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2016 macbook pro 13 power
2016 macbook pro 13 power









They roll right off the tongue, don’t they? Apple’s naming and branding are weird sometimes. The official names are MacBook Pro 13-inch (2 Thunderbolt 3 ports) and MacBook Pro 13-inch (4 Thunderbolt 3 ports). In my view, they are different enough to deserve different names. The low-end models are closer in base price to the $999 MacBook Air than to the high-end 13-inch MacBook Pro. The high-end models start at $1799 and have received a boost to 10th-generation “Ice Lake” Intel processors. The low-end laptops start at $1299 and are powered by 8th-generation Intel processors. There’s a big difference between the two models, one that’s been heightened with this set of updates. Originally the lower-end model didn’t have a Touch Bar, but Apple added it to the low-end model last year. Since 2016, there have really been two different laptops living under the name “13-inch MacBook Pro.” There’s a lower-end model with two Thunderbolt 3 ports (on the left side), and a higher-end model with four ports (two on either side). Jason Snell at Six Colors sums it up perfectly: The 10th-gen Air has better graphics performance though, due to the improvements in Intel’s 10th-gen integrated graphics. The MacBook Pro has better cooling, and a more powerful class of processor. That’s why the 8th-gen 15W 2-port MacBook Pro outperforms the 10th-gen 10W MacBook Air, for example. Things improve with Intel’s CPU generations too, but that usually has less impact than TDP. TL DR: There are different “classes” of MacBook, and you can sort them on their TDP. This is the 13-inch MacBook Pro you’ve been waiting for. We didn’t get the mythical 14-inch, and that’s OK. The new 13-inch MacBook Pro is a big update in some ways, but a small one in others.











2016 macbook pro 13 power