- So earlier this week
Apple announced this thing right here,
this is the new 13-inch MacBook Pro.
It's not 14 inches like
we were maybe hoping
but it does have the new Magic Keyboard,
which is very good news 'cause
you can actually type on it.
There are two models of
this thing, basically,
there is the lower-end model
with two Thunderbolt ports
and then there is the higher-end model
that has four Thunderbolt ports
and it also has the 10th Gen processors,
which are the newer processors.
And the main difference there
that you probably want to pay attention to
is graphics performance,
but there's a bunch of
other stuff to look at
with this thing and so we're
obviously gonna do that.
I haven't done an unboxing
in a while, it's kind of fun.
It's all the standard stuff,
a cable, some materials,
some stickers in there,
a charger, this lovely,
not bad.
So here it is,
(pulsing music)
and the main things to notice are that
it looks exactly like the last MacBook.
The differences here, of course,
are there is a real Escape key,
a real inverted-T arrow key set
and the Magic Keyboard.
Physically, we're looking
at the same stuff,
there's the same three-microphone array,
there's the same gigantic Magic Trackpad.
It is the exact same
13-point inch, 13-point inch?
It's the exact same--
- Choose the main language.
- Hey.
- Press the Return key.
- How's it going?
(funky music)
Okay, so the computer's finally set up,
let's actually talk about this machine.
Actually, machines, like I was saying,
there's two models of the
2020 MacBook Pro 13-inch.
The base model has two
Thunderbolt ports instead of four
and it also has Intel's
8th generation processor,
not the newest one.
This model is the step up, it costs 1,799,
it has Intel's 10th Gen Core i5 processor,
it also has faster RAM,
it's 3,733 megahertz,
and it has 16 gigs of that
RAM plus 512 of storage.
You can upgrade this up to 32 gigs of RAM
and a full four terabytes
of storage if you want to,
which is a lot for a 13-inch machine.
Now, looking at this machine,
it looks precisely like
a 13-inch MacBook Pro,
like what it's looked like for years,
and I was mentioning that I
was hoping from the rumors
for a 14-inch screen but
that's not what we got here.
Now, on the 16-inch
version of the MacBook Pro
they did manage to reduce the bezels
and make the screen look bigger.
They also managed to
give it better speakers
and studio microphones.
These speakers and the
three-micro array here
are exactly the same but they're very good
so I'm really not complaining about it.
(upbeat music)
But you know, the bezels are the same,
they're small but fine.
This screen gets up to 500 nits,
it has a wide P3 color gamut,
and it has the same 720p webcam,
there it is.
So I know I've been saying that this
is the exact same MacBook
Pro that we've seen
for the past two, three,
four years or whatever
but it actually is just a
tiny, tiny bit different.
So I'm gonna grab my 2017
13-inch MacBook Pro here
and looking at it from the camera,
they seem completely identical, right?
But there is a little bit of a difference,
so I can see, right here, I
can run my fingernail along
and notice that the 2020 version
is just a little bit thicker,
I think it's 0.61 inches versus 0.59.
It's also just a little bit heavier,
it's 3.1 pounds instead of like 3.02.
And the reason for that
extra thickness is,
what you've been waiting
for, the new Magic Keyboard
instead of the old butterfly keyboard
and, I gotta tell you, it's great.
Not only do we have that Escape key
and the inverted Ts that I mentioned,
it also just feels better,
of course it's more reliable,
and it also sounds better.
So this is the 2017 version.
It sounds terrible, it feels terrible,
my End key doesn't work, ha.
And here is the 2020 version.
It sounds good, it feels good,
I trust that it's not going to break
because it's a classic scissor switch,
just a huge upgrade all around.
Now, Apple says that they
did more than just take
their old, old keyboards and
slap it into this computer,
they say that they've done work
to make the entire key cap more stable
so that when you push on a corner
it pushes down flatly and evenly
instead of having a little wobble to it.
I guess I can feel that,
and the key travel isn't quite as large
as you might be used to from
the very old classic MacBooks
but it's still good and it's way better
than the butterfly keyboard.
I'm very, very happy
that after five years,
Apple finally gave up
on butterfly keyboards
and gave us the scissor
switches that we know and love.
Now if all Apple had done
was gotten rid of the butterfly keyboard
and given us the Magic Keyboard
I probably wouldn't complain,
but they also gave us this
new processor to test out.
It is, again, the 10th generation
of Intel's Core series,
this is the Core i5, and that's important
'cause it's a little bit faster
and it also might have better longevity
'cause it'll just last longer.
And also it doesn't have
WiFi 6 for some reason,
I don't know what the deal is there,
WiFi performance here is fine.
But the bottom line is
the biggest deal is that
it has better graphics associated with it,
it has Intel's Iris Plus graphics
and that could be a
really big deal for you,
depending on your workflow.
See, one thing we know about Macs
is that some software takes
huge advantage of the GPU,
stuff like Apple's Final Cut,
and other software, not so much,
which is, you know, Adobe
Premiere Pro which is what we use.
So we have a video that
we've actually published,
it's the Duo hands-on,
it's five and a half
minutes, it's 4K, H.264,
and normally we do this
export off an external SSD
but I can't access it because
I'm in home isolation,
so this is off the internal SSD,
so it's not a perfectly
scientific apples to apples test
but I do think it's useful.
And this 2020 MacBook Pro, the 13-inch,
got it done in 11:26 so
actually pretty fast,
pretty impressive, and
pretty good thermals on it.
Apple says they didn't
significantly change
the thermals on it and
we know that, in general,
MacBook thermals can't quite cool
quite as well as Windows machines,
but I am more impressed
than I expected here.
Now a question I've gotten a lot
is should you get the MacBook
Air or the MacBook Pro?
It's actually more complicated than that,
should you get the MacBook
Air, or the base MacBook Pro
or this 10th generation
Intel processor MacBook Pro
and here's kind of where I land on it.
If you just want thin and
light, you just want a Mac,
you're not worried about power,
you would be very happy with the Air,
it is a very good default MacBook.
If you want a little bit more power
but you're not worried about
graphics processing power,
you could probably be okay
with the base MacBook Pro.
If you think you need that GPU though
or you just want the best thing,
get the 13-inch MacBook Pro,
so far I'm really impressed with it.
You're gonna want to see other benchmarks
beyond just our one little Premiere export
to see if it can actually
handle the software that you use
but my hunch is that it's
gonna be pretty good.
Look, the bottom line here
is that the era of the butterfly keyboard
in Apple's laptop lineup is finally dead.
In the space of six
months they have refreshed
all of their laptops to
this new Magic Keyboard.
I wish it hadn't taken five years to do it
but I am so glad that they finally have.
Oh, the closet's open.
Alix, it wasn't recording that whole time.
Life is pain.
