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Asus Zenbook UX31A full review

The Asus Zenbook was one of the first entrants in the new ultrabook category when it launched in late 2011. We liked that original system, despite a few serious flaws, and the all-metal design marked it as a direct competitor to the MacBook Air.
Since then, ultrabooks have become both more common and less expensive. Asus now makes several UX variations, including three that we are reviewing, the UX31A, UX32A, and UX32VD. For $1,079, the Zenbook UX31A is neither the most nor least expensive of the current crop, but it is slightly thinner than the other two models.
For three systems that look so similar, there are a lot of differences between them. The 13-inch Asus Zenbook UX32VD comes alluringly close to being an ultrabook without compromise. For $1,299 it includes an Intel Core i7 CPU, a full HD 1,920x1,080-pixel-resolution display, and a discrete Nvida 620M GPU.
The UX32A still has a previous-generation Intel Core i3 CPU. That generation of chip is known by the code name Sandy Bridge, while the latest generation is Ivy Bridge. The Zenbook with the older CPU is slower, and also loses out on new Intel improvements, most notably the new HD 4000 integrated graphics.
Falling between those two extremes is this system, the UX31A. It's a more upscale design variant with a thinner chassis. It skips the GPU of the thicker UX32VD, but keeps the high-res screen and Ivy Bridge internal hardware. But at about $1,079, it doesn't make the most compelling value case. Many ultrabooks with Ivy Bridge components and solid-state drive (SSD) storage are available for around $800 or $900, and the UX31A does nothing in particular to justify a $200-$300 premium. That said, it's still one of the nicer-looking ultrabooks around.
Asus Zenbook models compared


CPU GPU Storage Display Price
UX32VD 1.7GHz Core i7-3517U Nvidia GeForce 620M 500GB HDD/24GB SSD 1,920x1,080 $1,299
UX32A 1.4GHz Intel i3-2367M Intel HD 3000 320GB HDD/32GB SSD 1,333x768 $779
UX31A 1.7GHz Intel Core i5-3317U Intel HD 4000 128GB SSD 1,920x1,080 $1,079
Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A specs

Price as reviewed $1,079
Processor 1.7GHz Core i5-3317U
Memory 4GB, 1,600MHz DDR3
Hard drive 128 SSD
Chipset Intel QS67
Graphics Nvidia GeForce GT 620M / Intel HD4000
Operating system Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)
Dimensions (WD) 12.8x8.8 inches
Height 0.1 - 0.7 inch
Screen size (diagonal) 13.3 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter 3.1 pounds / 3.5 pounds
Category 13-inch
The Zenbook line launched in late 2011 and its design -- aluminum, tapered, and minimalist -- made it the most Air-like of the early ultrabooks, at least until the Dell XPS 13 came around. But it also had a few design miscues. The lid on the original Zenbook was notoriously hard to open. That's been fixed here, across all three new Zenbook models we've reviewed.
The UX31A shares the more tapered design of the original Zenbook. It's slightly thinner and lighter than the UX32A and UX32VD models, although all three have a sharp front lip that can be murder on the heels of your hands, depending on your typing style. Despite the similarities, the small difference in thickness and weight in the UX31A actually feels pretty significant in the hand -- this is the closest to the ultrabook ideal.
The keyboard was a weak point on the original Zenbook, with shallow, clacky keys. The UX31A, with the same thin body, has similar shallow keys. For a better typing experience, check out the other two slightly thicker and heavier Zenbooks. The extra depth on those lets the keyboard have a little more space. Even though the keys here are shallow (a problem on other thin ultrabooks, such as the Sony Vaio T), the keyboard is thankfully backlit, a must-have feature on any ultrabook.
The large but finicky clickpad on the first UX31 was one of our main problems. Thanks to updated driver software from Asus, this feels like a reasonable improvement. It still gets a bit jumpy sometimes, and is under-responsive at other times.
There is, however, a decent set of multitouch gestures, demoed and controlled by the Asus Smart Gesture software app. It's nowhere near as intuitive or responsive as a MacBook trackpad, but that's a Windows-wide problem. One nice touch -- you can set a two-finger tap to indicate a right-click, a very Mac-like move that I've seen popping up a few Windows laptops lately.
In another change from the previous generation of Zenbook laptops, the display is now full HD, with a 1,920x1,080-pixel native resolution. That will be a major selling point to some for playing 1080p video content, but it can make text very small and hard to read at times. The UX32VD model also has a 1080p screen, while the less expensive UX32A has a 1,366x768-pixel screen.
Audio through a speaker grille at the very top of the keyboard tray was predictably thin, despite the Bang & Olufsen ICE Power branding. Audio volume controls are mapped to alternate F-key functions, so you'll need to hit, for example, Fn+F10 to mute the sound.


