
The Apple rumour mill continues to churn with a new report saying it
will extend its high-resolution Retina Display to MacBook Pros.“Apple is
likely to launch its new MacBook Pro lineup with a display resolution
of 2880 by 1800 in the second quarter of 2012,” read the 14 December
piece in the Taiwanese publication DigiTimes, which quoted unnamed
sources in the supply chain for its information.“While the prevailing
MacBook models have displays with resolutions ranging from 1680 by 1050
to 1280 by 800, the ultra-high resolution for the MacBook Pro will
further differentiate Apple’s products.”Retina Display Apple’s Retina
Display first appeared as part of the iPhone 4, then spread to the iPod
Touch. Current rumours suggest that the next version of the iPad could
feature a Retina Display-caliber screen, although Apple will almost
certainly decline to confirm this before an official unveiling.Apple’s
innovations in its mobile products have a habit of finding their way
into the company’s Macs. Apple recently launched the Mac App Store, an
apps storefront modelled after the highly successful one for iOS. Its
laptops have become progressively thinner and lighter, their software
more reliant on the cloud, to the point where they feel more like
offshoots of Apple’s mobile efforts.In that spirit, a higher resolution
screen leaping from iPhones to MacBooks would seem totally reasonable.
As with the iPad 3, though, Apple will surely keep a feature like that
under wraps until it wants it revealed.MacBook Pro Apple’s last MacBook
Pro refresh offered Intel’s 2nd Generation “Sandy Bridge” processors,
including the option of the quad-core Core i7 for certain models.In
benchmark testing, eWEEK found the current version of the Pro notably
faster than its predecessors. It also included Thunderbolt technology,
for data-transfer rates between peripherals of up to 10 Gbps.Mac OS X
continues to hold a relatively small portion of the overall operating
system market, which is overwhelmingly dominated by Microsoft’s Windows.
In mobility, though, Apple continues to maintain a sizable presence:
its iOS is currently battling Google Android for the lion’s share of the
smartphone market, and the iPad thoroughly dominates tablets.
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