MacBook Pro review (13-inch, mid-2012) Engadget. Dates sold, processor type, memory info, hard drive details, price and more. Apple MacBook Pro 13-Inch The MacBook Pro Core i7 2.7 13-Inch (Early 2011/Thunderbolt) features a 32.
The details don’t bring any particularly earth-shattering revelations, with 13” retaining the dual-core processor and integrated graphics, while the 15” makes the switch from AMD to Nvidia’s new Kepler-based GT 650M dedicated graphics.īasically, it’s just an Ivy Bridge-infused version of the venerable unibody MacBook Pro chassis that we’ve known and loved for the last few years. Technical specifications for the MacBook Pro 13-Inch 'Core i5' 2.5 Mid-2012.
Macbook pro mid 2012 specs i7 update#Īlong with Ivy Bridge, the 2012 MBP line gets HD 4000 graphics and USB 3.0 across the board, plus a free update to Mountain Lion when it releases later this summer. But is a less headline-worthy computer necessarily a worse one? Naturally, it doesn’t generate the same kind of excitement that the all-new, all-awesome Retina MacBook Pro does. It’s pretty difficult to find things to write about the 2012 MacBook Pro hardware.
You can essentially sum it up in one paragraph, or even one sentence if you try hard enough. The 2012 MBP looks exactly like the 2011 MBP, which looked exactly like the 2010 MBP, which looked exactly like the post-April 2009 MBP. It’s likely to be the last iteration of the original unibody MBP, giving this body style a 4.5 year run as one of the most instantly recognizable notebook computers on the market. I’m not going to go too far in depth with analyzing the design, because we’ve gone over it a few times over the years ( here, here, here, here, here, and here. It’s a solid notebook, that much is certain.