Asus Zenbook UX31A Average for category [13-inch]
Video HDMI (via dongle), VGA (via dongle) HDMI or DisplayPort
Audio Stereo speakers, headphone jack Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks
Data 2 USB 3.0, SD card slot 2 USB 3.0, 1 USB 2.0, SD card reader
Networking Ethernet via dongle, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, optional mobile broadband
Optical drive None DVD burner
Compared with the thicker UX32 model Zenbooks, you lose a USB port here, but little else, even with the thinner body. The USB 3.0 ports even charge devices (like phones and media players) while the system is asleep or off.

One important aspect of this latest generation of Zenbook laptops is the jump to Intel's third-generation Core i-series processors. But not all the current Zenbooks have that, nor do they have similar storage or graphics hardware. The $1,299 UX32VD has a 1.7GHz Intel Core i7-3517U along with a 500GB HDD/24GB SSD combo drive, and Nvidia GeForce 620M graphics. The $779 UX32A has a previous-generation 1.4GHz Intel i3-2367M CPU, 320GB HDD/24GB SSD, and Intel HD 3000 graphics. Finally, this model, the $1,079 UX31A, has a 1.7GHz Intel Core i5-3317U CPU, 128GB SSD, and Intel HD 4000 graphics, plus a slightly thinner body.
Of those three, the UX32VD is the most expensive, but also much faster at running our benchmark tests, beating out the other two Zenbooks, but falling behind an Intel Core i5 MacBook Air. In everyday use, I found all three to be more than responsive enough for common computer tasks, from social networking, to working in Microsoft Office, to running Photoshop. That said, there's a significant performance gap between this and the UX32A, with its older Sandy Bridge CPU. That makes this Ivy Bridge Core i5 the perfect middle-of-the-road choice, and indeed, it's what you'll find in most midprice ultrabooks.
The default Intel HD 4000 integrated graphics in the UX32A ran our very forgiving Street Fighter IV test at the system's very high 1,920x1,080 resolution at 16.3 frames per second. That's not great, but knock it down to a lower resolution (such as 1,600x900) and you'll do OK in games like Street Fighter IV or Portal 2. If you're at all interested in better ultrabook gaming, the UX32VD is the Zenbook for you, as it has an Nvidia GeForce 620M GPU.

Juice box
Asus Zenbook UX31A Avg watts/hour
Off (60%) 0.19
Sleep (10%) 0.28
Idle (25%) 4.66
Load (05%) 26.86
Raw kWh number 23.21
Annual power consumption cost $2.63

Annual power consumption cost
Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A
$2.63 
Acer Aspire S5-391-9880
$2.64 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32A
$2.74 
Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch (Summer 2012)
$2.93 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32VD
$3.79 
All three of the Asus Zenbook models we tested had solid battery life, to varying degrees. The UX31A ran for 6 hours and 16 minutes in our video-playback battery drain test. That's excellent, but still more than an hour behind a 13-inch MacBook Air. In comparison, the UX32A ran for 5 hours and 16 minutes -- decent if not spectacular. The UX32VD has higher-end components, but still ran for 5 hours and 13 minutes.
Asus offers a one-year mail-in warranty on each of these ultrabooks, which includes accidental damage protection, and a 30-day no-dead-pixel guarantee (which is rare). The Asus Web site can get a little confusing to navigate, but 24-7 phone support is available at 888-678-3688. The simplest way to find the Asus support section for your specific model is to ignore the frustrating pop-up navigation menus and simply type the model number into the support page search box.
The Asus Zenbook UX31A is the best-looking and most compact of the current batch of 13-inch Asus ultrabooks. Unfortunately, there are plenty of systems with the same components and reasonably similar designs for under $1,000, making this a tough sell from a value perspective.

