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From the aluminum unibody to the LED-backlit display, MacBook Pro has been precision engineered down to the smallest detail.
To build something truly different, you need to work in a truly different way. Apple designers and engineers work together through every stage of product development. It’s a partnership that makes innovation possible. And it’s exactly how the new MacBook Pro was created. With its breakthrough unibody enclosure, industry-first features, and environmentally sound design, it’s a revolution in the way notebooks are made.Until now, all notebooks were designed the same way. By assembling multiple pieces to create a single enclosure. But once you include all the necessary parts, you add size, weight, complexity, and more opportunities for failure. Solving a problem like this required more than an incremental change. It required a breakthrough. To create the new MacBook Pro, the design and engineering teams devised a way to replace many parts with just one. That one part is called the unibody — a seamless enclosure carved from a single piece of aluminum. Of course, building only one part creates its own set of challenges. When you have multiple parts that are fastened together, tolerances don’t need to be perfect. You have wiggle room, both literally and figuratively. But when one part is responsible for many functions, it’s critical to manufacture that part with absolute precision, down to the micron. Every time. Millions of times over. There was only one way to achieve this level of precision: mill the unibody from a solid block of aluminum using computer numerical control, or CNC, machines — the kind used by the aerospace industry to build mission-critical spacecraft components.When you pick up a new MacBook Pro, you immediately notice the difference. The entire enclosure is thinner and lighter. It looks polished and refined. And it feels strong and durable — perfect for life inside (and outside) your briefcase or backpack.
The marriage of electronics and mechanical design makes the new MacBook Pro as advanced on the inside as it is on the outside. The internal architecture has been reengineered from the silicon up. There’s a new logic board. A new chipset. And a new graphics architecture — a feat of engineering in itself.
Many notebook computers sacrifice graphics performance in order to save battery life. The new MacBook Pro offers the best of both worlds, thanks to not one, but two separate graphics processors.
The GeForce 9600M GT processor is the discrete graphics powerhouse. The GeForce 9400M processor is the integrated power saver. And depending on how much performance or battery life you need, you can switch between them easily.
Because Apple designs both the hardware and the software for the new MacBook Pro, it’s easier to improve things like energy efficiency. Software tells the hard drive to spin down when it’s not in use. It tells the display and battery indicator lights to dim in low-light conditions. And it helps decide whether the CPU or the graphics processor would be best suited to the task at hand. That’s the kind of smart, integrated design that sets MacBook Pro apart from other notebooks.
Tags: Absolute Precision, Aerospace Industry, Aluminum, Backlit Display, Breakthrough, Challenges, Cnc Machines, Complexity, Computer Numerical Control, Designers, Enclosure Industry, Failure, Incremental Change, Micron, New Macbook Pro, Notebooks, Spacecraft Components, Time Millions, Unibody, Wiggle Room
3 Responses to “Introdcing the new 15-inch macbook pro.”
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November 11th, 2008 at 1:05 am
Thanks for puting the great info on my site …….
November 11th, 2008 at 1:13 am
your welcome mate.
i need to order some 10 phones o so
whats your email?
November 11th, 2008 at 1:15 am
Tony@newiphonetoday.com