6] The 15-inch MacBook Pro weighs the same as the 15-inch aluminum PowerBook G4, but is 0.1 inches (0.25 cm) deeper, 0.4 inches (1.0 cm) wider, and 0.1 inches (0.25 cm) thinner.[7] Other changes from the PowerBook include a built-in iSight webcam and the inclusion of MagSafe, a magnetic power connector designed to detach easily when yanked. These features were later brought over to the MacBook. The optical drive was shrunk to fit into the slimmer MacBook Pro; it runs slower than the optical drive in the PowerBook G4 and cannot write to dual-layer DVDs.[6][8]

Both the original 15- and 17-inch model MacBook Pro computers come with ExpressCard/34 slots, which replace the PC Card slots found in the PowerBook G4. Initial aluminum 15-inch models retains the two USB 2.0 ports and a FireWire 400 port but drops the FireWire 800,[9] until it was restored in a later revision,[10] the 17-inch models have an additional USB 2.0 port, as well as the FireWire 800 port missing from the initial 15-inch models.[11] All models now included 802.11a/b/g.[9][11] Later models include support for the draft 2.0 specification of 802.11n[12] and Bluetooth 2.1.

Updates

[edit]

Apple refreshed the entire MacBook Pro line on October 24, 2006, to include Intel Core 2 Duo processors which were the first 64-Bit processors in the MacBook Pro.[10] Memory capacity was doubled for each model, up to 2 GB for the high-end 15- and 17-inch models.[10] FireWire 800 was added to the 15-inch models and hard drive capacity was also increased.[10]

The MacBook Pro line received a second update on June 5, 2007, with new Nvidia GeForce 8600M GT graphics processors and faster CPU options.[13][14] LED backlighting was added to the 15-inch model's screen, and its weight was reduced from 5.6 pounds (2.5 kg) to 5.4 pounds (2.4 kg).[14] Furthermore, the speed of the front-side bus was increased from 667 to 800 MHz. The EFI also was 64-bit for the first time as well.

On November 1, 2007, Apple added the option of a 2.6 GHz Santa Rosa platform Core 2 Duo CPU as well as reconfigured hard drive options.[14] The keyboard also received several changes to closely mirror the one which shipped with the iMac, by adding the same keyboard shortcuts to control multimedia, and removing the embedded numeric keypad and the Apple logo from the command keys.

On February 26, 2008, the MacBook Pro line was updated once more.[15][16] LED backlighting was added as an option for the 17-inch model.[15] Processors were updated to "Penryn" cores, which are built on the 45 nm process (65 nm "Merom" cores were previously used), and hard drive and memory capacities were increased.[15] Multi-touch capabilities, first introduced with the MacBook Air earlier that year, were brought over to the trackpad.[15]

The original case design was discontinued on October 14, 2008, for the 15-inch,[17] and January 6, 2009, for the 17-inch.[18]

Reception

[edit]

Some reviewers applauded the original MacBook Pro for its doubling or tripling the speed of the PowerBook G4 in some areas.[6] For example, the 3D rendering program Cinema 4D XL was 3.3 times as fast (2.3 times faster),[6] and its boot-up time was more than twice as quick.[7] The MacBook Pro generally outperformed the PowerBook G4 in performance analyzer utility tests XBench and Cinebench.[7] Reviewers lauded the screen's maximum brightness, 67% brighter than the PowerBook G4; the excellent horizontal viewing angles; the matte options; and the bright, crisp, and true colors.[8] Although the screen offered fewer vertical pixels (1440 × 900 in the MacBook Pro instead of 1440 × 960 in the PowerBook), one reviewer called the screen "nothing less than stellar".[7] Reviewers praised the new MagSafe power adapter,[6] although one reviewer said it disconnected too easily in some instances.[7] They also praised the backlit keyboard, large trackpad, and virtually silent operation of the machine.[6][8] The new notebook also offered better wireless performance.

One reviewer criticized the decision to underclock the ATI Mobility Radeon X1600 graphics card by about 30% its original speed.[8] The notebook was also noted for running hot.[6][8] Users complained that upgrading system memory was harder than in older Apple notebooks.[7] Since the dimensions for the 15-inch MacBook Pro were tweaked slightly from the 15-inch PowerBook G4, older accessories such as notebook sleeves did not work with the new models.[7] Some users noted a slight flickering when the screen was on lower brightness settings.[7] Apple increased the battery capacity by 10 Wh, going from 50 in the PowerBook G4 to 60,[7] but the more powerful Core Duo CPU required more power.[7] Battery life therefore remained about the same as in previous models, at three-plus hours.[7]

2007–2008 model GPU problems

[edit]

Models of the MacBook Pro built from 2007 to early 2008 (15") / late 2008 (17") using the Nvidia 8600M GT chip reportedly exhibited failures in which the GPU die would detach from the chip carrier, the chip would detach from the logic board.[19][unreliable source?] The issue has been mitigated by some users by keeping the notebook cooler by means of less intensive use or alternative fan settings.[citation needed] Apple initially ignored reports, before admitting to the fault and replacing logic boards free of charge for up to 4 years after the purchase date.[20] NVIDIA also confirmed the issue, and previously manufactured replacement GPUs, which some users have replaced themselves.[21]

Technical specifications

[edit]

According to Apple, all of these models are obsolete.[a][22]

Model Original and "Glossy" (Early 2006)[9][11][23] Core 2 Duo (Late 2006)[12] 2.4 2.2GHz (Mid 2007[24] and Late 2007[25]) Early 2008[26] and Late 2008[26]
Component / processor model Yonah Intel Core Merom Intel Core Merom (Santa Rosa) Intel Core Penryn Intel Core
Released January 10, 2006[4] February 14, 2006[b] April 24, 2006[5] October 24, 2006[10] June 5, 2007[14][27] February 26, 2008[15] October 14, 2008[28]
Discontinued October 24, 2006 June 5, 2007 February 26, 2008 October 14, 2008 January 6, 2009
Unsupported February 25, 2014 October 2014 October 2018
Model Common name and Model number Early 2006 15-inch
A1150
Early 2006 17-inch
A1151
Late 2006 15-inch
A1211
Late 2006 17-inch
A1212
Mid and Late 2007 15-inch
A1226
Early 2008 15-inch
A1260
Early and Late 2008 17-inch
A1261
Model identifier MacBookPro1,1 MacBookPro1,2 MacBookPro2,2 MacBookPro2,1 MacBookPro3,1 MacBookPro4,1
Apple order number MA090 MA463[c] MA464
After May 16, 2006: MA600
MA601 MA092 MA609 MA610 MA611 MA895 MB133 MB766
Display
(matte or glossy)[d]
15.4" LCD 1440 × 900 17" LCD 1680 × 1050 15.4" LCD 1440 × 900 17" LCD 1680 × 1050 15.4" LCD 1440 × 900 with LED backlighting 15.4" LCD 1440 × 900 with LED backlighting 17" CCFL 1680 × 1050 with CCFL backlighting
Optional 1920 × 1200 with LED backlighting
Processor Standard 1.67 GHz (L2400)
Intel Core Duo Yonah
1.83 GHz (T2400)
Intel Core Duo Yonah
2.0 GHz (T2500)
Intel Core Duo Yonah
2.16 GHz (T2600)
Intel Core Duo Yonah
2.16 GHz (T7400)
Intel Core 2 Duo Merom
2.33 GHz (T7600)
Intel Core 2 Duo Merom
2.2 GHz (T7500)
Intel Core 2 Duo Merom
2.4 GHz (T8300)
Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn
2.5 GHz (T9300)
Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn
On-chip L2 cache 2 MB 4 MB 3 MB 6 MB
Optional 2.6 GHz (T9500)
Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn
6 MB on-chip L2 cache
Front-side bus 667 MHz 800 MHz
Memory Standard 512 MB (two 256 MB) 1 GB (two 512 MB)
After May 16, 2006: 512 MB (two 256 MB)
1 GB (two 512 MB) 2 GB (two 1 GB) 4 GB (two 2 GB)
Optional Expandable to 2 GB[e] Expandable to 4 GB,[e] but only 3 GB addressable[29] Expandable to 6 GB[e][f][30]
Format Two slots for PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM (667 MHz)
Graphics
with dual-link DVI
Card ATI Mobility Radeon X1600 Nvidia GeForce 8600M GT[31]
VRAM 128 or 256 MB[c] 256 MB 128 or 256 MB 256 MB 512 MB[31]
VRAM type GDDR3 SDRAM
Hard drive[g] Standard (5,400 rpm) 80 GB[c] 100 GB After May 16, 2006: 80 GB 100 GB 120 GB 160 GB 120 GB 200 or 250 GB 320 GB
Optional 100 GB 7,200 rpm, 120 GB 5,400 rpm 160 GB, 5,400 rpm, 200 GB 4,200 rpm 100 GB, 7,200 rpm, 200 GB 4,200 rpm 160 GB 5400 rpm, 160 GB 7200 rpm, 200 GB 4200 rpm 200 GB 7,200 rpm, 300 GB 4,200 rpm 320 GB, 7,200 rpm
Format SATA I (1.5 Gbit/s)
Optical disc drive[h] 4x Slot-loading SuperDrive (DVD±RW/CD-RW) 8x Slot-loading SuperDrive (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW)
Connectivity Integrated Wi-Fi 3 (802.11a/b/g) (Qualcomm Atheros AR5007 chipset) Integrated Wi-Fi 4 (802.11a/b/g and draft-n, n disabled by default)[i] (Qualcomm Atheros AR5008 chipset) Integrated Wi-Fi 4 (802.11a/b/g and draft-n) (Qualcomm Atheros AR5008 or Broadcom BCM4322 chipset, depending on revision)
Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR
Gigabit Ethernet
Peripheral connections 2x USB 2.0 3x USB 2.0 2x USB 2.0 3x USB 2.0 2x USB 2.0 2x USB 2.0 3x USB 2.0
1x FireWire 400 1x FireWire 400 and 1x FireWire 800
ExpressCard/34, DVI, audio line in/out
Operating system Minimum Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard
Latest release Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard Mac OS X 10.7 Lion if 2 GB RAM installed, otherwise Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard OS X 10.11 El Capitan
Battery (lithium-polymer, removable) 60 Wh 68 Wh 60 Wh 68 Wh 60 Wh 60 Wh 68 Wh
Weight 5.6 lb (2.5 kg) 6.8 lb (3.1 kg) 5.6 lb (2.5 kg) 6.8 lb (3.1 kg) 5.4 lb (2.4 kg) 5.4 lb (2.4 kg) 6.8 lb (3.1 kg)
Dimensions (width × depth × thickness) 14.1 in (36 cm) × 9.6 in (24 cm) × 1.0 in (2.5 cm) 15.4 in (39 cm) × 10.4 in (26 cm) × 1.0 in (2.5 cm) 14.1 in (36 cm) × 9.6 in (24 cm) × 1.0 in (2.5 cm) 15.4 in (39 cm) × 10.4 in (26 cm) × 1.0 in (2.5 cm) 14.1 in (36 cm) × 9.6 in (24 cm) × 1.0 in (2.5 cm) 14.1 in (36 cm) × 9.6 in (24 cm) × 1.0 in (2.5 cm) 15.4 in (39 cm) × 10.4 in (26 cm) × 1.0 in (2.5 cm)

Unibody (2008–2012)

[edit]
MacBook Pro Unibody 15 inch

On October 14, 2008, in a press event at company headquarters, Apple officials announced a new 15-inch MacBook Pro featuring a "precision aluminum unibody enclosure" and tapered sides similar to those of the MacBook Air.[34][35] Designers shifted all of the MacBook Pro's ports to the left side of the case, and moved the optical disc drive slot from the front to the right side, similar to the MacBook. The new MacBook Pro computers had two video cards that the user could switch between: the Nvidia GeForce 9600M GT with either 256 or 512 MB[36] of dedicated memory and a GeForce 9400M with 256 MB of shared system memory.[34] Although the FireWire 400 port was removed, the FireWire 800 port remained. The DVI port was replaced with a Mini DisplayPort receptacle.[34] The original unibody MacBook Pro came with a user-removable battery; Apple claimed five hours of use,[34] with one reviewer reporting results closer to four hours on a continuous video battery stress test.[37] Apple said that the battery would hold 80% of its charge after 300 recharges.[38]

Design

[edit]

The slick unibody-construction MacBook Pro largely follows the styling of the original aluminum iMac and the MacBook Air. The unibody Macbook Pro body is milled from a single block of aluminum and is much stronger than its predecessor.[34] The screen is high-gloss, covered by an edge-to-edge reflective glass finish, while an anti-glare matte option is available in the 15- and 17-inch models in which the glass panel is removed.[39] The entire trackpad is usable and acts as a clickable button.[39] The trackpad is also larger than that of the aluminum models, giving more room for scrolling and multi-touch gestures.[39] When the line was updated in April 2010, inertial scrolling was added, making the scrolling experience much like that of the iPhone and iPad.[40][41][42] The keys, which are still backlit, are now identical to those of Apple's now-standard sunken keyboard with separated black keys.[40] The physical screen release latch from the aluminum models is replaced with a magnetic one.

