![]() ![]() ![]() Upgrading to the 10th-gen chip is not currently an option until you hit the $1,799 level. The two lowest-priced models are sticking with eighth-gen Intel CPUs. They start at £1,299 in the UK and AU$1,999 in Australia.īut before you buy, there are a few caveats to keep in mind. Prices for the four default configurations remain at $1,299 $1,499 $1,799 and $1,999. ![]() The new top-end cap for storage is now 4TB, up from the previous 2TB. Next to the keyboard, storage is probably the most practical change and takes the two lowest-priced models from 128GB of storage to 256GB the midtier model from 256GB to 512GB and the high-end base configuration from 512GB to 1TB. Major differences from the previous model include a Magic Keyboard upgrade, new 10th-generation Intel processor options for some models and double the base storage for all. ![]() Perhaps knowing I'd been sitting out in the woods contemplating such things, Apple has now updated the 13-inch MacBook Pro, bringing it much more in line with its other laptop offerings. And when Apple dropped the price on the 13-inch Air back down to $999 (yes, really - $1,099 with the Core i5 option), the $1,299-and-up 13-inch MacBook Pro was feeling like the odd man out. Neither of them would dare try and charge you more than $1,000 for a measly 128GB SSD. Newer Intel CPUs were available in those other systems. Both the 16-inch Pro and 13-inch Air recently upgraded from the much-maligned butterfly-style keyboard to the newer Magic Keyboard design - a name now used in laptops, stand-alone Mac accessories and the new iPad Pro keyboard case. In a lot of ways, the 13-inch Pro was always the most practical MacBook to buy - fewer compromises than the MacBook Air, less expensive and more portable than the massive 16-inch (and previously 15-inch) MacBook Pro.īut, that case had been harder to make of late. That's why I eagerly tore into the new 13-inch MacBook Pro when it landed at the socially distant, wooded retreat I've been hiding out in for the past two months. Even if you're stuck working from home, you can still get caught by the upgrade bug. ![]()
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