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  • - Apple has released a new MacBook Pro

  • and it's a game changer.

  • (gentle music)

  • I think it's going to transform the tech industry:

  • revolutionize our concept of a laptop as we know it.

  • I'm just kidding.

  • The new MacBook Pro is exactly the same

  • as the previous MacBook Pro.

  • Look at this screen.

  • Look at this keyboard.

  • There's even a touch bar.

  • They literally didn't change anything

  • that is on the outside.

  • On the inside,

  • there are a couple of differences.

  • Specifically, there's now a 24 gigabyte memory option,

  • increased memory bandwidth.

  • The headphone jack now supports a few more types

  • of headphone.

  • The charger is a little bit more powerful.

  • Oh! And there's a new processor.

  • The M2 which is the M1

  • but with a couple additional GPU cores and Apple claims

  • some other performance improvements.

  • So models of the 13-inch M2 MacBook Pro start at 1,299

  • for an eight core CPU and 10 core GPU,

  • eight gigabytes of unified memory,

  • and 256 gigabytes of storage.

  • This review unit is 1,899 for the 10 core GPU,

  • 16 gigabytes of unified memory,

  • and one terabyte of storage.

  • It is significantly cheaper than a 14-inch MacBook Pro

  • with the more powerful M1 Pro inside.

  • That device has at minimum a 14 core GPU,

  • and it would cost 2,199 for comparable specs.

  • The 14-inch Pro is an incredible laptop

  • but it's going to cost more money

  • than a lot of folks want to pay.

  • So since the M1 and the M2 versions

  • of the 13-inch MacBook Pro are the same

  • in almost every other way.

  • The question for me as a reviewer is pretty simple:

  • how much better is the M2 than the M1?

  • To answer this question,

  • I know some of you will want to see benchmarks.

  • We did run a bunch of those,

  • and I will spoil a surprise for you

  • because it's not really a surprise.

  • The processor is about as much of an improvement over the M1

  • as we expected it to be,

  • that is, the CPU results are somewhat better.

  • The GP results are in some cases substantially better,

  • but these numbers are not going to be useful for everyone,

  • and I don't expect they'll be particularly useful

  • to this MacBook's target demographic.

  • The reality is that the M1 was already really good,

  • and while many professionals do care about performance gains

  • beyond that point,

  • someone like me might not necessarily.

  • So I also tried all kinds of tasks from my daily workload

  • on the M2 MacBook and the M1 MacBook side by side

  • to figure out how big of a difference

  • someone like me might actually expect to see.

  • The services that I use most often during my workday

  • without exception are Google Docs and Google Sheets.

  • I'm generally using Intel machines at work,

  • and I often run into slow down

  • when I'm working in big files.

  • So using the two side by side,

  • the M2 was actually a lot faster,

  • like a few seconds faster to open up a 350 page Google Doc.

  • That was the most in your face improvement

  • I saw during this testing.

  • My spreadsheets with hundreds of rows

  • were also noticeably faster to scroll through on the M2,

  • and the newer MacBook was also quicker to swap

  • between tabs and run calculations.

  • Again, it's not like the M1 is slow,

  • but I did see a difference here.

  • Gaming is another area where I saw a significant difference,

  • which makes sense since the M2 has more GPU cores.

  • The previous MacBook ran "Shadow of the Tomb Raider"

  • at an average of 20 frames per second,

  • while the M2 device averaged 29 frames per second,

  • which is close to a 50% increase.

  • That is the sort of difference I noticed

  • while I was watching the benchmarks run.

  • I don't expect most MacBook shoppers

  • to be running AAA Games on them all the time,

  • but these results do speak

  • to the extent of the improvements that Apple has made.

  • But those were the only two tasks

  • where I really saw a difference in my workload.

  • When I was playing around in Swift Playgrounds 4,

  • which is Apple's fun little program

  • where you can practice coding,

  • the M2 was a smidge faster to load some new interfaces,

  • but they were both fine.

  • And when making an image black and white in Photoshop

  • and adding a lens flare,

  • which is just a thing I do with photos sometimes,

  • please don't judge me,

  • my editing experiences on the two MacBooks

  • were literally identical.

  • Lightroom: same deal.

  • I used Audition to add some CPU heavy effects

  • to an audio clip,

  • and the M2 was very, very slightly faster to complete them,

  • but everything else like playback

  • and hopping through the track,

  • that was exactly the same.