Multimedia multitasking test (in seconds)(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch (Summer 2012)
194 
Acer Aspire S5-391-9880
536 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32VD
544 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A
605 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32A
1,162 

Adobe Photoshop CS5 image-processing test (in seconds)(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Acer Aspire S5-391-9880
173 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32VD
187 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A
211 
Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch (Summer 2012)
216 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32A
306 

Apple iTunes encoding test (in seconds)(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch (Summer 2012)
76 
Acer Aspire S5-391-9880
109 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32VD
112 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A
129 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32A
244 

Video playback battery drain test (in minutes)(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch (Summer 2012)
447 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A
376 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32A
316 
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32VD
313 
Acer Aspire S5-391-9880
277 
Find out more about how we test laptops.
System configurations:
Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A
Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit) w/ SP1; 1.7GHz Intel Core i5-3317U; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 64MB (Dedicated) Intel HD 4000; 128GB Adata XM11 SSD
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32A
Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit) w/ SP1; 1.4GHz Intel Core i3-2367M; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,333MHz; 64MB (Dedicated) Intel HD 4000; 320GB Hitachi 5,400rpm
Acer Aspire S5-391-9880
Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit) w/ SP1; 1.7GHz Intel Core i5-3317U; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,333MHz; 128MB (Dedicated) Intel HD 4000; 256GB Lite-On IT SSD (2x RAID 0)
Asus Zenbook Prime UX32VD
Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit) w/ SP1; 1.9GHz Intel Core i7-3517U; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,333MHz; 1GB Nvidia GeForce GT 620M / 64MB (Dedicated) Intel HD 4000; 500GB Hitachi 5,400rpm
Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch (Summer 2012)
OS X 10.7.4 Lion; 1.8GHz Intel Core i5; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 384MB (Shared) Intel HD 4000; 128GB Apple SSD

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ACi launches low-cost Icon 1100 'laptop', at Rs. 4,999

ACi or Allied Computers International, a laptop specialist brand from the UK, has launched a super-affordable “laptop” in India – the ACi Icon 1100, which will be retailed for as little as Rs. 4,999.
With its specifications and feature set however, the device qualifies as an affordable netbook. Featuring a 10.2-inch 1024x768 pixel display, the ACi Icon 1100 runs on an undisclosed VIA CPU, along with 512MB of RAM (1GB optional). Dimensions are 11 x 7.25 x 1 inches, and it weighs in at 0.7kgs.
Other specifications include a MMC/SD push card reader, 10/100 Ethernet adapter, Wi-Fi, 3G support via USB dongle, 3 USB 2.0 ports, and 4GB of storage, expandable up to 32GB. It will ship with 12 months replacement warranty.
The ACi Icon 1100 is sold in India by the BSE listed company, Allied Computers International (Asia) Limited. Speaking on the launch of the ACI Icon 1100, Mr. Hirji Patel, Managing Director, ACi (Asia), said:
“Ergonomics and proper usability of a Laptop by the today’s deprived segments is what we have focused on today in our ACi ICON model. We will by no means stop here and will continuously develop the models in months to come in order to meet consumers' entire needs of today in order for them to up-bring their families to one day own slick, stylish and power laptops of tomorrow’s world.”
The company will also be launch other laptops from its portfolio in India, from mid-to-high end segments.
“At the same time as us fulfilling our goal of developing India as a Laptop Nation with never ending price breaks, we will continue to house latest technology in laptop computing in all our laptop models to ensure India is never used as a dumping ground by the MNCs of this world,”
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Dell XPS 14 And 15 Ivy Bridge, SSD Equipped Laptops Launched (video)