Updates

[edit]
A size comparison of the unibody line of MacBook Pro notebooks

During the MacWorld Expo keynote on January 6, 2009, Phil Schiller announced a 17-inch MacBook Pro with unibody construction. This version diverged from its 15-inch sibling with an anti-glare "matte" screen option (with the glossy finish standard) and a non user-removable lithium polymer battery.[43] Instead of traditional round cells inside the casing, the lithium-ion polymer batteries are shaped and fitted into each notebook to maximally utilize space. The computer has adaptive charging, which uses a chip to optimize the charge flow to reduce wear and tear, and extends the battery's overall life.[43] Battery life for the 17-inch version is quoted at eight hours, with 80 percent of this charge remaining after 1,000 charge-discharge cycles.[43]

At Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 8, 2009, it was announced that the 13-inch unibody MacBook would be upgraded and re-branded as a MacBook Pro,[44] leaving only the white polycarbonate MacBook in the MacBook line.[45] It was also announced that the entire MacBook Pro line would use the non-user-removable battery first introduced in the 17-inch MacBook Pro.[46] The updated MacBook Pro 13- and the 15-inch would each have up to a claimed 7 hours of battery life, while the 17-inch would keep its 8-hour capacity.[44][46] Some sources even reported up to eight hours of battery life for the 13- and 15-inch MacBook Pro computers during casual use,[47] while others reported around six hours.[39] Like the 17-inch MacBook Pro, Apple claims that they will last around 1,000 charging cycles while still containing 80% of their capacity.[48] Graphics card options stayed the same from the previous release, although the 13-inch[49] and the base model 15-inch, came with only the GeForce 9400M GPU.[50] The screens were also improved, gaining a claimed 60 percent greater color gamut.[49][50] All of these mid-2009 models also included a FireWire 800 port and all except the 17-inch models would receive an SD card slot.[35] The 17-inch model would retain its ExpressCard/34 slot.[46] For the 13-inch MacBook Pro, the Kensington lock slot was moved to the right side of the chassis.[51] In August 2009, Apple extended the "matte" anti-glare display option to the 15-inch MacBook Pro.[52]

On April 13, 2010,[53] Intel Core i5 and Core i7 CPUs were introduced in the 15- and 17-inch models, while the 13-inch retained the Core 2 Duo with a speed increase.[53] The power brick was redesigned[40] and a high-resolution display (of 1680 × 1050) was announced as an option for the 15-inch models.[41] The 13-inch gained an integrated Nvidia GeForce 320M graphics processing unit (GPU) with 256 MB of shared memory, while the 15- and 17-inch models were upgraded to the GeForce GT 330M, with either 256 or 512 MB of dedicated memory.[53] The 15- and 17-inch models also have an integrated Intel GPU that is built into the Core i5 and i7 processors.[53] The 15-inch model also gained 0.1 pounds (0.045 kg).[41] Save for a third USB 2.0 slot, all the ports on the 17-inch MacBook Pro are the same in type and number as on the 15-inch version.[54] All models come with 4 GB of system memory that is upgradeable to 8 GB.[53] Battery life was also extended further in this update, to an estimated 10 hours for the 13-inch and 8–9 hours on the 15- and 17-inch MacBook Pro computers.[53] This was achieved through both greater power efficiency and adding more battery capacity.[53] One reviewer reported about 6 hours of battery life through a continuous video battery stress test in the 15-inch[42] and another, who called the battery life "unbeatable", reported nearer to 8 in the 13-inch through their "highly demanding battery drain test".[40]

Thunderbolt technology, Sandy Bridge dual-core Intel Core i5 and i7 (on the 13-inch model) or quad-core i7 (on the 15- and 17-inch models) processors, and a high definition FaceTime camera were added on February 24, 2011. Intel HD Graphics 3000 come integrated with the CPU, while the 15- and 17-inch models also utilize AMD Radeon HD 6490M and Radeon HD 6750M graphics cards. Later editions of these models, following the release of OS X Lion, replaced the Expose (F3) key with a Mission Control key, and the Dashboard (F4) key with a Launchpad key. The chassis bottoms are also engraved differently from the 2010 models.[55] The Thunderbolt serial bus platform can achieve speeds of up to 10 Gbit/s,[56] which is up to twice as fast as the USB 3.0 specification, 20 times faster than the USB 2.0 specification, and up to 12 times faster than FireWire 800.[57] Apple says that Thunderbolt can be used to drive displays or to transfer large quantities of data in a short amount of time.[57]

On June 11, 2012, Apple showcased its upgraded Mac notebooks, OS X Mountain Lion, and iOS 6 at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in San Francisco.[58] The new MacBook Pro models were updated with Ivy Bridge processors and USB 3.0 ports, and the default RAM on premium models was increased to 8 GB.[59] Following this announcement, the 17-inch model was discontinued.[citation needed] After a media event on October 22, 2013, Apple discontinued all unibody MacBook Pro computers except for the entry-level 2.5 GHz 13-inch model.[60] Apple discontinued the 13-inch unibody MacBook Pro on October 27, 2016. Prior to its discontinuation it was Apple's only product to still include an optical drive and a FireWire port, and only notebook with a hard disk drive and Ethernet port.[61]

Reception

[edit]

Some reviewers praised the new notebook's performance and compact size,[37] the quality of the screen, and sturdy unibody build,[37] which allowed easier upgrading of internal components as compared to the original models.[37] Some reviewers also noted that the new MacBook Pro ran more quietly and at cooler temperatures than aluminum machines.[37] Others, however, criticized the amount of heat generated by the new design.[62][63]

The Reviewers lamented the loss of a matte screen option for the 2008 unibody MacBook Pro, noting the reflectiveness of the screen in sunlight, even when its brightness was turned all the way up.[37] CNET's Dan Ackerman commented of the mid-2009 models: "According to Apple, the new display offers a wider color gamut, and the screen certainly looks bright and colorful, but we wish the same matte-screen option offered on the 17-inch MacBook Pro was available across the line... While the LED screen means a thinner lid and some battery life benefits, the edge-to-edge glass covering the entire display panel grabs stray light rays with ease, making the glossy screen hard to see in some lighting conditions."[39] By 2011, matte screens were offered for both the 15" and 17" models. Furthermore, the addition of Mini DisplayPort instead of the more popular HDMI was criticized.[37] The relatively low number of ports and lower end technical specifications when compared to similarly priced laptops from other brands were also bemoaned.[37]

Laptop Magazine's Michael Prospero praised the 2010 15-inch model's display, calling it "bright and crisp". He further commented, "While reflections from the glossy display weren't overwhelming, it's also nice to know there's an antiglare option—though only for the higher resolution display. Still, colors were bright, blacks were deep and dark, and viewing angles were excellent both vertically and horizontally." He also lauded the quality of the iSight webcam, the responsiveness of the trackpad, the microphone and speakers, as well as the performance of the new CPUs for the 15" model and the long battery life. Complaints included the price of the notebook, the low number of USB ports, and the lack of HDMI.[41]

CNET praised the automatic graphics switching features of the 15- and 17-inch 2010 models as well as the graphics cards themselves. Acclaim was also given to the Core i5 and i7 CPUs, the multi-touch trackpad, and the addition of audio capabilities to the Mini DisplayPort video output.[42] They also called for the addition of HDMI and the Blu-ray optical disc format, saying that most other computers in the MacBook Pro's price range possessed these features.[42] CNET also criticized the option of a higher-resolution screen in the 15-inch model, saying that "the higher-resolution screen should be included by default."[42]

Technical specifications

[edit]

According to Apple, all of these models are obsolete.[a][22]

Since the RAM and the hard drive on some generations of MacBook Pro are user-serviceable parts, there are aftermarket modifications to enhance the system with up to 16 GB DDR3-1600 RAM (although maximum capacity and frequency depend on the hardware in question), 7,200 rpm hard drives or third-party SSDs. Third-party caddies are also made, allowing the internal optical drive to be replaced with a second internal SATA 2.5-inch hard drive or solid state drive.

