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Issue link: https://digital.macdirectory.com/i/75051
FEATURE
IWARDS UPDATE >SUMMER 2012 WORDS BY BILL TROOP
heavily in innovative engineering to achieve capabilities never before contemplated in a laptop display.
Trouble in Paradise?
The MBR's resolution is 2880x1800. From higher res we expect smoother images once we crank up the default zoom factor in the OS and our favorite apps. That's what we're used to doing when we move to higher resolution. Yet apparently the MBR defaults to a 'Best for Retina' resolution of just 1440x900, same as the non-Retina version.
The MacBook Retina
The weeks leading up to June 11 were hot with rumors that Apple was going to add USB 3 and a Retina display to at least one new laptop. Meanwhile, months before, MacDi
rectoryhad gone out on a limb and
published predictions that, mercifully, were right. We absolutely swear we had no inside information. All the new MacBooks have USB 3, and the 15-inch MacBook has an optional Retina display, for a reasonable $400 over the base price. This is the technology product for 2012 — so far. Nothing like 2880x1800 resolution has ever been seen in a 15-inch laptop before. That's 220 dpi or four times the pixels of the new non-Retina Macbook, which has 1440x900.
The Macbook Pro with Retina Display also marks a step forward in Apple's approach to resolution. Until recently, Apple didn't seem that interested in high resolution. In 2000, Dell made history with a 1600x1200 15-inch (133 dpi) laptop, a feat Apple took many years to match. This is the first time Apple has raised the resolution bar before anyone else in the laptop industry. The screen is the best, brightest and smoothest that has yet appeared in a laptop. Moreover, as we now know, Apple hasn't just plugged a high-res screen into a laptop — anyone could do that. As we'll see below, Apple has invested
A lot of confusing things are happening here, and it turns out that Apple scaled some pretty phenomenal heights of engineering to obtain the best possible display experience for
users today by downscaling some parts of some apps (to keep them large enough to see comfortably), while allowing others to work at the LCD's native resolution.
As we all know, downscaling is supposed to be bad. But Apple has gone way beyond anything we have recognized in the past as scaling. I think I can safely say that Apple has put more ingenious engineering into this product than has ever been seen in a laptop before. To date,it is certainly Apple's finest product. For a detailed explanation, you can't do better than look at the exemplary coverage over at anandtech.com. There are hits and misses. For example, iLife looks great and iWorks doesn't. Safari looks great and Chrome looks fuzzy, though by the time you read this, that should have been fixed. A year from now, probably every anomaly will have been fixed. Even so, for now, this is the laptop to have. If, however, you have a legacy application of overwhelming importance that you want to run on the Retina, it may be prudent to test drive it first. Oh, and one more thing:
Enough external monitors for you?
The brilliant folks at Other World Computing