Seriously? This is a $200 upgrade to a Dell or Lenovo laptop and with their current gen chips and support for more ram it will run circles around the Mac. To me that is a really poor argument. Apple soldered in the SSD and RAM so you can't even upgrade it to a better or more recent SSD as they come out. Not to mention I can't even upgrade the RAM as demands and applications change. Yet we pay a hefty premium for the Apple Macbook, way more then the $200 or so upgrading to a quality SSD would cost you.
Don't get me wrong, I work daily on a Macbook Pro, but I think it is likely limited unless Apple takes the Macbooks seriously. I understand that most people don't need more then 16Gb of Ram daily, but running VM's and IDE's etc can eat through RAM pretty fast, so having 32Gb would really be nice. Apple used to lead the pack when it came to this stuff, now they trail. That is I guess what is mainly just disappointing.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 9.4 ms ] threadhttp://semiaccurate.com/2016/11/15/apple-maintains-ux-domina...
and a 2007 machine with an SSD will run rings around a brand-new machine that is dragged down by an HDD.
No computer manufacturer has done a good job at convincing consumers of the value of SSDs.
Don't get me wrong, I work daily on a Macbook Pro, but I think it is likely limited unless Apple takes the Macbooks seriously. I understand that most people don't need more then 16Gb of Ram daily, but running VM's and IDE's etc can eat through RAM pretty fast, so having 32Gb would really be nice. Apple used to lead the pack when it came to this stuff, now they trail. That is I guess what is mainly just disappointing.