Model[64] Late 2008[65] and Early 2009[66] Mid 2009[67][68][69] Mid 2010[70][71][72] Early 2011[73][74][75] Late 2011[76][77][78] Mid 2012[79][80]
Component Penryn Intel Core Arrandale Intel Core Sandy Bridge Intel Core Ivy Bridge Intel Core
Release date October 14, 2008[j][34][81] January 6, 2009[18] June 8, 2009[82] April 13, 2010[53] February 24, 2011[83] October 24, 2011[84] June 11, 2012[85][86]
Discontinued date June 8, 2009 April 13, 2010 February 24, 2011 October 24, 2011 June 11, 2012 October 27, 2016 October 22, 2013
Unsupported October 2018[22] November 12, 2020[22] November 30, 2022
Models Common name and Model number Late 2008 and Early 2009 15-inch
A1286
Early 2009 17-inch
A1297
Mid 2009 13-inch
A1278
Mid 2009 15-inch
A1286
Mid 2009 17-inch
A1297
Mid 2010 13-inch
A1278
Mid 2010 15-inch
A1286
Mid 2010 17-inch
A1297
Early 2011 13-inch
A1278
Early 2011 15-inch
A1286
Early 2011 17-inch
A1297
Late 2011 13-inch
A1278
Late 2011 15-inch
A1286
Late 2011 17-inch
A1297
Mid 2012 13-inch
A1278
Mid 2012 15-inch
A1286
Model identifier MacBook
Pro5,1
MacBook
Pro5,2
MacBook
Pro5,5
MacBook
Pro5,4
MacBook
Pro5,3
MacBook
Pro5,2
MacBook
Pro7,1
MacBook
Pro6,2
MacBook
Pro6,1
MacBook
Pro8,1
MacBook
Pro8,2
MacBook
Pro8,3
MacBook
Pro8,1
MacBook
Pro8,2
MacBook
Pro8,3
MacBook
Pro9,2
MacBook
Pro9,1
Apple order number MB470 MB471
After March 3, 2009: MC026[j]
MB604 MB990 MB991 MC118 MB985 MB986 MC226 MC374 MC375 MC371 MC372 MC373 MC024 MC700 MC724 MC721 MC723 MC725 MD313 MD314 MD318 MD322 MD322 MD101 MD102 MD103 MD104
LED-backlit widescreen glossy display (16:10) 15.4", 1440 × 900 17", 1920 × 1200
Optional matte screen
13.3", 1280 × 800 15.4", 1440 × 900
Optional matte screen
17", 1920 × 1200
Optional matte screen
13.3", 1280 × 800 15.4", 1440 × 900
Optional 1680 × 1050 (glossy or matte)
17", 1920 × 1200
Optional matte screen
13.3", 1280 × 800 15.4", 1440 × 900
Optional 1680 × 1050 (glossy or matte)
17", 1920 × 1200
Optional matte screen
13.3", 1280 × 800 15.4", 1440 × 900
Optional 1680 × 1050 (glossy or matte)
17", 1920 × 1200
Optional matte screen
13.3", 1280 × 800 15.4", 1440 × 900
Optional 1680 × 1050 (glossy or matte)
Video camera iSight (480p) FaceTime HD (720p)
Processor Standard 2.4 GHz (P8600) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 3 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.53 GHz (T9400) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache
After March 3, 2009: 2.66 GHz (T9550) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache
2.66 GHz (T9550) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.26 GHz (P8400) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 3 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.53 GHz (P8700) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 3 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.66 GHz (P8800) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 3 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.8 GHz (T9600) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.4 GHz (P8600) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 3 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.66 GHz (P8800) Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn with 3 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.4 GHz (520M) Intel Core i5 Arrandale with 3 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.53 GHz (540M) Intel Core i5 Arrandale with 3 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.66 GHz (620M) Intel Core i7 Arrandale with 4 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.53 GHz (540M) Intel Core i5 Arrandale with 3 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.3 GHz (2415M) Intel Core i5 Sandy Bridge with 3 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.7 GHz (2620M) Intel Core i7 Sandy Bridge with 4 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.0 GHz quad-core (2635QM) Intel Core i7 Sandy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.2 GHz quad-core (2720QM) Intel Core i7 Sandy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.4 GHz (2435M) Intel Core i5 Sandy Bridge with 3 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.8 GHz (2640M) Intel Core i7 Sandy Bridge with 4 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.2 GHz quad-core (2675QM) Intel Core i7 Sandy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.4 GHz quad-core (2760QM) Intel Core i7 Sandy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.5 GHz (3210M) Intel Core i5 Ivy Bridge with 3 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.9 GHz (3520M) Intel Core i7 Ivy Bridge with 4 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.3 GHz quad-core (3615QM) Intel Core i7 Ivy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.6 GHz quad-core (3720QM) Intel Core i7 Ivy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache
Optional 2.8 GHz (T9600) with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache
After March 3, 2009: 2.93 GHz (T9800) with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache[j]
2.93 GHz (T9800) with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache 3.06 GHz (T9900) with 6 MB on-chip L2 cache 2.8 GHz (640M) with 4 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.3 GHz (2820QM) with 8 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.5 GHz (2860QM) with 8 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.7 GHz (3820QM) with 8 MB on-chip L3 cache
System bus 1,066 MHz front-side bus 2.5 GT/s Intel DMI 5 GT/s Intel DMI
Memory
(two slots)
Standard 2 GB (two 1 GB) 4 GB (two 2 GB) 2 GB (two 1 GB) 4 GB (two 2 GB) 8 GB (two 4 GB) 4 GB (two 2 GB) 8 GB (two 4 GB)
Expansion Up to 4 GB initially, or 8 GB with the latest EFI update[87] Up to 8 GB[e] Up to 8 GB Up to 16 GB Up to 8 GB Up to 16 GB Up to 8 GB
Speed 1,066 MHz PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM 1,333 MHz PC3-10600 1.5 V DDR3 SDRAM[88][89]
Expandable to 16 GB 1,600 MHz PC3-12800 DDR3 SDRAM[90][91]
1,600 MHz PC3-12800 1.35 V DDR3 SDRAM[92]
Graphics Nvidia GeForce 9400M with 256 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and Nvidia GeForce 9600M GT with 256 MB GDDR3 SDRAM
Can switch between the two (but cannot use both)
Nvidia GeForce 9400M with 256 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory Nvidia GeForce 9400M with 256 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and Nvidia GeForce 9600M GT with 512 MB GDDR3 SDRAM
Can switch between the two (but cannot use both)
Nvidia GeForce GT 320M with 256 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory Intel HD Graphics with 256 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and Nvidia GeForce GT 330M with 256 MB GDDR3 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware when running OS X
Intel HD Graphics with 256 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and Nvidia GeForce GT 330M with 512 MB GDDR3 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware when running OS X
Intel HD Graphics 3000 with 384 MB (512 MB with 8 GB RAM installed)[93] DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory Intel HD Graphics 3000 with 384 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and AMD Radeon HD 6490M with 256 MB GDDR5 memory or AMD Radeon HD 6750M with 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware when running OS X
Intel HD Graphics 3000 with 384 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and AMD Radeon HD 6750M with 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware when running OS X
Intel HD Graphics 3000 with 384 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory Intel HD Graphics 3000 with 384 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and AMD Radeon HD 6750M with 512 MB GDDR5 SDRAM or AMD Radeon HD 6770M with 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware when running OS X
Intel HD Graphics 3000 with 384 MB DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and AMD Radeon HD 6770M with 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware when running OS X
Intel HD Graphics 4000 with DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory Intel HD Graphics 4000 with DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory and Nvidia GeForce GT 650M with 512 MB GDDR5 memory (base model) or 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware when running OS X
Storage[g] Standard 250 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 320 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 160 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 250 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 320 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 500 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 250 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 320 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 500 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 320 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 500 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 750 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 500 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 750 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 500 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 750 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 750 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 500 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 750 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 500 GB SATA 5,400 rpm 750 GB SATA 5,400 rpm
Options 250 7,200 rpm, 320 5,400 rpm, 320 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD 250 7,200 rpm, 320 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD
After March 3, 2009: 250 7,200 rpm, 320 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD[j]
320 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD 320 5,400 rpm, 500 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD 320 5,400 rpm, 500 5,400 rpm, 320 7,200 rpm, 500 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD 500 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD 320 5,400 rpm, 500 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 500 5,400 rpm, 500 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 500 5,400 rpm, 500 7,200 rpm, 750 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 500 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 750 GB 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 1 TB 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 750 GB 5,400 rpm, 750 GB 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 750 GB 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 750 GB 7,200 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 750 GB 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 1 TB 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 750 GB 5,400 rpm, 750 GB 7,200 rpm, 1 TB 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD 750 GB 7,200 rpm, 1 TB 5,400 rpm, 128 GB SSD, 256 GB SSD, 512 GB SSD
Transfer rate SATA 3 Gbit/s SATA 6 Gbit/s
Optical disc drive[h] SuperDrive: 4× DVD±R DL writes, 8× DVD+/−R read/write, 8× DVD+RW writes, 6× DVD-RW writes, 24× CD-R, and 16× CD-RW recording
Connectivity Wi-Fi Integrated AirPort Extreme (802.11a/b/g/draft-n) (Broadcom BCM4322 2 × 2 chipset, up to 300 Mbit/s) Integrated AirPort Extreme (802.11a/b/g/n) (Broadcom BCM4331 3 × 3 chipset, up to 450 Mbit/s)
Bluetooth Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR Bluetooth 4.0
Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet
Peripheral connections Cards ExpressCard/34 SDXC card slot ExpressCard/34 SDXC card slot ExpressCard/34 SDXC card slot ExpressCard/34 SDXC card slot ExpressCard/34 SDXC card slot
USB USB 2.0 (two ports) USB 2.0 (three ports) USB 2.0 (two ports) USB 2.0 (three ports) USB 2.0 (two ports) USB 2.0 (three ports) USB 2.0 (two ports) USB 2.0 (three ports) USB 2.0 (two ports) USB 2.0 (three ports) USB 3.0 (two ports)
Video out Mini DisplayPort (without audio support) Mini DisplayPort (with audio support) Thunderbolt port
FireWire FireWire 800
Audio Built-in stereo speakers, Audio line-in/out
Operating system Minimum Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard Mac OS X 10.7 Lion
Latest release OS X 10.11 El Capitan macOS 10.13 High Sierra macOS 10.15 Catalina
Battery (lithium polymer, non-removable except in original 15") 50 Wh removable 95 Wh 60 Wh 73 Wh 95 Wh 63.5 Wh 77.5 Wh 95 Wh 63.5 Wh 77.5 Wh 95 Wh 63.5 Wh 77.5 Wh 95 Wh 63.5 Wh 77.5 Wh
Weight 5.5 lb (2.5 kg) 6.6 lb (3.0 kg) 4.50 lb (2.04 kg) 5.5 lb (2.5 kg) 6.6 lb (3.0 kg) 4.50 lb (2.04 kg) 5.6 lb (2.5 kg) 6.6 lb (3.0 kg) 4.50 lb (2.04 kg) 5.6 lb (2.5 kg) 6.6 lb (3.0 kg) 4.50 lb (2.04 kg) 5.6 lb (2.5 kg) 6.6 lb (3.0 kg) 4.50 lb (2.04 kg) 5.6 lb (2.5 kg)
Dimensions (width × depth × thickness) 14.35 in × 9.82 in × 0.95 in (36.4 cm × 24.9 cm × 2.4 cm) 15.47 in × 10.51 in × 0.98 in (39.3 cm × 26.7 cm × 2.5 cm) 12.78 in × 8.94 in × 0.95 in (32.5 cm × 22.7 cm × 2.4 cm) 14.35 in × 9.82 in × 0.95 in (36.4 cm × 24.9 cm × 2.4 cm) 15.47 in × 10.51 in × 0.98 in (39.3 cm × 26.7 cm × 2.5 cm) 12.78 in × 8.94 in × 0.95 in (32.5 cm × 22.7 cm × 2.4 cm) 14.35 in × 9.82 in × 0.95 in (36.4 cm × 24.9 cm × 2.4 cm) 15.47 in × 10.51 in × 0.98 in (39.3 cm × 26.7 cm × 2.5 cm) 12.78 in × 8.94 in × 0.95 in (32.5 cm × 22.7 cm × 2.4 cm) 14.35 in × 9.82 in × 0.95 in (36.4 cm × 24.9 cm × 2.4 cm) 15.47 in × 10.51 in × 0.98 in (39.3 cm × 26.7 cm × 2.5 cm) 12.78 in × 8.94 in × 0.95 in (32.5 cm × 22.7 cm × 2.4 cm) 14.35 in × 9.82 in × 0.95 in (36.4 cm × 24.9 cm × 2.4 cm) 15.47 in × 10.51 in × 0.98 in (39.3 cm × 26.7 cm × 2.5 cm) 12.78 in × 8.94 in × 0.95 in (32.5 cm × 22.7 cm × 2.4 cm) 14.35 in × 9.82 in × 0.95 in (36.4 cm × 24.9 cm × 2.4 cm)

Early and late 2011 model GPU problems

[edit]

Early and late 2011 models with a GPU; 15" & 17"; reportedly suffer from manufacturing problems leading to overheating, graphical problems, and eventually complete GPU and logic board failure. A similar but nonidentical problem affected iMac GPUs which were later recalled by Apple.[94] The problem was covered by many articles in Mac-focused magazines, starting late 2013 throughout 2014.[95][96][97][98][99] In August 2014 the law firm Whitfield Bryson & Mason LLP had begun investigating the problem to determine if any legal claim exists.[100] On October 28, 2014, the firm announced that it has filed a class-action lawsuit in a California federal court against Apple. The lawsuit will cover residents residing in both California and Florida who have purchased a 2011 MacBook Pro notebook with an AMD graphics card. The firm is also investigating similar cases across the United States.[101] On February 20, 2015, Apple instituted the "MacBook Pro Repair Extension Program for Video Issues". This "will repair affected MacBook Pro systems, free of charge". The program covered affected MacBook Pro models until December 31, 2016, four years from original date of sale.[102]

Retina (2012–2015)

[edit]
MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid-2012)
A MacBook Air (top) and a Retina MacBook Pro (bottom). The MacBook Pro has a thinner MagSafe 2 port and two Thunderbolt ports.

On June 11, 2012, at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, Apple introduced the 15-inch Retina MacBook Pro, marketed as the "MacBook Pro with Retina display" to differentiate it from the previous model.[103][58] The model includes Intel's third-generation Core i7 processors (Ivy Bridge microarchitecture).[59] It made solid-state storage (SSD) standard, upgraded to USB 3.0, added an additional Thunderbolt port, added HDMI, and included a high-resolution 2880 × 1800 Retina display.[59] It brought a thinner MagSafe connector, dubbed "MagSafe 2".[104] Apple also claims improved speakers and microphones and a new system for cooling the notebook with improved fans.[104] The 15-inch model is 25% thinner than its predecessor. The model name is no longer placed at the bottom of the screen bezel; instead, it is found on the underside of the chassis, similar to an iOS device, and is the first Macintosh notebook to not have its model name visible during normal use.[105]

It eliminated Ethernet and FireWire 800 ports, but Thunderbolt adapters were made available for purchase.[106] It also eliminated the Kensington lock slot and battery indicator button and light on the side of the chassis found on the previous generation models.[107][108] It did not include an optical drive, being the first professional notebook since the PowerBook 2400c to not include one.[109]

Apple introduced a 13-inch version on October 23, 2012, with specifications similar but slightly inferior to the 15-inch, such as less powerful processors.[103]

The Retina models also have fewer user-accessible upgrade or replacement options than previous MacBooks. Unlike in previous generations, the memory is soldered onto the logic board and is not upgradable. The solid state drive is not soldered and can be replaced by users, although it has a proprietary connector and form factor.[110] The battery is glued into place; attempts to remove it may destroy the battery and/or trackpad.[111] The entire case uses proprietary pentalobe screws and cannot be disassembled with standard tools. While the battery is glued in, recycling companies have stated that the design is only "mildly inconvenient" and does not hamper the recycling process.[112]

On February 13, 2013, Apple announced updated prices and processors and increased the memory of the high-end 15-inch model to 16 GB.[113]

