The New MacBook Pro: The ultimate good news/bad news story

Who doesn’t love a good news/bad news joke? You know, like the one on the Roman galleon ship: “Gentlemen,” says the whip master to the galley slaves, “I have good news and bad news. The good news: For the first time in a year, you all get a change of underwear!” The rowers cheer. “The bad news is: Julian, you trade with Cato. Cornelius, you trade with Drusa…”

Apple’s new laptop, called the MacBook Pro, is also a good news/bad news story.

Which do you want to hear first?

The MacBook Pro is ready to go.
The MacBook Pro is ready to go.

The good news

OK, here it is. The new flagship laptops from Apple (AAPL), available in 13- and 15-inch screen sizes and a choice of aluminum colors, are thinner (0.6 inches), lighter (3 and 4 pounds), and faster than ever before. They’re not tapered like the MacBook Air, but they’re thinner than the Air was at its thickest part.

The thick part of the MacBook Air is actually thicker than the new MacBook Pro.
The thick part of the MacBook Air is actually thicker than the new MacBook Pro.

That’s right, “was.” The existing MacBook Air will remain available for awhile, but there won’t be any more models. Told you this was good news/bad news.

The MacBook Pro screen is a masterpiece. It’s so bright, it could light up a runway. It’s a Retina screen (resolution so high, you can’t see the pixels), which is something MacBook Air fans have waited for forever. The color is spectacular. You will love this screen.

Especially because Apple has shaved away most of the margin around it. As a result, this laptop is actually about an inch smaller in each dimension than the Air, despite having the same size screen.

The screen sizes are the same, but the newer laptop is smaller all over.
The screen sizes are the same, but the newer laptop is smaller all over.

The new MacBooks are very fast; as you can see in my video above, they demolish the wait times on the equivalent MacBook Airs.

The trackpad is huge, which makes a difference when, for example, you’re painting in Photoshop or pinching to zoom out. The speakers are more powerful and sound great. Battery life is 8 to 10 hours, somewhat less than in previous models.

The keys are very flat and don’t travel much at all. I actually dig it—I can really fly when I type—but lots of people hate it, at least initially. Try before you buy.

The Touch Bar

The star feature of the new laptops, though, is the Touch Bar.

Above the keyboard, where the function keys (F1, F2, F3…) once sat, there’s a colorful, half-inch–tall, Retina, 2170×60 pixel, OLED touch screen. It can display whatever programmers want: buttons for functions you might need right now, a rainbow of color selections, or a timeline of the video you’re editing. The Touch Bar is designed to give you quick access to commands and features that are usually hidden in menus—but now you don’t have to memorize keystrokes to trigger them.

The Touch Bar replaces the F-keys.
The Touch Bar replaces the F-keys.

The controls here change according to what you’re doing at this moment—what program you’re using, and what function within that program.