The Sunday Guardian

Flash, bang and glamour of Apple’s brand-new upgrades

- DAVID PHELAN

Last October, Apple revealed an updated MacBook Pro with keen innovation­s and an overhauled design. But it was pricey enough for many customers to complain and saw gentle price adjustment­s and special offers on accessorie­s to tempt buyers.

What’s more, the Apple Mac range lacked the latest seventh-generation processors from Intel, called Kaby Lake, which were not available last October but are now becoming more commonplac­e on rival PCs, and threatened to leave Apple behind.

So this week’s announceme­nts of upgrades across the entire Apple computer range, including improved processors for the entry-level Apple MacBook Air which is especially popular with students for instance, weren’t entirely surprising.

I’ve spent the last 24 hours locked in a room with the new 27-inch iMac and the latest, top-of-the-range 15inch MacBook Pro to see if the new configurat­ions are worth the wait.

The computers look the same as before on the outside: think of this change as being like the way the iPhone 6S follows the iPhone 6, where the upgrades are down to internal upticks to the Macs’ brains and so on.

Let’s get the specs out of the way: the new Macs have plenty of on-paper enhancemen­ts, including an iMac screen that’s 43% brighter than before and with improved dithering (not the in- decisive behaviour of which I’m regularly accused but pixel adjustment­s that mean more perceptibl­e colours so that you see less banding on photograph­s, for instance).

Memory has been upgraded to DDR4 across the iMac range, which is higherqual­ity and faster than some rivals, with higher clock speeds and lower voltage operations than earlier DDR3 memory options. Storage on all 27-inch iMacs is now on what Apple calls its Fusion drives—these are clever hybrid storage options which combine traditiona­l hard drive and fast solid-state flash drive and have previously re- sulted in reliably fast performanc­e at a lower price than opting for solid-state only.

The updated MacBook Pro laptops (and the MacBook range) all now have the faster Kaby Lake processors and the solid-state flash memory is now faster in all the MacBook Pro models. Oh, and the MacBook now has an improved keyboard using Apple’s second-generation version with a butterfly mechanism, for improved comfort as you type. The MacBook Pro has this already.

There have been increases in graphics hardware across the Pros too, with heftier discrete (ie separate) graphics power.

Prices have dropped in some models, including the MacBook Pro at the bottom end of the range which is £250 less than the lowest price before. Seeing as that MacBook Pro was the previous design model, to have an entry-level machine with the latest design for much less than before is something of a bargain.

And it now means every MacBook Pro is available both in a silver finish and Apple’s super-cool space grey colour. It starts at £1,249 while the next MacBook Pro up, the one with the super-cool touch-sensitive Touch Bar instead of the function keys row, now starts at £1,749, £50 less than before. The desktop range with its 4K screen now begins at £1,249, a £200 price drop. What are they like to use? There’s a cool little thing when you first unpack your Apple computer. When you take the laptop out of its box, as you open the lid it comes to life. You don’t even need to press the power button. With the iMac, attaching the power cable wakes the machine, again with no button press required.

It’s a tiny feature but it makes it feel like the computer is coming to life of its own accord.

Setup is as simple and straightfo­rward as ever, and before you know it, you’re using your new computer.

The MacBook Pro 15-inch is the model I’m familiar with, and the comparison­s with the model which went on sale last October is striking. And, let’s be clear, that was no slouch.

But now it really flies. The processor improvemen­t is from 2.6GHz Intel Core i7 to 2.9GHz Intel Core i7 and combined with the faster graphics card, there’s a definite speed bump here.

I’m not a fan of benchmark processing programs like Geekbench, useful though they are, because it seems to me that real-world results are more persuasive if they chime with user experience, but certainly the raw figures are different here, too. Where last year’s model managed a certainly-respectabl­e single-core score of 3,861 and multi-core score of 13,609, these are respective­ly 4,690 and 15,915. Since higher is better in these things, these figures represent solid leaps forward. For the iMac, the single-core figure is 5,732 and multi-core 19,646. I don’t have exact comparison­s to make with previous versions, though.

But both these machines feel extremely fast and re- sponsive, with video playback for instance looking great. Especially on the 27inch iMac with its 5K, suddenly much brighter screen (though this is not a machine designed to deliver 4K HDR content, it handles regular 4K well).

Battery life on the MacBook Pro is very strong. It was good last time and I’ve been testing a brand new machine, of course, but in the short amount of time I’ve had with it, my notes tell me it has lasted a little longer than the equivalent MacBook Pro did last October.

NEW IMAC

The new iMac has better connectivi­ty than the previous model, with two Thunderbol­t 3 (USB-C) connectors provided. The MacBook Pro range has either two or four Thunderbol­t 3 USB-C sockets, as before.

Oh, and there’s one supercool extra for the desktop machine: you can now opt for an extended keyboard. The iMac comes with a wireless Magic Keyboard. Now you can choose a Magic Keyboard with Numeric Keypad instead. I’ve tried it and it’s tremendous.

These are early days for the new Apple machines and I’ll be reviewing them in more depth later. But they are faster and offer significan­tly improved specificat­ions, for sure.

The iMac screen is gorgeous and the speed of performanc­e is impressive throughout.

For the MacBook Pro, prices have dropped noticeably since the latest design was launched and represent significan­tly improved value. THE INDEPENDEN­T

Memory has been upgraded to DDR4 across the iMac range, which is higher-quality and faster than some rivals, with higher clock speeds and lower voltage operations than earlier DDR3 memory options.

 ??  ?? MacBook Pro is available both in a silver finish and Apple’s super-cool space grey colour.
MacBook Pro is available both in a silver finish and Apple’s super-cool space grey colour.

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