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Is The Retina Display Macbook Pro Really Worth It

Is retina display worth it for macbook pro?

If your not doing video or photos I don't think it's worth it! Just my thought!

Oh and check out your nearest Mac User Group!
http://www.apple.com/usergroups/

@Zac. It's actually better than HD! HD only has to be 720 pixels vertical! hence 720p! Retina is much higher than that!

MacBook Pro with Retina Display -- 8GB memory or 16GB memory?

I do a lot of video editing, but nothing too hard core. I have Adobe Premiere Elements on my iMac with 4GB of memory and it crashes a lot.

I'm debating whether or not to upgrade to the 16GB memory for $200...any thoughts or experiences? Is it worth it or not?

Should I buy a MacBook Pro with or without the Retina display?

In virtually all ways—not just the screen, but also the weight, battery life, storage speed, RAM size, and CPU speed—the Retina is a much better computer than the non-retina Pro. If you're put off by the retina Pro's price tag, you should be looking at the Air line, which will at least match, and frequently exceed, the non-retina Pro's real-world performance while being smaller and lighter. (Don't be fooled by the lack of "Pro" in the name—a well-specced Air is a capable photo editing machine, although the retina Pro's display will show your photos in greater detail.)The non-retina MacBook Pro is best understood as a legacy model. It's for people who have a specific need for a technology that the more modern MacBooks have left behind, like the built-in DVD burner, the large-but-slow mechanical hard drive, or the FireWire or Ethernet ports. (Of course, you can plug a USB or Thunderbolt DVD burner, hard drive, or FireWire or Ethernet adapter into any MacBook, but if you use them all the time, you may find that inconvenient.) For almost any other use, one of the other models will work better.

Is the Macbook Pro with retina display really that much better and worth buying over the regular MacBook Pro?

When Apple talks about a Retina display it's not referring to a worldwide standard or a set of specifications. It's actually just a marketing term, and it simply means that the screen has sufficient pixel density, so that when you look at it normally, you can't make out all the individual pixels. The Retina display is the best screen you'll find on any device, and the difference it makes is dramatic. It's like upgrading from dot matrix printers to laser ones, or from VHS to DVD. Once you've seen it, you'll want it!For more details, please see: http://www.macworld.co.uk/featur...

Macbook Pro with Retina Display.......Need opinions?

I am a pc user and have been for fifteen years.........however, I have been through 3 laptops in the past 4 years due to viruses attacking my system, harddrive stops working for no reason, and oh I had to return one pc because It was unresponsive right out of the box. My question is, is a MacBook pro worth the money? it looks like a nice computer. I do have a few questions that need answered
Is the display truly hd? I'm a college student so this is frustrating
is Microsoft office available for macs?
how long do macs usually last?
does it get many viruses?
Thanks for the help ;-)

Is it worth the extra $300 - $400 to buy the MacBook Pro with Retina Display instead of the updated 15-inch MacBook Pro?

Advantages of the MacBook Pro with Retina Display (MBPR):Slimmer and lighter: This can't be understated if you commute a lot with your laptop. This 15.4 inch laptop weighs less than the 13 inch Macbook Pro.Faster than the default HDD which come with the standard MBP, as the MBPR's use Flash storage. The standard MBP's come with HDD's and CAN be upgraded to a similarly spec'd SSD, but it will cost anywhere between $200-$250 if you buy and install yourself or $500 if you get that option through Apple. (Prices based on 256 GB option)Better display8GB standard, upgradeable to 16 GB of memory (although I believe the old MacBook Pro's can be upgradeable to 16 GBs despite the Apple site saying it's maximum 8 GB). Not too shabby considering most laptops come with a standard 4 GB of RAM.Disadvantages:Cannot upgrade hard drive and memory: I believe these components are soldered on. So for most laymen, I don't think they'd be able to install upgraded parts as easily as the old Macbook Pro. So if you are thinking of buying the cheaper MBPR and upgrading in a few years when prices of SSD/RAM drop, you won't be able to do it.More expensive: As of now, it's $400 to get a better screen and slimness, along with a flash hard drive. To a lot of people who just want an Apple laptop for home browsing, writing, and maybe simple photo editing, the new features might not be enough of a noticeable upgrade to justify that much extra dollars.Additional considerations;The potential disadvantage to both is that neither natively support 1920 by 1200, a resolution that some other laptops on the market have. The Retina display can scale to 1920 by 1200 but I'm still uncertain how well that will look, especially since it's native (and probably best) resolution is 2880 by 1800, effectively double the 1440 by 900 resolution of the standard MBP displays. This isn't a deal-breaker but one consideration worth noting especially with the cost.With the MBPR, you cannot get hard drives larger than 256 GB without going with the highest priced option. For me, I'm most likely to get the most expensive MBPR because of the hard drive offering rather than the processing speed (which is a negligible .3 GHZ difference)

My dad broke my macbook pro with retina display?? Please help?

Ok my brother came down from New Jersey, and he bought me a 13 inch macbook pro with retina display, and he wanted to buy it for me and he spent $1,800! Then I came home with it and set it up, and I loved the display and the design! 3 hours later, my dad wanted to watch Hulu on it, because his laptop needed to be restored, because he hit a virus. I told him nicely to wait a minute, because I was doing photoshop on it, and 5 minutes later my dad said: Hurry up! Then I said "ok" 2 minutes later he stomped in my room and said: No Computer for an hour! Then he slammed it shut!! Then he came in to my room and said: "Take your laptop!!" Then I opened it up the screen was all shattered!! I almost cut myself, because a little bit of glass was on the keyboard. Why would my dad do that!! I'm really upset, I was trying to do photoshop for my science protect!! And it was the perfect laptop to do photoshop! The screen is all ruined, and I can't see a thing. Everything else works, but the screen! It still turns on, but it shows cracks, and damaged pixels! How can I fix this? I don't have any external monitors to finish my work! Right now I'm on my iPod and that's the only thing I can use right now! He did slam it pretty hard and how can I talk to him? He just wanted to see a new movie! He's fired up for nothing and I did tell him what I was working on! Please help!

Is there a big difference between the retina display MacBook and the regular MacBook?

I would yesRetina Macbook Pro:Weight: 4.46 lbs.(Will feel a lot lighter when you actually carry it around.)Dimension: 0.71" H x 14.13" W x 9.73" DResolution: 2880 by 1800 pixels (Retina), IPS technology. if you are using a non-retina macbook pro you feel that your screen is good enough, But if you look at a retina display for a while you will realise there is pixel on the non-retina macbook.Optical Drive:noneCome with SSD Only, a lot faster for boot upNon-Retina Macbook Pro:Weight: 5.6 lbs.Dimension: 0.95" H x 14.35" W x 9.82" DResolution: 1680 by 1050 (native), Non-IPSOptical Drive: YesCome with SSD or HDD

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