On October 22, 2013, Apple updated the line with Intel's Haswell processors and Iris Graphics, 802.11ac Wi-Fi, Thunderbolt 2, and PCIe-based flash storage.[114] The chassis of the 13-inch version was slightly slimmed to 0.71 inches (18 mm) to match the 15-inch model. The lower-end 15-inch model only included integrated graphics while the higher-end model continued to include a discrete Nvidia graphics card in addition to integrated graphics.[115] Support for 4K video output via HDMI was added but limited the maximum number of external displays from three to two.[116] On July 29, 2014, Apple announced new models with updated prices and processors.[117]

On March 9, 2015, the 13-inch model was updated with Intel Broadwell processors, Iris 6100 graphics, faster flash storage (based on PCIe 2.0 × 4 technology), faster RAM (upgraded from 1600 MHZ to 1866 MHZ), increased battery life (extended to 10 hours), and a Force Touch trackpad.[118][119] On May 19, 2015, a 15-inch model was released with a Force Touch trackpad, AMD Radeon R9 M370X, SSD based on PCIe 3.0 × 4 technology, and battery life extended to 9 hours.[120][121] The higher-end 15-inch model also added support for dual-cable output to 5120 × 2880 displays.[122] The 15-inch models were released with the same Intel Haswell processors and Iris Pro graphics as the 2014 models due to a delay in shipment of newer Broadwell quad-core processors.[123] Apple continued to sell the 2015 15-inch model until July 2018.[124]

Reception

[edit]

The Retina MacBook Pro received positive reviews of the Retina Display, flash storage and power. It was criticized, however, for its high price and lack of an Ethernet port and optical drive. Roman Loyola of Macworld said that the Retina MacBook Pro was "groundbreaking" and made people "rethink how they use technology". He praised the inclusion of USB 3.0 and the slimmer body.[125] Dan Ackerman of CNET commented "I've previously called the 15-inch MacBook Pro one of the most universally useful all-around laptops you can buy. This new version adds to that with HDMI, faster ports, and more portability. But it also subtracts from that with its exclusion of an optical drive and Ethernet port, plus its very high starting price. The Pro and Retina Pro are clearly two laptops designed for two different users, and with the exception of all-day commuters who need something closer to a MacBook Air or ultrabook, one of the two branches of the MacBook Pro family tree is still probably the most universally useful laptop you can buy."[126]

The Retina MacBook line has no internal optical drive. External drives such as Apple's SuperDrive (pictured) can be used instead.

Joel Santo Domingo of PC Magazine gave the MacBook Pro an "Editor's Choice" rating. He praised its "brilliant Retina display", the thin design, port selection and speedy storage, and highlighted the expandability via Thunderbolt ports which support up to seven devices each.[127] David Pogue of The New York Times praised the 15-inch model's screen, keyboard, sound, start-up time, cosmetics, battery life, storage, and RAM capacity. They criticized the lack of a SuperDrive, pricing, and the MagSafe 2 power connector's lack of backwards compatibility with the older MagSafe design.[128]

The Retina Display on the MacBook Pro have been criticized for "image retention", specifically for displays manufactured by LG.[129][130] Many users also complained the Anti-reflective coating on their screens could wear off easily, which is an issue known as "staingate".[131]

In 2017, one year after the introduction of the Touch Bar of the MacBook Pro, the original lead developer of Tumblr Marco Arment wrote an evocative article in which he declared the Retina MacBook Pro the best laptop ever made.[132] The sentiment was shared by many users of various social platforms.[133]

Repairability and environmental concerns

[edit]

Apple was criticized for gluing the battery into the case, making it harder to be recycled (ease of disassembly is an EPEAT criterion),[111] but some recycling companies have stated that the design is only "mildly inconvenient" and does not hamper the recycling process.[112] Greenpeace spokesman Casey Harrell said Apple "has pitted design against the environment—and chosen design. They're making a big bet that people don't care, but recycling is a big issue."[134] Wired also criticized Apple's recyclability claims in 2012: "[t]he design may well be comprised of 'highly recyclable aluminum and glass'—but my friends in the electronics recycling industry tell me they have no way of recycling aluminum that has glass glued to it like Apple did with both this machine and the recent iPad."[135]

Battery problems

[edit]

In June 2019, Apple announced a worldwide recall for certain 2015 15" MacBook Pro computers after receiving at least 26 reports of batteries becoming hot enough to produce smoke and inflict minor burns or property damage. The problem affected some 432,000 computers, mostly sold between September 2015 and February 2017. The company asked customers to stop using their computers until Apple could replace the batteries.[136][137][138]

In September 2019, India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation said MacBook Pro computers could dangerously overheat, leading the national carrier Air India to ban the model on its flights.[139]

Technical specifications

[edit]
Obsolete[22] Vintage
Apple model name Mid 2012[140] Late 2012[141] Early 2013[142][143] Late 2013[144][145] Mid 2014[146][147] Early 2015[148] Mid 2015[149]
Component Ivy Bridge Intel Core Haswell Intel Core Broadwell Intel Core Haswell Intel Core
Timetable Released June 11, 2012[85][86] October 23, 2012[103] February 13, 2013[113] October 22, 2013[114] July 29, 2014[117] March 9, 2015[119] May 19, 2015[121]
Discontinued February 13, 2013 October 22, 2013 July 29, 2014 March 9, 2015 May 19, 2015 June 5, 2017 July 12, 2018
Unsupported November 30, 2022 September 26, 2023[citation needed] Security updates only[citation needed]
Models Common name & model number Mid 2012 15-inch
A1398
Late 2012 – Early 2013 13-inch
A1425
Early 2013 15-inch
A1398
Late 2013 13-inch
A1502
Late 2013 15-inch
A1398
Mid 2014 13-inch
A1502
Mid 2014 15-inch
A1398
Early 2015 13-inch
A1502
Mid 2015 15-inch
A1398
Model identifier MacBookPro10,1 MacBookPro10,2 MacBookPro10,1 MacBookPro11,1 MacBook
Pro11,2
MacBook
Pro11,3
MacBookPro11,1 MacBook
Pro11,2
MacBook
Pro11,3
MacBookPro12,1 MacBookPro11,4 MacBookPro11,5
Apple order number MC975 MC976
MD831
MD213 MD212 ME662 ME664[150] ME665 ME864 ME865 ME866 ME293 ME294 MGX72 MGX92 MGXA2 MGXC2 MF839 MF841 MJLQ2 MJLT2
Display Size 15.4", 2880 × 1800, 220 ppi 13.3", 2560 × 1600, 227 ppi 15.4", 2880 × 1800, 220 ppi 13.3", 2560 × 1600, 227 ppi 15.4", 2880 × 1800, 220 ppi 13.3", 2560 × 1600, 227 ppi 15.4", 2880 × 1800, 220 ppi 13.3", 2560 × 1600, 227 ppi 15.4", 2880 × 1800, 220 ppi
Kind LED-backlit 16∶10 widescreen Retina display
Video camera FaceTime HD (720p)
Processor Standard 2.3 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (3615QM) Ivy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.6 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (3720QM) Ivy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.5 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (3210M) Ivy Bridge with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.6 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (3230M) Ivy Bridge with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.4 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (3635QM) Ivy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache[150][151] 2.7 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (3740QM) Ivy Bridge with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.4 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (4258U) Haswell with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.6 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (4288U) Haswell with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.0 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4750HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell) 2.3 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4850HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell) 2.6 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (4278U) Haswell with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.8 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (4308U) Haswell with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.2 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4770HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell) 2.5 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4870HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell) 2.7 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (5257U) Broadwell with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.9 GHz 2-core Intel Core i5 (5287U) Broadwell with 3 MB shared L3 cache 2.2 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4770HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell) 2.5 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4870HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell)
Optional 2.7 GHz Intel Core i7 (3820QM) Ivy Bridge with 8 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.9 GHz 2-core Intel Core i7 (3520M) Ivy Bridge with 4 MB shared L3 cache 3.0 GHz 2-core Intel Core i7 (3540M) Ivy Bridge with 4 MB shared L3 cache 2.8 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (3840QM) Ivy Bridge with 8 MB on-chip L3 cache 2.8 GHz 2-core Intel Core i7 (4558U) Haswell with 4 MB shared L3 cache 2.6 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4960HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell) 3.0 GHz 2-core Intel Core i7 (4578U) Haswell with 4 MB shared L3 cache 2.8 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4980HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell) 3.1 GHz 2-core Intel Core i7 Broadwell (5557U) with 4 MB shared L3 cache 2.8 GHz 4-core Intel Core i7 (4980HQ) Haswell with 6 MB on-chip L3 cache and 128 MB L4 cache (Crystalwell)
System bus Intel DMI 5 GT/s
Memory Standard built-in onboard 8 GB 8 GB 8 GB 16 GB 4 GB 8 GB 16 GB 8 GB 16 GB 8 GB 16 GB
Optional at time of purchase only 16 GB 16 GB 16 GB 16 GB 16 GB
Format 1600 MHz PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM 1866 MHz PC3-14900 LPDDR3 SDRAM 1600 MHz PC3-12800 DDR3L SDRAM
Graphics Intel HD Graphics 4000 with DDR3L SDRAM shared with main memory and Nvidia GeForce GT 650M with 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware
Intel HD Graphics 4000 with DDR3L SDRAM shared with main memory Intel HD Graphics 4000 with DDR3L SDRAM shared with main memory Intel HD Graphics 4000 with DDR3L SDRAM shared with main memory and Nvidia GeForce GT 650M with 1 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware
Intel Iris 5100 Graphics with DDR SDRAM shared with main memory Intel Iris Pro 5200 Graphics with 128 MB eDRAM Intel Iris Pro 5200 Graphics with 128 MB eDRAM and Nvidia GeForce GT 750M with 2 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware
Intel Iris 5100 Graphics with DDR SDRAM shared with main memory Intel Iris Pro 5200 Graphics with 128 MB eDRAM Intel Iris Pro 5200 Graphics with 128 MB eDRAM and Nvidia GeForce GT 750M with 2 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware
Intel Iris 6100 Graphics with LPDDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory Intel Iris Pro 5200 Graphics with 128 MB eDRAM Intel Iris Pro 5200 Graphics with 128 MB eDRAM and AMD Radeon R9 M370X with 2 GB GDDR5 SDRAM
Automatically switches between graphics hardware
Storage[g] Standard 256 GB 512 GB 256 GB 128 GB 256 GB 512 GB 128 GB 256 GB 512 GB 256 GB 512 GB 128 GB, 256 GB 512 GB 256 GB 512 GB 128 GB 256 GB 512 GB
Optional 768 GB 512 GB, 768 GB 256 GB, 512 GB, 768 GB 512 GB, 768 GB 1 TB 512 GB, 1 TB 1 TB 512 GB, 768 GB, 1 TB 768 GB, 1 TB 512 GB, 1 TB 1 TB 512 GB, 1 TB 1 TB
Interface mSATA 6 Gbit/s SSD PCIe 2.0 ×2 5.0 GT/s (8 Gbit/s) SSD PCIe 2.0 ×4 5.0 GT/s (16 Gbit/s) SSD[152] PCIe 3.0 ×4 8.0 GT/s (31.5 Gbit/s) SSD
Wi-Fi Integrated Wi-Fi 4 (802.11a/b/g/n) (2.4 and 5 GHz, up to 450 Mbit/s)
(Broadcom BCM4331 3 × 3 chipset)
Integrated Wi-Fi 5 (802.11a/b/g/n/ac) (2.4 and 5 GHz, up to 1.3 Gbit/s)
(Broadcom BCM4360 3 × 3 chipset)
Bluetooth Bluetooth 4.0 wireless technology
Peripheral connections SDXC card slot
Two USB 3.0
Audio line out (analog/optical)
Two Thunderbolt ports
Supports two 2560 × 1600 displays
Two Thunderbolt 2 ports
Supports two 2560 × 1600 displays
Two Thunderbolt 2 ports
Supports two 3840 × 2160 displays
Two Thunderbolt 2 ports
Supports two 2560 × 1600 displays
Two Thunderbolt 2 ports
Supports two 3840 × 2160 displays
Two Thunderbolt 2 ports
Supports two 3840 × 2160 displays
Two Thunderbolt 2 ports
Supports two 3840 × 2160 displays (Iris Graphics) or one 5120 × 2880 dual-cable display (Radeon R9)
HDMI port
Supports 1920 × 1200 output[153]
HDMI port
Supports 3840 × 2160 @ 30 Hz or 4096 × 2160 @ 24 Hz output[116]
Battery (Li-Poly Battery, non-removable) 95.0 Wh 74 Wh 95.0 Wh 71.8 Wh 95.0 Wh 74.9 Wh 95.0 Wh 74.9 Wh 99.5 Wh
Operating system Minimum OS X 10.7 Lion OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion OS X 10.9 Mavericks OS X 10.10 Yosemite
Latest macOS 10.15 Catalina macOS 11 Big Sur macOS 12 Monterey
Weight 4.46 lb (2.02 kg) 3.57 lb (1.62 kg) 4.46 lb (2.02 kg) 3.46 lb (1.57 kg) 4.46 lb (2.02 kg) 3.48 lb (1.58 kg) 4.46 lb (2.02 kg) 3.48 lb (1.58 kg) 4.49 lb (2.04 kg)
Dimensions (width × depth × thickness) 14.13 in × 9.73 in × 0.71 in (35.9 cm × 24.7 cm × 1.8 cm) 12.35 in × 8.62 in × 0.75 in (31.4 cm × 21.9 cm × 1.9 cm) 14.13 in × 9.73 in × 0.71 in (35.9 cm × 24.7 cm × 1.8 cm) 12.35 in × 8.62 in × 0.75 in (31.4 cm × 21.9 cm × 1.9 cm) 14.13 in × 9.73 in × 0.71 in (35.9 cm × 24.7 cm × 1.8 cm) 12.35 in × 8.62 in × 0.71 in (31.4 cm × 21.9 cm × 1.8 cm) 14.13 in × 9.73 in × 0.71 in (35.9 cm × 24.7 cm × 1.8 cm) 12.35 in × 8.62 in × 0.71 in (31.4 cm × 21.9 cm × 1.8 cm) 14.13 in × 9.73 in × 0.71 in (35.9 cm × 24.7 cm × 1.8 cm)

