Stylishly and intelligently designed for mobile professionals, Apple’s MacBook Pro now includes Apple’s Multi-Touch technology (which debuted with the MacBook Air), allowing you to pinch, swipe, or rotate to enlarge text, advance through photos, or adjust an image. And it gets a serious speed bump from Intel’s latest 2.4 GHz 45-nanometer Penryn series Core 2 Duo processor, which also helps to reduce power requirements and save on battery life.
Entries Tagged as 'MacBook Pro'
15-inch 2.4 Ghz
August 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
Tags: 15-inch 2.4 GHz
15-inch 2.5 Ghz
August 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
Meticulously designed and encased in sleek and sturdy aluminum, the MacBook Pro measures just 1 inch thin and weighs 5.4 pounds. Your hands have room to spread out on the full-size keyboard with crisp, responsive keys, and the MacBook Pro has a built-in ambient light sensor that adjusts the keyboard and display brightness so it’s easy to work in low-light settings. Other standard Apple "extras" includes a built-in iSight video camera and Apple’s magnetically connected MagSafe power adapter, which safely disconnects when under strain.
Tags: 15-inch 2.5 GHz
17-inch 2.5 Ghz
August 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
It’s pre-loaded with Apple’s Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard operating system, which enables easy backup of your most important data via Time Machine, a redesigned desktop that helps eliminate clutter. It also comes with the iLife ‘08 suite of applications–including iPhoto, iMovie, Garageband, and iTunes–and the newest version of the fast-loading Safari web browser.
Tags: 17-inch 2.5 GHz
MacBook Pro
August 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
The MacBook Pro is the culmination of years of refining hardware and software design to an integrated art, and Apple’s Multi-Touch technology is just the latest innovation to be added to it. The advanced trackpad now allows you to flip through photos, enlarge text, and adjust an image using just your fingers. It also comes with a MagSafe power adapter connector, which offers a magnetic connection instead of a physical one. So, if you happen to trip over a power cord, you won’t send MacBook Pro flying off a table or desk–the cord simply disconnects, without damage to either the cord or the system.
Tags: MacBook Pro
NEW 15 inch MacBook Pro 2.4ghz
November 6th, 2008 · No Comments

Carved from a single block of aluminum, the new MacBook Pro unibody enclosure is slim and streamlined with a soft-brushed surface and stunning contours. But it’s not all about beauty. The unibody also makes MacBook Pro more durable than ever. You can throw it in your briefcase or messenger bag and pull it out at an airport, in a hotel room, or on location without a second thought. So wherever you go, you have everything you need to edit, compose, design, and create.
Tags: NEW 15 inch MacBook Pro 2.4ghz
NEW 15 inch MacBook Pro 2.53ghz
November 6th, 2008 · No Comments
The moment you open your MacBook Pro you’re greeted by glorious, full screen brightness. But that’s only one gleaming quality of the glossy LED-backlit widescreen display. The picture is brilliant and sharp from corner to corner. And anything you view — including the ultrathin display itself — is a spectacular experience. The seamless glass enclosure makes this display stronger and more durable. It’s more power efficient and mercury- and arsenic-free, so it’s greener than ever.
Tags: NEW 15 inch MacBook Pro 2.53ghz
NEW 15 inch MacBook Pro 2.5ghz
November 6th, 2008 · No Comments
The new MacBook Pro reaches a new level of high-speed, high-end game-playing power. Not to mention pure performance for graphics-intensive applications like Aperture and Motion. Use the new NVIDIA GeForce 9400M integrated graphics processor for great everyday performance with up to five hours of battery life.1 Or switch to the discrete NVIDIA 9600M GT graphics processor for the fastest, smoothest, clearest graphics yet.
Tags: NEW 15 inch MacBook Pro 2.5ghz
NEW 17 inch MacBook Pro 2.5ghz
November 6th, 2008 · No Comments
The first thing you might notice — or not notice — is the missing click
button. Now the entire trackpad is the button, so you can click
anywhere. Without a separate button, your hands have 39 percent more
room to move on the large, silky glass surface. Use two fingers to
scroll up and down a page. Pinch to zoom in and out. Rotate an image
with your fingertips. Swipe with three fingers to flip through your
photo libraries. Swipe with four fingers to show your desktop, view all
open windows, or switch applications. If you’re coming from a
right-click world, you can right-click with two fingers or configure a
right-click area on the trackpad. The more you use the Multi-Touch
trackpad, the more you’ll wonder what you ever did without it.


