A standout amongst the most well-known messages I get from CNET perusers is a minor departure from: "When will item X get upgraded?" And, as a rule, the item being referred to is one of Apple's MacBook portable PCs.
With their unmistakable aluminum bodies and (some of the time) gleaming Apple logos, MacBooks are a well known sight all around individuals figure on the go, from coffeehouses to air terminals to school grounds.
In any case, in the event that it feels like you've been seeing the same MacBooks skimming around for some time, you'd be right. The present cycles of most MacBooks have been around for more than numerous contending tablet lines, and the solitary non-retina-show 13-inch MacBook Pro is still discounted in 2016 with the same essential setup it's had subsequent to 2012. (Yes, Apple still offers a PC with a DVD drive.)
That is an exception, however it's symbolic of a bigger issue: The pace of outline development on the Mac stage has impeded extensively. The last genuinely new model was the 12-inch MacBook in 2015. Macintosh's different portable workstations, the MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro, haven't seen something besides minor spec knocks - stuff like fresher Intel chips, speedier Wi-Fi, more memory - in the previous quite a long while. Indeed, the main "new" Mac in 2016 has been the invigorated variant of that 12-inch MacBook - once more, only a speedier chip dropped into a year ago's body.
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