Read more.And it updates the butterfly keyboard mechanism again for greater reliability.
Read more.And it updates the butterfly keyboard mechanism again for greater reliability.
8-core with 5.0GHz. Aye, righto Apple.
Yeah effin right 5GHz on 8 cores. The 6 core dials back to below base clock under load.
What an utter load of <colourful expletives>
Does it come with a freezer so that it can run at those speeds.
Yeah, a single core might get to 5GHz for a few hundred microseconds in this form factor and TDP.
Still, 8 cores is a step up for multithreaded software uses.
Apple needs to move to its own designs ASAP.
That is if you work outside on Antarctic or somewhere else where is well below 0 degree C,
you might see your CPU go to 5hz for one millisecond.
But hey, marketing loves this, legally and technically, it is possible but will be super rare.Anyways,they gonna sell tons of this. It is after all 8 cores chip.
Enjoy!
The more you live, less you die. More you play, more you die. Isn't it great.
So, real-world performance wise, it's the equivalent of a Celeron under sustained use, and has a keyboard that's likely to last less than a year.
No doubt it'll be nice and quiet though? Presumably Apple still set the fan curves really low as silence is MUCH more important than performance for Starbucks "pros"
Looking forward to seeing these benched. Always good for a laugh.
I had a look at the configurator. It's worryingly easy to push a 15" model over £6000! I'll stay with my desktop...
Easy, over-gas it and the compressor will fail prematurely. You can work out how much extra gas to put in to increase the pressure to the sweet spot when it'll fail just outside warranty. If you do it right, you can vary the quality of the parts you want to fail or use worn tooling on certain batches so different parts fail at different times. This will give the appearance of random failures and just entropy but it's really all planned so you can ensure you always have these particular parts in stock at silly prices as well as training your staff to be able to fix them in store.
Do it right and you can plan to declare the model obsolete at the point of peak planned failures and ensure you have a lovely new expensive product for them to justify buying. Conveniently ready and all shiny and hyped.
Nah, no one would be this evil.
Since their userbase buy them because of the form factor, they have to be nuts to make this laptop thicker for more cooling. In normal usage you will feel the difference because in general, you use that extra performance only in short bursts. Transcode a small video, load something on your, transcode an audio file, etc. So yeah, I think they could have done more, but they are limited by their prices and users requirements.
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