Touch Bar (2016–2020)

[edit]
The MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2016)
Teardown of a MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2019) showing internal parts

Apple unveiled Touch Bar 13- and 15-inch MacBook Pro models during a press event at their headquarters on October 27, 2016. All models, except for the baseline 13-inch model, featured the Touch Bar, a new multi-touch-enabled OLED strip built into the top of the keyboard in place of the function keys. The Touch Bar is abutted on its right by a sapphire-glass button that doubles as a Touch ID sensor and a power button. The models also introduced a "second-generation" butterfly-mechanism keyboard whose keys have more travel than the first iteration in the Retina MacBook. The 13-inch model has a trackpad that is 46% larger than its predecessor while the 15-inch model has a trackpad twice as large as the previous generation.

All ports have been replaced with either two or four combination Thunderbolt 3 ports that support USB-C 3.1 Gen 2 and dual DisplayPort 1.2 signals,[154] any of which can be used for charging.[155] The MacBook Pro is incompatible with some older Thunderbolt 3-certified peripherals,[156][157] including Intel's own reference design for Thunderbolt 3 devices.[158] Furthermore, macOS on MacBook Pro blacklists certain classes of Thunderbolt 3-compatible devices, preventing them from working.[159] Support for Thunderbolt 3 external graphics processing units (eGPU) was added in macOS High Sierra 10.13.4.[160] Devices using HDMI, previous-generation Thunderbolt, and USB need an adapter to connect to the MacBook Pro.[155][161][162] The models come with a 3.5 mm headphone jack; the TOSLINK functionality of older-generation MacBook Pro computers has been removed.

Other updates to the MacBook Pro include dual- and quad-core Intel "Skylake" Core i5 and i7 processors, improved graphics, and displays that offer a 25% wider color gamut, 67% more brightness, and 67% more contrast. All versions can output to a 5K display; the 15-inch models can drive two such displays. The 15-inch models include a discrete Radeon Pro 450, 455 or 460 graphics card in addition to the integrated Intel graphics. The base 13-inch model has function keys instead of the Touch Bar, and just two USB-C ports. The flash storage in the Touch Bar models is soldered to the logic board and is not upgradeable, while in the 13-inch model without Touch Bar, it is removable, but difficult to replace, as it is a proprietary format of SSD storage.[163][164]

On June 5, 2017, Apple updated the line with Intel Kaby Lake processors and newer graphics cards. A 128 GB[k] storage option was added for the base 13-inch model, down from the base 256 GB[k] storage.[165] New symbols were introduced to the control and option keys. On July 12, 2018, Apple updated the Touch Bar models with Intel Coffee Lake quad-core processors in 13-inch models and six-core processors in 15-inch models, updated graphics cards, third-generation butterfly keyboards that introduced new symbols for the control and option keys, Bluetooth 5, T2 SoC Chip, True Tone display technology, and larger-capacity batteries. The 15-inch model can also be configured with up to 4 TB[k] of storage, 32 GB of DDR4 memory and a Core i9 processor.[166] In late November the higher-end 15-inch model could be configured with Radeon Pro Vega graphics. On May 21, 2019, Apple announced updated Touch Bar models with newer processors, with an eight-core Core i9 standard for the higher-end 15-inch model, and an updated keyboard manufactured with "new materials" across the line.[167] On July 9, 2019, Apple updated the 13-inch model with two Thunderbolt ports with newer quad-core eighth-generation processors and Intel Iris Plus graphics, True Tone display technology, and replaced the function keys with the Touch Bar.[168] macOS Catalina added support for Dolby Atmos, Dolby Vision, and HDR10 on 2018 and newer models.[169] macOS Catalina 10.15.2 added support for 6016x3384 output on 15-inch 2018 and newer models to run the Pro Display XDR at full resolution.[170]

The 2019 MacBook Pro was the final model that could run macOS Mojave 10.14, the final MacOS version that can run 32-bit applications such as Adobe Creative Suite 6 or Microsoft Office for Mac 2011.

Design and usability

[edit]
Touch Bar of MacBook Pro

The Touch Bar MacBook Pro follows the design of the Retina models, with an all-metal unibody enclosure and separated black keys. A few of the apparent design changes include a thinner chassis and screen bezel, a larger trackpad, the OLED Touch Bar, and the shallower butterfly-mechanism keyboard with less key separation than the previous models. The speaker grilles have been relocated to the sides of the keyboard on the 13-inch variant. Tear downs show that the speaker grilles on the 13-inch model with Touch Bar are "largely cosmetic", and that sound output mostly comes through the side vents.[171] The Touch Bar MacBook Pro comes in two finishes, the traditional silver color and a darker "space gray" color. The MacBook Pro model name returns to the bottom of the screen bezel in Apple's San Francisco font after being absent from the Retina MacBook Pro. As with the Retina MacBook, the new models replace the backlit white Apple logo on the rear of the screen, a feature dating back to the 1999 PowerBook G3, with a glossy metal version.[172]

MagSafe, a magnetic charging connector, has been replaced with USB-C charging.[155] Unlike MagSafe, which provided an indicator light within the user's field of view to indicate the device's charging status, the USB-C charger has no visual indicator. Instead, the MacBook Pro emits a chime when connected to power.[155] The Macintosh startup chime that has been used since the first Macintosh in 1984 is now disabled by default. The notebook now boots automatically when the lid is opened.[155]

Battery life

[edit]

The battery life of the new models also got a mixed reception, with outlets reporting inconsistent battery life and inaccurate estimates of time remaining on battery by the operating system. After the latter reports, Apple used a macOS update to hide the display of estimated battery time.[173][174] Consumer Reports did not initially recommend the 2016 MacBook Pro models, citing inconsistent and unpredictable battery life in its lab testing (which involves the consecutive loading of multiple websites). However, Apple and Consumer Reports found that the results had been affected by a bug caused by disabling caching in Safari's developer tools. Consumer Reports performed the tests again with a patched macOS, and retracted its original assessment.[175][176]

Repairability

[edit]

iFixit scored the models 1 out of 10 for repairability, noting that memory, the processor, and flash storage are soldered to the logic board, while the battery is glued to the case. The entire assembly uses proprietary pentalobe screws and cannot be disassembled with standard tools.[163]

Keyboard reliability

[edit]

A report by AppleInsider has claimed that the updated "Butterfly" keyboard fails twice as often as previous models, often due to particles stuck beneath the keys.[177] Repairs for stuck keys have been estimated to cost more than $700.[178] In May 2018, two class action lawsuits were filed against Apple regarding the keyboard problem; one alleged a "constant threat of nonresponsive keys and accompanying keyboard failure" and accusing Apple of not alerting consumers to the problem.[179] In June 2018, Apple announced a Service Program to "service eligible MacBook and MacBook Pro keyboards, free of charge".[180] The 2018 models added a membrane underneath keys to prevent malfunction from dust.[181] As of early 2019, there were reports of problems with the same type of keyboards in the 2018 MacBook Air.[182] In May 2019, Apple modified the keyboard for the fourth time and promised that any MacBook keyboard with butterfly switches would be repaired or replaced free of charge for a period of four years after the date of sale.[183]

Thermal throttling

[edit]

PC Magazine said "the Core i9 processor Apple chose to use inside the MacBook Pro (i9-8950HK) has a base clock frequency of 2.9 GHz, which is capable of bursting up to 4.8 GHz when necessary. However, testing carried out by YouTuber Dave Lee showed that the Core i9 couldn't even maintain 2.9 GHz, let alone 4.8 GHz. And it ended up running at 2.2 GHz due to the heat generated inside the chassis forcing it to throttle. Lee found the 2018 i9 MacBook Pro was slower than the 2017 MacBook Pro and stated, "This isn't a problem with Intel's Core i9, it's Apple's thermal solution."[184] When Lee put the i9 MacBook Pro inside a freezer, the render times were over 30% faster.[185]

On July 24, 2018, Apple released a software fix for the new 2018 MacBook Pro computers which addressed the thermal throttling problem. Apple said "there is a missing digital key in the firmware that impacts the thermal management system and could drive clock speeds down under heavy thermal loads on the new MacBook Pro".[186]

Other problems

[edit]

A "limited number" of 13-inch MacBook Pro units without Touch Bar, manufactured between October 2016 and October 2017, saw the built-in battery swell. Apple created a free replacement program for eligible units.[187]

A "limited number" of 128 and 256 GB solid-state drives used in 13-inch MacBook Pro (non-Touch Bar) units can lose data and fail. 13-inch MacBook Pro units with affected drives were sold between June 2017 and June 2018. This resulted in Apple launching a repair program for those affected – the repair involves the update of firmware.[188]

Some users are reporting kernel panics on 2018 models, because of the T2 chip. Apple is already aware of the problem and performing an investigation.[189] There are also user reports about the speaker crackling problems on the 2018 models.[190]

Users have reported malfunctioning display cables, causing uneven lighting at the bottom of the screen and ultimately display failure. Customers of Apple have named this issue "Flexgate". The problem has been tracked to a cable, stressed from opening and closing the notebook. The entire display needs to be replaced in affected units.[191] In May 2019 Apple initiated a program to replace the display on affected 13-inch models made in 2016 for free, and the cable on the 2018 models and onwards was made 2 mm longer than on prior models, thus reducing the likelihood of display failure.[192] Apple has been criticized for not extending the replacement program to the 15-inch models which are also affected by this issue.[193]

Reception

[edit]
The MacBook Pro (2016) was criticized for needing adapters for USB or SD card connections.

The Touch Bar MacBook Pro received mixed reviews. The display, build quality, and audio quality were praised but many complained about the butterfly keyboard; the little-used Touch Bar; and the absence of USB-A ports, HDMI port, and SD card slot.

Ars Technica noted that the second-generation keyboard with firm keys was a "drastic departure" from previous Retina MacBook keyboards. It further noted that resting palms may brush the trackpad occasionally, causing inadvertent cursor jumps onscreen as the notebook interprets this as input, without one's hands or wrists actually resting on it.[155] Bandwidth increased; the flash storage was about 40 percent faster.[155] Engadget praised the thinner, lighter design; improved display and audio; and increased speed of the graphics and flash storage, but criticized the lack of ports and the price.[194] Wired praised the display, calling it "the best laptop display I've ever seen", as well as praising the Touch Bar, though it criticized the need of adapters for many common connectors.[195] Likewise, The Verge concluded that "using [the new MacBook] is alienating to anyone living in the present. I agree with Apple's vision of the future. I'm just not buying it today."[196]

Engadget voiced their concerns that "by doing things like removing full-sized USB ports, the memory card reader and even the Function row, Apple seems to have forgotten how many of us actually work".[197] Miriam Nielsen from The Verge said: "When I tried to intentionally use the Touch Bar, I felt like a kid learning how to type again. I had to keep looking down at the bar instead of looking at the images I was actually trying to edit."[198] She also said that after learning the Touch Bar one cannot work as efficiently on any other computer. Developers have their share of headaches because they cannot rely on the Touch Bar being present on every machine that runs their software. Even if Apple makes the Touch Bar an integral part of macOS, it will take "many years" for it to become ubiquitous, in the meantime, anything in the Bar needs to be available through another part of the interface.[199]

Also criticized were non-compatibility between Thunderbolt 2 and 3 devices. Some found unpleasant the fan whine on the 15" model, where the two integrated fans run all the time by default,[citation needed] thanks to the coprocessor powering the Touch Bar and higher TDP of the stronger CPU models.

