![]() The separated keys give a nice soft typing action which is responsive and a pleasure to use, although we are starting to hear of keys that detach and need to be replaced: not something that we've experienced ourselves, but perhaps something that will be addressed in future updates. The seamless deck and neat cut-outs for the various ports and connectors give a premium finish that other manufacturers just don't achieve. The unibody MacBook Pro is an excellent design, it not only gains the durability boost of an aluminium construction, but it looks fantastic too and is without doubt one of the best looking notebooks money can buy. ![]() Technically the two models are very similar, although the higher-spec model has a noticeably faster pace, skipping through tasks, hopping ahead of its slower brother as you'd expect. The 13-inch MacBook Pro range comes in two guises (excluding the white version), a 2.26GHz model, packing in 2GB RAM and 160GB hard drive at £899 and the 2.53GHz, 4GB, 250GB version on test here, which will set you back a not unsubstantial £1149. It is the second iteration of Apple's unibody MacBook and brings with it a few changes. (Pocket-lint) - Apple announced the update to their MacBook line-up in June, and here we have the 13-inch model, which takes on the "Pro" moniker previously applied to its bigger brothers.
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