Dell has today launched a couple of new high powered laptop additions to its range, in the form of the Dell XPS 14 and XPS 15. Which are both equipped with Intel’s latest Ivy Bridge processors and can be fitted with solid state disks if desired. Watch the video after the jump to see it in action.
Dell XPS 2012
The Dell XPS laptops are available to purchase from $1099, with upgrade options offering Core i7 processors, supported by up to 8GB of RAM and storage provided by a 512GB SSD. XPS 15 has a starting price of $1299.
The difference between the XPS 14 and XPS 15 being the size of the screen 14 and 15 inch respectively with a 1600 x 900 (XPS 14) and 1920 x 1080 (XPS 15) resolution.
Other available options include a NVIDIA GeForce GT 630m graphics card with 1GB of video memory for the XPS 14 and NVIDIA GeForce GT 640m graphics card with 2GB of video memory on the larger XPS 15.

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Acer Aspire M5 Ultrabooks Coming This Month


Acer announced their new M5 range of ultrabooks back in May, and now they have announced that their new Acer M5 Ultrabooks will go on sale in the US later this month.
There are a few different models in the Acer M5 range, with a choice of either a 14 inch or a 15.6 inch display, the cheapest model is the Ultra M50-481T-6670, which features a core i3 sandy bridge processor and will retail for $679.99.
Acer Aspire M5
There are also a range of other models available with Intel’s latest Ivy Bridge processors, pricing on these models will start at $779.99 and for that you get an Intel Core i5 3317u Ivy Bridge processor, 4GB of RAM, discrete graphics and a 500GB HDD.
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Dell gives a peek at a revamped XPS 15 in Romania


Dell gives a peek at a revamped XPS 15 in Romania
Dell showed the heart of its 2012 laptop design language in the XPS 13 just as the snow started melting, but it's been mostly silent or conservative ever since. The company must want to close out the spring the same way it entered: Dell and Romania's Asesoft Distribution have just previewed a larger XPS 15 at an event B1 attended at the Bucharest-based Romanian Aviation Museum. Based on the early look, Dell isn't going to stretch the Ultrabook definition across the whole XPS range. There will still be full-power, 2.5GHz dual Core i5 and quad 2.1GHz Core i7 chips from Intel's Ivy Bridge family, and NVIDIA is supplying some modestly ultraportable GeForce GT 630M and 640M video. Although there's no special tricks that we can see so far, the 15.6-inch system is reportedly due to show in at least Romania by the end of the spring, which leaves just weeks to wait if you prefer your mid-size performance laptops designed in Texas.
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Samsung refreshes Series 5 laptops with AMD Trinity processors


Samsung refreshes Series 5 laptops with AMD processors
We recently got a look at Samsung's new Ivy Bridge-enhanced Series 5 laptops, but it turns out that's not the only refresh the line has gotten this month. Samsung's also now rather quietly introduced a pair of new AMD-based models on its website, including an $850 14-inch version with a quad-core A10-4655M APU, and a $700 13.3-inch model with a quad-core A6-4455M (both otherwise known as Trinityprocessors). You'll also get an AMD Radeon HD 7500G GPU on the 13.3-incher (while the 14 relies on integrated graphics), but their specs remain pretty much in line with their Intel-based counterparts beyond that, including a standard 4GB RAM on both models and 500GB or 750GB hard drives. You can find the full rundown on each at the links below.
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Retina MacBook Pro: The Laptop From the Future [REVIEW]


macbook-pro-retina-640
When Apple created major buzz around a new product in the past few years, it was almost always an iPhoneor iPad. That’s why it’s so refreshing to see the world ooh and aah about an Apple computer again, theMacBook Pro With Retina Display.
It certainly looks great on paper — a cutting-edge laptop loaded with the latest tech and a jaw-droppingly sharp screen. But does it really deliver the goods?
The answer isn’t just yes. It’s “oh, baby.” Within minutes of taking our review sample out of the box here at theMashable offices, a crowd of staffers gathered around to see what visions the glorious 2,880 x 1,800 retina display would show them.
It didn’t disappoint. After setting up the laptop and putting it side by side with a six-month-old MacBook Prowith the same-size screen, the difference was apparent to anyone with eyes.
Also apparent: How crazy thin this machine is — just 0.71 of an inch thick, or 0.03 inch thicker than the 13-inch MacBook Air. However, it’s a mite heftier at 4.46 pound to the Air’s roughly 3 pounds.
If you’re used to the Air or some of the sleeker Ultrabooks like the Dell XPS 13, the retina Pro’s is still a size class above. However, it’s still significantly less bulky than the regular Pro, and still fits in the same bags.