In 2016 and 2017, the Touch Bar caused concern among American state bars that the predictive text could be used to cheat on bar exams. The responses varied state by state: New York State Bar Association banned the use of the MacBook Pro on bar exams; while North Carolina Bar Association allowed students to take the state bar exam with the computer once a proctor verified that the predictive text feature had been disabled.[200]

Technical specifications

[edit]
Obsolete[22] Vintage Discontinued
Model 13-inch, 2016
Two Thunderbolt 3 Ports[201]
13-inch, 2016
Four Thunderbolt 3 Ports[201]
15-inch, 2016[201] 13-inch, 2017
Two Thunderbolt 3 Ports[202]
13-inch, 2017
Four Thunderbolt 3 Ports[202]
15-inch, 2017[202] 13-inch, 2018
Four Thunderbolt 3 Ports[203]
15-inch, 2018[203] 13-inch, 2019
Two Thunderbolt 3 Ports[204]
13-inch, 2019
Four Thunderbolt 3 Ports[205]
15-inch, 2019[205]
Initial release operating system macOS 10.12 Sierra macOS 10.13 High Sierra macOS 10.14 Mojave
Latest release operating system macOS 12 Monterey macOS 13 Ventura macOS 15 Sequoia
Display
Screen Size 13.3 in (340 mm) (diagonal) 15.4 in (390 mm) (diagonal) 13.3 in (340 mm) (diagonal) 15.4 in (390 mm) (diagonal) 13.3 in (340 mm) (diagonal) 15.4 in (390 mm) (diagonal) 13.3 in (340 mm) (diagonal) 15.4 in (390 mm) (diagonal)
Backlight LED-backlit
Technology Retina Display with IPS technology
Resolution 2560 × 1600 2880 × 1800 2560 × 1600 2880 × 1800 2560 × 1600 2880 × 1800 2560 × 1600 2880 × 1800
Pixel Density (ppi) 226 220 226 220 226 220 226 220
Aspect Ratio 16:10
Supported scaled resolutions
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, default)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600, native)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
  • 1920 × 1200 (Rendered as 3840 × 2400)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100, default)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, native)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, default)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600, native)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
  • 1920 × 1200 (Rendered as 3840 × 2400)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100, default)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, native)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, default)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600, native)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
  • 1920 × 1200 (Rendered as 3840 × 2400)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100, default)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, native)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, default)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600, native)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
  • 1920 × 1200 (Rendered as 3840 × 2400)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100, default)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, native)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
SDR Max brightness ( cdm2) 500
XDR Max brightness ( cdm2)
Color Depth 8-bit (native) with millions of colors
Full sRGB Display Yes
Wide Color Display (Display P3) Yes
True Tone Display No Yes
Night Shift Yes
ProMotion Display No
Fixed refresh rates 60 Hz
Cooling System Single-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Single-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Single-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor
Processor
Chip 6th-generation Intel Core i5 6360U 6th-generation Intel Core i5 6267U 6th-generation Intel Core i7 6700HQ 7th-generation Intel Core i5 7360U 7th-generation Intel Core i5 7267U 7th-generation Intel Core i7 7700HQ 8th-generation Intel Core i5 8259U 8th-generation Intel Core i7 8750H 8th-generation Intel Core i5 8257U 8th-generation Intel Core i5 8279U 8th-generation Intel Core i7 8569U 9th-generation Intel Core i7 9750H 9th-generation Intel Core i9 9880H 9th-generation Intel Core i9 9980HK
Codename Skylake Kaby Lake Coffee Lake
Technology Node 14 nm
CPU
Total Cores 2 4 2 4 6 4 6 8
Total Threads 4 8 4 8 12 8 12 16
Base Clock Speed 2.0 GHz 2.9 GHz 2.6 GHz 2.3 GHz 3.1 GHz 2.8 GHz 2.3 GHz 2.2 GHz 1.4 GHz 2.4 GHz 2.8 GHz 2.6 GHz 2.3 GHz 2.4 GHz
Turbo Clock Speed 3.1 GHz 3.3 GHz 3.5 GHz 3.6 GHz 3.5 GHz 3.8 GHz 3.8 GHz 4.1 GHz 3.9 GHz 4.1 GHz 4.7 GHz 4.5 GHz 4.8 GHz 5.0 GHz
L3 Cache 4 MB 6 MB 4 MB 6 MB 6 MB 9 MB 6 MB 8 MB 12 MB 16 MB
Bus Speed 4 GT/s 8 GT/s 4 GT/s 8 GT/s 4 GT/s 8 GT/s 4 GT/s 8 GT/s
Online Configuration 6th-generation Intel Core i7 6600U with:
  • 2-core CPU with 4 threads
  • 2.4 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 3.4 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache
6th-generation Intel Core i5 6287U with:
  • 2-core CPU with 4 threads
  • 3.1 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 3.5 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache, or

6th-generation Intel Core i7 6567U with:

  • 2-core CPU with 4 threads
  • 3.3 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 3.6 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache
7th-generation Intel Core i7 6920HQ with:
  • 4-core CPU with 8 threads
  • 2.9 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 3.8 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache, or
7th-generation Intel Core i7 7600U with:
  • 2-core CPU with 4 threads
  • 2.5 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.0 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache
7th-generation Intel Core i5 7287U with:
  • 2-core CPU with 4 threads
  • 3.3 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 3.7 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache, or

7th-generation Intel Core i7 7567U with:

  • 2-core CPU with 4 threads
  • 3.1 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.1 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache
7th-generation Intel Core i7 7920HQ with:
  • 4-core CPU with 8 threads
  • 3.5 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.0 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 4 MB L3 Cache, or
8th-generation Intel Core i7 8559U with:
  • 4-core CPU with 8 threads
  • 2.7 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.5 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 8 MB L3 Cache
8th-generation Intel Core i9 8950HK with:
  • 6-core CPU with 12 threads
  • 2.9 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.8 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 12 MB L3 Cache
8th-generation Intel Core i7 8557U with:
  • 4-core CPU with 8 threads
  • 1.7 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.5 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 8 MB L3 Cache
8th-generation Intel Core i7 8569U with:
  • 4-core CPU with 8 threads
  • 2.8 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.7 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 8 MB L3 Cache
9th-generation Intel Core i9 9980HK with:
  • 8-core CPU with 16 threads
  • 2.4 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 5.0 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 16 MB L3 Cache
Graphics
Integrated
Name Intel Iris Plus Graphics 540 Intel Iris Plus Graphics 550 Intel HD Graphics 530 Intel Iris Plus Graphics 640 Intel Iris Plus Graphics 650 Intel HD Graphics 630 Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655 Intel UHD Graphics 630 Intel Iris Plus Graphics 645 Intel Iris Plus Graphics 655 Intel UHD Graphics 630
Tier GT3e GT2 GT3e GT2 GT3e GT2 GT3e GT2
EUs and Shading units 48 (384) 24 (192) 48 (384) 24 (192) 48 (384) 24 (192) 48 (384) 24 (192)
Shared Memory 1536 MB
eDRAM 64 MB 64 MB 128 MB 128 MB
Discrete
Chip rowspan=6 colspan=5 data-sort-value="" style="background: var(--background-color-interactive, #ececec); color: var(--color-base, #2C2C2C); vertical-align: middle; text-align: center; " class="table-na" | — rowspan=6 colspan=3 data-sort-value="" style="background: var(--background-color-interactive, #ececec); color: var(--color-base, #2C2C2C); vertical-align: middle; text-align: center; " class="table-na" | — rowspan=6 colspan=5 data-sort-value="" style="background: var(--background-color-interactive, #ececec); color: var(--color-base, #2C2C2C); vertical-align: middle; text-align: center; " class="table-na" | — AMD Radeon Pro 555X AMD Radeon Pro 560X AMD Radeon Pro Vega 20
Cores 640 768 768 768 1024 1280
Memory Type 128-bit GDDR5 (81 GB/s) 128-bit GDDR5 (81 GB/s) 128-bit GDDR5 (94 GB/s) 128-bit GDDR5 (94 GB/s) 1024-bit HBM2 (192 GB/s)
Memory Capacity 2 GB 2 GB 4 GB 4 GB
Automatic Graphics Switching Yes Yes Yes Yes
Online Configuration AMD Radeon Pro 460 with 4 GB GDDR5 AMD Radeon Pro 560 with 4 GB GDDR5
  • AMD Radeon Pro 560X with 4 GB GDDR5
  • AMD Radeon Pro 560X with 4 GB GDDR5
  • AMD Radeon Pro Vega 16 with 4 GB HBM2(1024 Cores, 1024-bit HBM2, 307 GB/s)
  • AMD Radeon Pro Vega 20 with 4 GB HBM2(1280 Cores, 1024-bit HBM2, 192 GB/s)
Memory
Type LPDDR3 2133 MHz DDR4 2400 MHz LPDDR3 2133 MHz DDR4 2400 MHz
Capacity 8 GB 16 GB 8 GB 16 GB 8 GB 16 GB 8 GB 16 GB 32 GB
Online Configuration 16 GB 16 GB 16 GB 32 GB 16 GB 32 GB
SSD
Type PCIe 3.0-based SSD
Capacity 256 GB 256 GB 128 GB 256 GB 256 GB 256 GB 256 GB 128 GB 256 GB 512 GB 1 TB 256 GB 512 GB 1 TB
Online Configuration 512 GB
1 TB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
256 GB
512 GB
1 TB
512 GB
1 TB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
256 GB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
256 GB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
1 TB
2 TB
2 TB 256 GB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
1 TB
2 TB
4 TB
2 TB
4 TB
Keyboard and Trackpad
Type Backlit Butterfly Keyboard with butterfly mechanism and ambient light sensor
Number of keys 78 (U.S.) or 79 (ISO) 65 (U.S.) or 66 (ISO) 78 (U.S.) or 79 (ISO) 65 (U.S.) or 66 (ISO)
Arrow keys 4 arrow keys
Function keys Yes No Yes No
Touch Bar No Yes No Yes
Trackpad Force Touch Trackpad
Secure Authentication
Touch ID No Integrated in Touch Bar No Integrated in Touch Bar
Security Chip Apple T1 Apple T1 Apple T2
Audio
Speakers Stereo speakers with high dynamic range
Force-cancelling woofers No
Wide Stereo Sound No
Dolby Atmos Playback No Yes
Dolby Atmos with built-in speakers No
Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking No
Microphone Two-mic array Three-mic array Two-mic array Three-mic array
3.5 mm Jack Yes
Audio output from HDMI No
Camera
Resolution 720p FaceTime HD
Connectivity
Wi-Fi (802.11) Wi-Fi 5 (802.11a/b/g/n/ac)
Maximum Wi-Fi Speed 0.866 Gbit/s
Bluetooth Bluetooth 4.2 Bluetooth 5.0
HDMI Port No
SDXC Card Slot No
USB-C/Thunderbolt Port Two Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port, two left-hand ports for full performance, supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Two Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port, two left-hand ports for full performance, supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Two Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others
Transmission Speed Up to 40 Gbit/s transmission speed (Thunderbolt 3)
Up to 10 Gbit/s transmission speed (USB 3.1 Gen 2)
eGPU support Yes
External Display support
Maximum display 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4
Max. one display combination
  • 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
Max two displays combination
  • 2 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 2 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
  • 2 × 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 2 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 2 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
  • 2 × 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 2 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 2 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
  • 2 × 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 2 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 2 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
  • 2 × 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
Max four displays combination
  • 4 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 4 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
  • 4 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 4 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
  • 4 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 4 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
  • 4 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 4 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
Power
Battery 11.4 V 54.5 W·h (4780 mA·h) 11.41 V 49.2 W·h (4310 mA·h) 11.4 V 54.5 W·h (6667 mA·h) 11.4 V 76 W·h (4780 mA·h) 11.41 V 49.2 W·h (4310 mA·h) 11.4 V 54.5 W·h (6667 mA·h) 11.47 V 58 W·h (5083 mA·h) 11.40 V 83.6 W·h (7336 mA·h) 11.4 V 58.2 W·h (5152 mA·h)[206] with 1000 battery cycle count[116] 11.47 V 58 W·h (5083 mA·h) 11.40 V 83.6 W·h (7336 mA·h)
Power Adapter 61 W USB-C 87 W USB-C 61 W USB-C 87 W USB-C 61 W USB-C 87 W USB-C 61 W USB-C 87 W USB-C
Charging Method USB-C ports
Dimensions
Height 0.59 in (1.5 cm) 0.61 in (1.5 cm) 0.59 in (1.5 cm) 0.61 in (1.5 cm) 0.59 in (1.5 cm) 0.61 in (1.5 cm) 0.59 in (1.5 cm) 0.61 in (1.5 cm)
Width 11.97 in (30.4 cm) 13.75 in (34.9 cm) 11.97 in (30.4 cm) 13.75 in (34.9 cm) 11.97 in (30.4 cm) 13.75 in (34.9 cm) 11.97 in (30.4 cm) 13.75 in (34.9 cm)
Depth 8.36 in (21.2 cm) 9.48 in (24.1 cm) 8.36 in (21.2 cm) 9.48 in (24.1 cm) 8.36 in (21.2 cm) 9.48 in (24.1 cm) 8.36 in (21.2 cm) 9.48 in (24.1 cm)
Weight 3.02 lb (1.37 kg) 4.02 lb (1.82 kg) 3.02 lb (1.37 kg) 4.02 lb (1.82 kg) 3.02 lb (1.37 kg) 4.02 lb (1.82 kg) 3.02 lb (1.37 kg) 4.02 lb (1.82 kg)
Total greenhouse gas emissions 321 kg CO2e (256 GB storage)[207] 344 kg CO2e (256 GB storage) 461 kg CO2e (256 GB storage)[208] 302 kg CO2e (128 GB storage)[209] 319 kg CO2e (256 GB storage) 336 kg CO2e (256 GB storage) 449 kg CO2e (256 GB storage)[210] 273 kg CO2e (256 GB storage)[211] 366 kg CO2e (6-core CPU, 256 GB storage)[212] 210 kg CO2e (128 GB storage)[213] 229 kg CO2e (256 GB storage) 247 kg CO2e (256 GB storage) 247 kg CO2e (512 GB storage) [data missing] 334 kg CO2e (6-core CPU, 256 GB storage)[214] 354 kg CO2e (8-core CPU, 512 GB storage) [data missing]
Model details
Model number A1708 A1706 A1707 A1708 A1706 A1707 A1989 A1990 A2159 A1989 A1990
Hardware strings MacBookPro13,1 MacBookPro13,2 MacBookPro13,3 MacBookPro14,1 MacBookPro14,2 MacBookPro14,3 MacBookPro15,2 MacBookPro15,1 MacBookPro15,4 MacBookPro15,2 MacBookPro15,1
Part/order number
(Space Gray at first, Silver at last)
MLL42, MLUQ2 MLH12, MLVP2 MHL32, MLW72 MPXQ2, MPXR2 MPXT2, MPXU2 MPXV2, MPXX2 MPTR2, MPTU2 MR9Q2, MR9U2 MV932, MV962 MUHN2, MUHQ2 MUHP2, MUHR2 MV962, MV992 MV972, MV9A2 MV982, Build-to-order (Silver) MV902, MV922 MV912, MV932 MV942, Build-to-order (Silver) MV952, Build-to-order (Silver)
Timeline
Announced Date October 27, 2016 June 5, 2017 July 12, 2018 July 9, 2019 May 21, 2019
Released Date October 27, 2016 November 12, 2016 June 5, 2017 July 12, 2018 July 9, 2019 May 21, 2019
Discontinued Date June 5, 2017 July 9, 2019 July 12, 2018 May 21, 2019 May 4, 2020 November 13, 2019
Unsupported Date Security fixes only, ending support Security fixes only Supported

