![]() “The second new toy is, of course, the Touch Bar. ![]() “It’s fantastic having Touch ID on a Mac… Logging-in just by touching the power button is great, and likewise being able to do things like unlock notes by fingerprint – just as you do on iOS devices – feels long overdue,” Lovejoy writes. But for all its slimness, it doesn’t feel remotely flimsy: the build quality feels absolutely rock solid.” This one feels portable enough that having a separate MacBook Air now feels like overkill. “I said before that I think I may be able to switch from two Macs to just one. It’s also significantly lighter,” Lovejoy writes. “The base unit is much thinner, and the lid is almost unbelievably so. ![]() And in my case, I’m also moving from a 17-inch machine to a 15-inch one.” The new machine is smaller, slimmer and sleeker either way, but the difference is of course much more dramatic from a pre-2012 model. “Impressions of the form factor will obviously vary depending on whether you’re coming from a pre-Retina machine – as I was – or a later one. “Having got my maxed-out 15-inch 2016 MacBook Pro set up yesterday, I’ve now been using it for a total of around 12 hours – so I’m calling this one my first real-life usage impressions,” Ben Lovejoy writes for 9to5Mac.
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