  • The M2 did beat the M1 on the Puget Systems benchmark

  • for Premiere Pro,

  • but that didn't translate to our real world export test

  • where we didn't see a sizable difference in export time.

  • Premiere can be weird about those sorts of things though,

  • so that's hard to conclude too much from.

  • I will also report that the MacBook was able

  • to sustain these heavy loads for long periods of time.

  • Its 30 minute Cinebench score was actually a bit higher

  • than its 10 minute Cinebench score,

  • which is not something you see all that often.

  • Results were also the same

  • regardless of whether the device was on power or battery,

  • which you never see with Windows laptops.

  • And I never heard the fans,

  • not even when I was running games or Cinebench.

  • Now, this was all true of the M1 device as well.

  • I'm just letting you know that none of that has gone away

  • or gotten worse with the M2,

  • which is certainly good.

  • Now, I can already hear you all in the comments section,

  • "But what about professional video editors?

  • What about VFX people, and engineers, and architects?"

  • I'm going to address that very clearly.

  • If you are one of those people,

  • you should be buying the 14-inch MacBook Pro

  • with the M1 Pro or M1 Max.

  • That device is a bit more expensive than this one,

  • but the types of stuff that you folks are doing

  • will be hugely impacted by the M1 Pro's extra GPU cores.

  • The 14-incher has displayed significant gains

  • in things like export time and playback speed

  • compared to what this 13-incher can achieve.

  • Now, these results would make it easy for me to tell you

  • that the M2 MacBook Pro isn't too much better

  • than the M1

  • if it weren't for the battery life.

  • This M2 MacBook Pro does not die.

  • I have never said this about a laptop before:

  • I was not able to run this device's battery down

  • during my testing period.

  • From the results I am seeing,

  • I would expect it to last around 17 and a half hours

  • which is not actually too far

  • from the 20 hours Apple promised in its Keynote.

  • Remember, I'm being somewhat hard on this thing.

  • I've been Photoshopping,

  • I've been Auditioning,

  • I've been Lightrooming,

  • and even Tomb Raidering at various points,

  • and I'm still consistently seeing over half the battery left

  • after eight to nine hours of consistent use.

  • That is longer than we saw from the M1 Pro models,

  • and it is much longer than we saw from the M1 MacBook Pro.

  • That is a category topping lifespan,

  • and it means that a lot of people will likely be able

  • to use the thing for a couple days

  • without touching the charger.

  • While not everyone needs a laptop that will last that long,

  • there certainly are people

  • for whom those eight hours alone are worth paying for.

  • So, at the end of the day,

  • there are two questions I need to answer for you

  • about the M2 MacBook Pro.

  • First, is the M2 better than the M1?

  • The answer is yes,

  • and on GPU benchmarks,

  • it's a big yes.

  • But the M1 was already so fast

  • that many workloads probably don't need more.

  • And, second, should you buy it?

  • The answer to that is pretty much the same

  • as it was for the M1 model:

  • I actually think the most plausible audience

  • for this laptop is people like me.

  • It's people who don't need the 14-inch model

  • and probably can't afford the 14-inch model,

  • but who do need a machine that can do things here and there

  • in Photoshop, Lightroom,

  • and the like.

  • I think this is a good model for us,

  • and the battery life is a huge factor,

  • but, there is one thing worth considering

  • before you put in your order:

  • the new MacBook Air.

  • There is an M2 powered MacBook Air coming soon

  • with similar performance

  • as well as all kinds of other benefits:

  • to better webcam, a better keyboard, MagSafe,

  • and a whole new design.

  • If you can wait,

  • I'd suggest you wait.

  • We will need to sort out who should buy the Air

  • and who should buy the Pro

  • once we've gotten our hands on that.

  • So, good luck with that, future Monica.

  • In the meantime, if you're able to wait and see

  • what the new M2 Air is going to bring,

  • it's probably worth waiting.

  • Can I just say one more thing?

  • It is so frustrating

  • that Apple has one computer called the MacBook M1 Pro

  • and a processor called the M1 Pro,

  • but the M1 MacBook Pro doesn't have the M1 Pro in it.

  • The M1 Pro is in a totally other laptop

  • called the M1 MacBook Pro,

  • and Apple, what are we doing here?

  • What are we doing?

- Apple has released a new MacBook Pro

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