Magic Keyboard revision

[edit]
A MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2019)

Apple announced the 16-inch MacBook Pro on November 13, 2019, replacing the 15-inch model.[215][216] Similar in size to the 15-inch model, it has a larger 16-inch 3072x1920 Retina display set in a narrower bezel, the largest MacBook screen since the 17-inch unibody MacBook Pro that was discontinued in 2012. It has a physical Escape key, a Touch Bar, and a now-separate sapphire-glass-covered Touch ID sensor at the right end of the Touch Bar that doubles as a power button. It uses a scissor mechanism keyboard almost identical to Apple's wireless Magic Keyboard, providing more travel than the previous revision's "Butterfly" keyboard.[217]

Like its predecessor, the 16-inch MacBook Pro has four combined Thunderbolt 3 ports that support USB-C 3.1 Gen 2 and dual DisplayPort 1.4 signals, providing 6016×3384 output to run the Pro Display XDR at full resolution. Any port can be used for charging, it includes a 96 W USB-C power adapter. At launch only the included adapter and the Pro Display XDR provide full host power. Peripherals that delivered 87 W for the 15-inch model, such as LG Ultrafine displays, are recommended to be used with a separate power supply.[154][155][218] It also has a 3.5 mm headphone jack.[219]

It uses the same Coffee Lake CPUs as the 2019 15-inch model. Purchasers can choose between AMD Radeon Pro 5300M or 5500M GPUs with up to 8 GB of GDDR6 memory (or from June 2020 onwards, a 5600M GPU with 8 GB of HBM2 memory), up to 64 GB of 2667 MHz DDR4 memory, and up to 8 TB[220] of SSD storage. It includes better speakers, a better three-microphone array, and a 100 Wh battery, the largest that can be easily carried onto a commercial airliner under U.S. Transportation Security Administration rules.[215][221]

On May 4, 2020, Apple announced an updated 13-inch model with the Magic Keyboard. The four Thunderbolt port version comes with Ice Lake processors, updated graphics, up to 32 GB of memory and 4 TB of storage, and supports 6K output to run the Pro Display XDR. The two Thunderbolt port version has the same Coffee Lake processors, graphics, and maximum storage and memory as the 2019 two Thunderbolt port models.[222] The 2020 13-inch models also gain 0.02 inches (0.6 mm) in thickness over the 2019 models.[223]

Reception

[edit]

Reception to the 16-inch MacBook Pro was generally positive. LaptopMag called the keyboard "much-improved".[224] The Verge praised the new keyboard, microphones, and speakers, but criticized the lack of peripherals such as an SD card slot.[225] 9to5Mac criticized the use of a 720p webcam and older 802.11ac Wi-Fi standard, noting that Apple's iPhone 11 family included a 4K front-facing camera and faster Wi-Fi 6.[226] MacWorld also noted the lack of Face ID.[227] Techable noted the vast improvements to the keyboard. Another review criticized the 13-inch model with two Thunderbolt 3 ports for being unable to run Apple's Pro Display XDR at full resolution, while the lower-priced 2020 MacBook Air, released two months earlier, can.[228]

There are numerous reports of cracked screens caused by closing the unit with a third-party physical webcam cover due to reduced clearance compared to previous models.[229]

Technical specifications

[edit]
Model 16-inch, 2019[230] 13-inch, 2020
Two Thunderbolt 3 ports[231]
13-inch, 2020
Four Thunderbolt 3 ports[232]
Initial release operating system macOS 10.15 Catalina
Latest release operating system macOS 15 Sequoia
Display
Screen Size 16 in (410 mm) (diagonal) 13.3 in (340 mm) (diagonal)
Backlight LED-backlit
Technology Retina Display with IPS technology
Resolution 3072 × 1920 2560 × 1600
Pixel Density (ppi) 226 227
Aspect Ratio 16:10
Supported scaled resolutions
  • 2048 × 1280 (Rendered as 4096 × 2560)
  • 1792 × 1120 (Rendered as 3584 × 2240, default)
  • 1536 × 960 (Rendered as 3072 × 1920, native)
  • 1334 × 840 (Rendered as 2668 × 1680)
  • 1152 × 720 (Rendered as 2304 × 1440)
  • 1680 × 1050 (Rendered as 3360 × 2100)
  • 1440 × 900 (Rendered as 2880 × 1800, default)
  • 1280 × 800 (Rendered as 2560 × 1600, native)
  • 1024 × 640 (Rendered as 2048 × 1280)
SDR Max brightness ( cdm2) 500
XDR Max brightness ( cdm2)
Color Depth 8-bit (native) with millions of colors
Full sRGB Display Yes
Wide Color Display (Display P3) Yes
True Tone Display Yes
Night Shift Yes
ProMotion Display No
Fixed refresh rates 47.95 Hz, 48 Hz, 50 Hz, 59.95 Hz, 60 Hz 60 Hz
Cooling System Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Single-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor Dual-fan cooling system with aluminum heat spreader attached on processor
Processor
Chip 9th-generation Intel Core i7 9750H 9th-generation Intel Core i9 9880H 8th-generation Intel Core i5 8257U 10th-generation Intel Core i5 1038NG7 10th-generation Intel Core i7 1068NG7
Codename Coffee Lake Ice Lake
Technology Node 14 nm 10 nm
CPU
Total Cores 6 8 4
Total Threads 12 16 8
Base Clock Speed 2.6 GHz 2.3 GHz 1.4 GHz 2.0 GHz 2.3 GHz
Turbo Clock Speed 4.5 GHz 4.8 GHz 3.9 GHz 3.8 GHz 4.1 GHz
L3 Cache 12 MB 16 MB 6 MB 8 MB
Bus Speed 8 GT/s 4 GT/s
Online Configuration 9th-generation Intel Core i9 9980HK with:
  • 8-core CPU with 16 threads
  • 2.4 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 5.0 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 16 MB L3 Cache
8th-generation Intel Core i7 8557U with:
  • 4-core CPU with 8 threads
  • 1.7 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.5 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 8 MB L3 Cache
10th-generation Intel Core i7 1068NG7 with:
  • 4-core CPU with 8 threads
  • 2.3 GHz Base Clock Speed
  • 4.1 GHz Turbo Clock Speed
  • 8 MB L3 Cache
Graphics
Integrated
Name Intel UHD Graphics 630 Intel Iris Plus Graphics 645 Intel Iris Plus Graphics
Tier GT2 GT3e G7
EUs and Shading units 24 (192) 48 (384) 64 (512)
Shared Memory 1536 MB
eDRAM 128 MB
Discrete
Chip AMD Radeon Pro 5300M AMD Radeon Pro 5500M
Cores 1280 1536
Memory Type 128-bit GDDR6 (192 GB/s)
Memory Capacity 4 GB
Automatic Graphics Switching Yes
Online Configuration
  • AMD Radeon Pro 5500M with 4 GB GDDR6 (From 5300M)
  • AMD Radeon Pro 5500M with 8 GB GDDR6
  • AMD Radeon Pro 5600M with 8 GB HBM2(2560 Cores, 2048-bit HBM2, 384 GB/s, June 2020 until October 2021)
Memory
Type DDR4 2666 MHz LPDDR3 2133 MHz LPDDR4X 3733 MHz
Capacity 16 GB 8 GB 16 GB 32 GB
Online Configuration 32 GB
64 GB
16 GB 32 GB
SSD
Type PCIe 3.0-based SSD
Capacity 512 GB 1 TB 256 GB 512 GB 1 TB
Online Configuration 1 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
2 TB
4 TB
8 TB
512 GB
1 TB
2 TB
1 TB
2 TB
1 TB
2 TB
4 TB
2 TB
4 TB
Keyboard and Trackpad
Type Backlit Magic Keyboard with (Scissor-switch) mechanism and ambient light sensor
Number of keys 65 (U.S.) or 66 (ISO)
Arrow keys 4 arrow keys in an inverted-T arrangement
Function keys Esc key is physical only
Touch Bar Yes
Trackpad Force Touch Trackpad
Secure Authentication
Touch ID Yes
Security Chip Apple T2
Audio
Speakers High-fidelity six-speakers Stereo speakers with high dynamic range
Force-cancelling woofers Yes No
Wide Stereo Sound Yes
Dolby Atmos Playback Yes
Dolby Atmos with built-in speakers No
Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking No
Microphone Studio-quality three-mic array with high signal-to-noise ratio and directional beamforming Three-mic array with directional beamforming
3.5 mm Jack Yes
Audio output from HDMI No
Camera
Resolution 720p FaceTime HD
Connectivity
Wi-Fi (802.11) Wi-Fi 5 (802.11a/b/g/n/ac)
Maximum Wi-Fi Speed 0.866 Gbit/s
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.0
HDMI Port No
SDXC Card Slot No
USB-C/Thunderbolt Port Four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Two Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others Four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port supporting charging and DisplayPort protocols among others
Transmission Speed Up to 40 Gbit/s transmission speed (Thunderbolt 3)
Up to 10 Gbit/s transmission speed (USB 3.1 Gen 2)
eGPU support Yes
External Display support
Maximum display 4 2
Max. one display combination
  • 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 6K at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 5K at 60Hz at 10-bit
Max two displays combination
  • 2 × 6K at 60Hz at 10-bit
  • 2 × 4K UHD at 60Hz at 10-bit, or
  • 2 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 8-bit
Max four displays combination
  • 4 × 4K DCI at 60Hz at 10-bit
Power
Battery 11.76 V 99.8 W·h (8486 mA·h) 11.4 V 58.2 W·h (5152 mA·h)[233] with 1000 battery cycle count[116] 11.47 V 58 W·h (5083 mA·h)
Power Adapter 96 W USB-C 61 W USB-C
Charging Method USB-C ports
Dimensions
Height 0.64 in (1.6 cm) 0.61 in (1.5 cm)
Width 14.09 in (35.8 cm) 11.97 in (30.4 cm)
Depth 9.68 in (24.6 cm) 8.36 in (21.2 cm)
Weight 4.3 lb (1.95 kg) 3.1 lb (1.41 kg)
Total greenhouse gas emissions 394 kg CO2e (6-core CPU, 512 GB storage)[234] 465 kg CO2e (8-core CPU, 1 TB storage) 217 kg CO2e (256 GB storage)[235] 238 kg CO2e (512 GB storage) 251 kg CO2e (512 GB storage) 298 kg CO2e (1 TB storage) [data missing]
Model details
Model number A2141 A2289 A2251
Hardware strings MacBookPro16,1 MacBookPro16,3 MacBookPro16,2
Part/order number
(Space Gray at first, Silver at last)
MVVJ2, MVVL2 MVVK2, MVVM2 MXK72, MXK52 MXK62, MXK32 MWP42, MWP72 MWP52, MWP82 MWP62
Build-to-order (Silver)
Timeline
Announced Date November 13, 2019 May 4, 2020
Released Date November 13, 2019 May 4, 2020
Discontinued Date October 18, 2021 November 10, 2020 October 18, 2021
Unsupported Date Supported