Feasting Your Retina


Back to that screen. Perhaps surprisingly, the first thing you notice is the deeper colors, not necessarily the sharpness — although that becomes clear when viewing photos with lots of detail. Browsing through the Flickr feed of the NASA Goddard Space Center, the crowd could see those extra pixels working to show, say, the wispy clouds in satellite shots of earth.
Virtually all images were displayed with more vibrant colors and better contrast than on the older Pro.
It’s not just photos that benefit from the extra pixels, but text and iconography as well. Everything from the system fonts to app icons to the galactic background image looks sharper, with better contrast.
After I connected the retina Pro to an external (non-retina) Acer monitor, it became something of a game to drag windows from one screen to the other, watching the images and text magically transform as they crossed from edge to edge, becoming crisper and more affecting.
When you venture outside Apple apps, however, the experience isn’t so improved. Sometimes it’s actually worse than what you had before. Text in third-party web browsers like Chrome and Firefox appears jagged and pixelated because those apps aren’t rendering for retina resolutions.
Although those app developers will issue updates that will address those issues (Google is already doing so with Chrome), it emphasizes how new this screen tech is. Eventually, ultra-high-resolution displays will become more common. But for now the retina MacBook is an outlier, and early adopters will pay the price in non-optimized apps, at least for a while.
There’s one way around that issue, of course: Just stick with Apple apps, which appear to be all retina-ready. iPhoto (see the screenshot below) and Aperture in particular take tremendous advantage of the screen, and if you can bear to browse the web with Safari (and judging by the browser stats for Mashable readers, you can’t), your eyes will be satisfied.
It actually got me surfing with Apple’s browser for more than 5 minutes for the first time in years.
iPhoto-retina-640
It’s worth noting that by default, the retina display scales the screen so everything is the same size as it would be on a regular MacBook Pro. If you really enjoy squinting, though, you can use the streamlined display settings to make more use of your pixels. Everything will appear smaller, but you’ll get more on the screen, and the processor can handle it.

The Power of Pro


That processor, by the way, is an Intel third-generation (Ivy Bridge) quad-core Core i7, with a clock speed of either 2.3 or 2.6GHz (Turbo Boostable to 3.3 or 3.6GHz). It’s augmented by a discrete graphics processor, an Nvidia GeForce GT 650M with 1GB of dedicated memory (the laptop itself comes with 8GB, though you can configure it with 16GB at purchase).
That’s some serious power, but the retina Pro really needs it to drive all those pixels, particularly for graphics-intensive exercises, like video editing.
In addition to the meaty processing power, the new Pro has another performance advantage: a solid-state flash drive for storage. Since the drive doesn’t have moving parts like a hard disk has, the laptop can “lift” data off the drive faster, adding to the speed of the machine.
Just what can you do with that kind of power? We aimed to find out by re-creating a demo that Apple reps showed us: playing four simultaneous full HD video streams in Final Cut Pro X and making live cuts between them.
We made sure all the streams were all uncompressed 1080i files at 60 frames per second, cued them up, then watched for any stuttering or other problems. Check out the results in this video:
In our test, all the clips played just fine in the inspector window, never tripping up as we made rapid-fire cuts between them — an impressive feat. Apple says this is one of the abilities the solid-state drive bestows, and that the retina Pro is the only machine that can play four full-HD clips simultaneously.
The flash drive also speeds things up when copying files, but even better in that regard is the upgrade to USB 3.0. The retina MacBook Pro isn’t alone in getting better USB — all of Apple’s new laptops have it (native support for USB 3.0 comes hand-in-hand with Intel’s Ivy Bridge processors).
Still, it’s a welcome change, as is relocating one of the ports to the right side of the chassis, à la the MacBook Air.

Connectors & More


USB 3.0 and flash storage are a great combo, though its benefits will be best realized with USB 3.0 devices. When I tried offloading a big 3.84GB file from the most common thing users will likely use — a USB thumb drive — it took an 7 minutes, 3 seconds. That was better than the old MacBook Pro, which took almost 10 minutes, but not as awesome as you’d think.
Although the improved USB ports are on all MacBooks now, the retina Pro boasts a connector that isn’t: a full-size HDMI port. This is the first time an Apple laptop has included HDMI, and Apple says it’s because its customers demanded it.
It’s pretty obvious why — to watch video services like Netflix on a big-screen TV. Apple may have been reluctant to include HDMI until now to avoid subverting its own Apple TV box. Could the appearance of HDMI on the retina MacBook signal that Apple isn’t as concerned about that anymore, possibly because it has bigger plans for the living room?
We’ll leave that question unanswered for now, and instead say that the HDMI connection is welcome and worked well upon connection to one of the Sony TVs here at the Mashable offices.
Generally, you’ll probably want to mirror displays when connecting to a TV (see the pic below), though that will letterbox the screen on the pro to a 16:9 ratio while you’re connected.
MacBook Pro HDMI Mirroring
Rounding out the jacks on the new Pro are an SDXC card slot (technically capable of reading cards up to 2TB, though cards have only gotten as big as 128GB) and two Thunderbolt ports — the fastest connector available on Apple gear. Those are where you’ll connect external monitors, drives and those adapters for Ethernet and FireWire, both of which do not appear on this machine.

The MacBook Transformed


Which leads to an important factor: You’ll definitely need some accessories to enjoy the fruits of a full-featured laptop. Besides those adapters, you’ll likely need an external optical drive for the few times you’ll want to read an old CD-ROM or burn a DVD. Be prepared: Your final price tag will likely be more than you thought.
Also, the MagSafe power adapter is a different design from the regular MacBook Pro. Since the retina Pro is so thin, it had to be flattened a little, plus it discards the L-shaped connector on the recent Pros with more conventional plug design that came before it and is still used by the Air. That means older power adapters are incompatible with the new Pro — an important detail if you have an external Apple display that also powers your machine via MagSafe (Apple does sell an adapter, however).
Other changes MacBook Pro veterans will notice: The power button has a new home, right where the Eject button for the DVD drive used to be (no need for that anymore). There are also some curious omissions: First, the rarely-used Audio input is gone — there’s just a solitary headphone jack now. Also absent are the handy battery-status button, its accompanying LEDs, the sleep indicator and the infrared sensor. You sacrifice a lot to have a thin body, apparently. Thankfully the keyboard is still backlit.
You can see some of those absences in the photo below, which shows the MacBook Air, Retina Pro and Pro, all stacked together (more comparisons in the gallery).
MacBook Air, Retina Pro and Pro, Front
The speakers in the retina Pro have clearly been given some vitamins, although users probably won’t notice until they cue up Spotify or iTunes. Listening to Ahead by a Century by the Tragically Hip on both machines, it was easier to pick out the individual voices among the band members on the retina MacBook, and the soundstage felt wider overall, with deeper bass.
Helpfully, the fan is whisper-quiet.

The Return to Apple’s Core


Taking a step back, it’s beautiful to see so much cutting-edge technology put into a laptop: The latest processors, discrete graphics, high-speed connectivity, up to 16GB of RAM, a flash drive that can be as massive as 768GB — and of course that ultra-high-res screen.
Such a package comes with a price: It starts at $2,199, and that’s just with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. It should really be called the MacBook Pro With Retina Screen And An Eye-Popping Price Tag.
You get what you pay for, though, and in this case it’s a ticket to the future. More than even Intel has done with Ultrabooks, Apple has, with the retina MacBook Pro, drawn a dividing line between old laptops and the ones we’ll be using in the coming years.
With retina, it’s effectively obsoleted all of its other laptop designs and given its customers — and competitors — something to aspire to.
Putting the stunning retina display aside, you’ll probably be able to find a Windows machine that can beat it on an individual feature, be it speed, connectivity, convenience or storage. But as a package, nothing offers what this machine does.
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