Software and operating systems

[edit]

The macOS operating system has been pre-installed on all MacBook Pro computers since release, starting with version 10.4.5 (Tiger).[4] Along with OS X, iLife has also shipped with all systems, beginning with iLife '06.[4]

The Intel-based MacBook Pro comes with the successor to BIOS, Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) 1.1. EFI handles booting differently from BIOS-based computers,[236] but provides backwards compatibility, allowing dual- and triple-boot configurations. In addition to OS X, the Microsoft Windows operating system is installable on Intel x86-based Apple computers. Officially, this is limited to 32-bit versions of Windows XP, Vista, and 7, and 64-bit versions of Windows Vista, 7, 8, 8.1, and 10 with the necessary hardware drivers included with the Boot Camp software.[82][237] Other x86 operating systems such as Linux are also unofficially supported.[238] This is made possible by the presence of the Intel architecture as provided by the CPU and the BIOS emulation Apple has provided on top of EFI.[239]

macOS Sonoma, the most recent release of macOS, will work with Wi-Fi and graphics acceleration on unsupported MacBook Pro computers with a compatible patch utility.[240]

Supported macOS releases
OS release Intel-based
Aluminum Unibody Retina Touch Bar and Function Keys
Early 2006 Late 2006 Mid 2007 Late 2007 Early 2008 Late 2008 Early 2009 Mid 2009 Mid 2010 Early 2011 Late 2011 Mid 2012 Late 2012 Early 2013 Late 2013 Mid 2014 Early 2015 Mid 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 16", 2019 13", 2020
10.4 Tiger 10.4.5 10.4.8 10.4.9 Unofficial, Restore disc only Unofficial, No sound
10.5 Leopard Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.5.2 10.5.5 10.5.6 10.5.7
10.6 Snow Leopard With 1 GB RAM Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.6.3 10.6.6 Unofficial Unofficial, No sound and graphics acceleration
10.7 Lion Patch, up to 10.7.2 With 2 GB RAM Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.7.2 10.7.3 10.7.4
10.8 Mountain Lion No Patch[Note 1] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.8.1 10.8.2
10.9 Mavericks No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.9.4
10.10 Yosemite No Patch, No graphics acceleration[Note 1] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.10.2 10.10.3
10.11 El Capitan No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
10.12 Sierra No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.12.1 10.12.5
10.13 High Sierra No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.13.6
10.14 Mojave No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.14.5
10.15 Catalina No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 10.15.1 10.15.4
11 Big Sur No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
12 Monterey No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
13 Ventura No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
14 Sonoma No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes
15 Sequoia No Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes
  1. ^ a b The Late 2006 MacBook Pro was not intended to run OS X 10.8 or later, as such there are no graphics drivers available under OS X. However, unofficial drivers are available for OS X 10.8 and 10.9
Supported Windows versions
OS release Aluminum Unibody Retina Touch Bar and Function Keys
2006 models 2007 models 2008–2009 models Mid 2010 2011 models Mid 2012 Late 2012–2014 Early 2015 Mid 2015 2016–2020 models
Windows XP
[Note 1][Note 2][241][242]
Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No
Windows Vista
32-bit[Note 3][241][242]
Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No
Windows Vista
64-bit[Note 3][241]
Patch[Note 4] Patch Yes Yes No No No No No No
Windows 7
32-bit[Note 5][241][243]
Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No
Windows 7
64-bit[Note 6][241][244]
Patch[Note 4] Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No
Windows 8
[Note 7][Note 8][241]
Patch[Note 4] Patch Patch Partial, Patch[Note 9] Yes Yes Yes Yes No No
Windows 8.1
[Note 10][Note 8][245][244]
Patch[Note 4] Patch Patch Partial, Patch[Note 9] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No
Windows 10
[Note 11][246][244]
Patch[Note 4] Patch Patch Patch Patch Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
  1. ^ Windows XP can only be installed on Macs with Boot Camp 3 or earlier. This includes Mac OS X 10.6 or earlier and copies of Mac OS X 10.7 that have not been updated to Boot Camp 4.
  2. ^ Only 32-bit editions of Windows XP are supported.
  3. ^ a b Windows Vista can only be installed on Macs with Boot Camp 3 or earlier. This includes Mac OS X 10.6 or earlier and copies of Mac OS X 10.7 that have not been updated to Boot Camp 4.
  4. ^ a b c d e Only Late 2006 models are compatible with 64-bit versions of Windows.
  5. ^ The 32-bit version of Windows 7 can only be installed on Macs with Boot Camp 3.1 to 6.0. This includes OS X 10.11 and earlier.
  6. ^ The 64-bit version of Windows 7 can only be installed on Macs with Boot Camp 3.1 or later, running macOS High Sierra or earlier. Later versions of macOS no longer support Windows 7.
  7. ^ Windows 8 can only be installed on Macs with Boot Camp 5.0 to 6.0. This includes OS X 10.11 and earlier.
  8. ^ a b Only 64-bit versions of Windows are supported for Windows 8 and later.
  9. ^ a b Only the 15 and 17-inch models of the Mid-2010 MacBook Pro support Windows 8 and 8.1. The 13-inch model is not supported.
  10. ^ Windows 8.1 can only be installed on Macs with Boot Camp 5.1 or later, running macOS High Sierra or earlier. Later versions of macOS no longer support Windows 8.1.
  11. ^ Windows 10 can only be installed on Macs with Boot Camp 6.0 or later. It is the only supported version of Windows on macOS Mojave and later.

Timeline

[edit]
Timeline of portable Macintoshes
Mac transition to Apple siliconiMac ProApple WatchiPadiPhoneMac ProPower Mac G5Power Mac G4Power Macintosh G3Power MacintoshCompact MacintoshMacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Apple silicon)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)MacBook Pro (Intel-based)iBook G4PowerBook G4PowerBook G4iBook (white)PowerBook G3PowerBook G3PowerBook 2400cPowerBook 3400cPowerBook 1400PowerBook 5300PowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 190PowerBook G4PowerBook 150PowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 500 seriesPowerBook 160PowerBook 140PowerBook 180PowerBook 180PowerBook 160PowerBook 160PowerBook 140PowerBook 170PowerBook 140MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Apple silicon)MacBook Air (Intel-based)12-inch MacBookMacBook Air (Intel-based)iBook G4iBook (white)iBook ClamshellMacBook Air (Intel-based)MacBook (2006–2012)PowerBook Duo 210MacBook Air (Intel-based)MacBook (2006–2012)MacBook (2006–2012)PowerBook G4PowerBook 100Macintosh PortablePowerBook G3PowerBook G3PowerBook G3PowerBook G3PowerBook G3PowerBook DuoPowerBook DuoPowerBook DuoMacintosh PortablePowerBook DuoPowerBook DuoPowerBook Duo 230Macintosh Portable

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Apple products that have been discontinued for 7 years and no longer receive hardware support nor spare parts
  2. ^ A less-expensive model shipped May 16, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c Order number MA463 was initially introduced as MA091 at a higher price with a 100 GB HD, more video RAM, but that model never shipped.
  4. ^ Through use of a second display, all pre-unibody MacBook Pros simultaneously support their native resolution on the internal display and a maximum 2560 × 1600 on an external display.
  5. ^ a b c d Existing memory modules may need to be replaced.
  6. ^ Some sources reference 6 GB functionality.
  7. ^ a b c Hard and solid-state drives listed are configurations available from Apple.
  8. ^ a b Quoted optical drive speeds are the maximum possible for each drive.
  9. ^ Wireless-N functionality requires installing the wireless-N enabler software included with the AirPort Extreme Wireless-N Router or sold as a download on the Apple online store, or by upgrading to OS X 10.5 "Leopard" or later.[32][33]
  10. ^ a b c d Starting March 3, 2009, the MB471 model was replaced by MC026 at the same price, with the only differences being 2.66 MHz (T9550) (or optional 2.93 GHz) processor and an optional 256 GB SSD
  11. ^ a b c 1 GB = 1 billion bytes. 1 TB = 1 trillion bytes

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Owen, Malcolm (January 15, 2018). "Apple apparently shifting more MacBook orders to Foxconn with no plans for a major update in 2018". AppleInsider. Archived from the original on February 24, 2022. Retrieved February 24, 2022.
  2. ^ Hardwick, Tim (May 29, 2018). "Pegatron Tipped to Manufacture Upcoming 'ARM-Based MacBook'". MacRumors. Archived from the original on February 24, 2022. Retrieved February 24, 2022.
  3. ^ Sandoval, Alex (September 4, 2020). "Apple MacBook Pro 13 Review: Apple Delivers a Consistently Excellent Ultraportable Laptop". E-Money Chat. Archived from the original on June 2, 2021. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d "Apple Introduces MacBook Pro" (Press release). Apple. January 10, 2006. Archived from the original on January 8, 2010. Retrieved April 11, 2010.
  5. ^ a b "Apple Introduces 17-inch MacBook Pro" (Press release). Apple. April 24, 2006. Archived from the original on March 28, 2010. Retrieved April 11, 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Snell, Jason (February 25, 2006). "MacBook Pro/1.83 GHz and 2.0 GHz". MacWorld. Archived from the original on April 3, 2010. Retrieved April 18, 2010.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Cheng, Jacqui (March 1, 2006). "MacBook Pro". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on April 5, 2010. Retrieved April 22, 2010.
  8. ^ a b c d e Jackman, Tom (April 17, 2006). "Apple MacBook Pro Review (pics, specs)". NotebookReview. TechTarget. Archived from the original on March 16, 2010. Retrieved April 19, 2010.
  9. ^ a b c "MacBook Pro - Technical Specifications". Apple. Archived from the original on October 30, 2009. Retrieved October 22, 2009.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Apple MacBook Pro Notebooks Now with Intel Core 2 Duo Processors" (Press release). Apple. October 24, 2006. Archived from the original on March 5, 2010. Retrieved April 22, 2010.
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