Recommended Posts

Unless your bent on playing Doom 3, I have not noticed a single situation where the Macbook lags on video.

what about watching HD trailers?

what about watching a dvd and switching between a playing dvd and msn messenger?

what about photoshop performance?

and what games will run and look half descent on onboard video?

not trying to knock the macbook here, just dont understand why they couldnt have gone with a descent ati or nvidia card!

how many MB is the intel onboard video?

Granted, I don't own a Macbook (yet) but I have done some research into it.

As far as the HD Trailers, the macbook supposedly plays them flawlessly

Photoshop performance will be slow until they release the next version (prob. CS3, which will be universal)

Not sure about the watching dvd and switching to messenger

And the games are something I'm wondering too.

And I too don't understand why they couldn't put a dedicated graphics card in... The integrated graphics is what has been holding me back from buying one...

Hope this helps somewhat.

And Dazzla, if you could do some gaming benchmarks if you get the chance that'd be great. If not that's cool too, your review has already helped me alot.

...the slow loading superdrive...
Don't you mean slot loading SuperDrive? :p

That was honestly the best review I've read on Neowin - the pictures, the videos, the great descriptions - thanks a lot Dazzla. Have you tried using any Adobe apps under Rosetta, like Dreamweaver or Photoshop? I'd really appreciate some comments on them if you don't mind.

Again, great review. (Y)

And I too don't understand why they couldn't put a dedicated graphics card in... The integrated graphics is what has been holding me back from buying one...

Don't most discrete notebook graphics processors require additional space for the rest of the graphics board and a fan? I suspect that by adding a discrete video card, the thickness would have been increased considerably, percentage wise.

It's probably a heat and battery consideration as well, for having integrated graphics.

I own a MacBook and 720p HD content plays just fine. I haven't tried 1080 yet and I don't plan on doing so. 480 is enough for me but I was just mucking around with 720p and it was fine.

It is a 64MB onboard video chip with 16MB buffer I believe, so 80MB but I have heard it can be as high as 224MB, but I think Apple have just left it at 80MB. I don't play games or do anything graphically intensive so it is perfect for my uni needs.

Dazzla, I know what you mean about having to use Windows and wanting to use OS X. Thank goodness at work the app I use 90% of the time is IE for the company intranet. The other 10% is an app that takes the form of a DOS menu (ugly! but is extremely efficient I hate to say).

Also, to go back a space like you do on a Windows PC by pressing the backspace, just hold the FN key and press the Del button. See the thing about Apple, is they are all about the consolidation of functions. Just like to go to the end of what you are typing you just hold command and press the right arrow key. Same goes for home (but instead press the left arrow key). And now that the new trackpads have easy right clicking, Windows users have less to complain about in OS X and an easier time transitioning to it.

Also, of note, the integrated graphics in the MacBook are superior to the Nvidia GPU in the 12" PowerBook (which I have). And that chip will run Quartz Extreme just fine and a host of 3D games to boot. But, if you want to run the latest games, buy a MacBook Pro. That's why they made it better and more expensive.

Oh and Dazzla, Thanks for another great review. They are so good I read them even when I don't ever plan on buying what you're reviewing! I Love the pictures and footage which rounds out you're reviews; don't ever stop including them.

I also, wanted to exlaim about the speed at which Safari loads. I can see why you noted and included footage of it. For those who don't know, Safari wasn't already open. What you saw was OS X loading Safari not just a window and that blows me away!

Edited by QuarterSwede

Don't most discrete notebook graphics processors require additional space for the rest of the graphics board and a fan? I suspect that by adding a discrete video card, the thickness would have been increased considerably, percentage wise.

my laptop has an onboard 128mb(dedicated) ATi XPRESS200 video card...its not the greatest, but it doenst make the laptop any thicker then say the chipset or CPU require.

For me it's not an issue. It's a Core Duo after all! Check this website for some sort of temp. range.

www.intelmactemp.com

From that website, my 2.0GHz averages out to be 60C idle and 83C under load. My own temperatures are about 65 idling and perhaps 75-80C under load. It's not hot in my opinion and I'm fine with it. I don't use it as a laptop though. The fans don't come on until it's about 80C and this hardly happens.

The trackpad doesn't (fully) work in Windows. You're left to use the clicker button and cannot perform two finger scrolling, two finger tapping for right-clicks or single tap, drag/lock, etc. It's pretty annoying. You can only move the mouse around using one finger and click with the button. For right clicks you hold down ctrl like you would on older models of Apple notebooks.

My XP takes 55 seconds from selecting the partition to the login prompt. Most of it is spent at the black loading screen. From selection to finishing loading startup apps etc, it takes about 1.5 minutes including entering password, Norton AV, wireless networking and all of Apple's programs such as brightness, CD eject, Intel GMA etc.

Edited by Huy

Can you Ctrl+Shift+Esc instead? That's how I get C+A+D anyway for Task Manager... I just don't know if it works for logon.

Thanks.

ctrl + shift + esc works for the task manager but not for logon.

what about watching HD trailers?

what about watching a dvd and switching between a playing dvd and msn messenger?

what about photoshop performance?

and what games will run and look half descent on onboard video?

not trying to knock the macbook here, just dont understand why they couldnt have gone with a descent ati or nvidia card!

how many MB is the intel onboard video?

I'm going to add a performance section to the review, mentioning HD video playback, h264 video encoding, general performance, rosetta and maybe games.

dL don't forget that it also runs Windows so you're still able to do everything. I used to be in a Computer Science degree (now Engineering and Business) but for everything that needs to be done, it can be done on a Mac - mostly programming in Java, there's a text editor, the terminal/shell, Eclipse IDE, etc. If you're unhappy with OS X, you could use Windows and program in there - I do the same with my MacBook, I prefer using Matlab on Windows which was one of the reasons for getting this notebook. Windows is exclusively used for Matlab and other MS apps like Access, Visio and Project.

I think that the MacBook is suited to Computer Science, because I used to own a 12" PowerBook and there's a lot of UNIX users with PowerBooks who love the Mac hardware/OSX with the ability to do their programming-related tasks on the Mac through the terminal.

Thanks for all the feedback guys, I've added a "Performance" section which covers quite a few things, as well as touching on the speakers, WiFi and battery life. Has a few graphs and videos too. I added a screenshot of the preference pane where you enable the two fingered tapping for those who can't find it.

I'm gonna try and get some gaming benchmarks done, I'll see if I can grab the 3D Mark demo and I've still got Half Life 2 lying around from when I had my Acer.

Edited by Dazzla
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • If the drive/memory is soldered to the board, which it probably is, then it's a no from me
    • Driver Genius 25.0.0.143 by Razvan Serea Driver Genius is a professional driver management tool features both driver management and hardware diagnostics. Driver Genius provides such practical functions as driver backup, restoration, update and removal for computer users. If you often reinstall your operating system, you may not forget such painful experiences of searching all around for all kinds of drivers. If unfortunately you have lost your driver CD, the search will be more troublesome and time-consuming. Driver Genius can automatically find drivers for a device when the system can't find a driver for it. It can recognize the name and vendor's information of the device, and directly provide download URL for the required driver. Driver Genius also supports online updates for drivers of existing hardware devices. Driver Genius customers can obtain information for latest drivers by Driver Genius's LiveUpdate program, which can synchronize to the database on Driver Genius site. Features at a glance: Find the latest drivers for your computer. One click to update all drivers silently. Automatically install driver updates silently. Make your drivers are always up to date. New rollback driver design for safer driver update. Free to backup all drivers now! Package all drivers to an executable auto installer. One click to restore all drivers. Remove invalid or useless drivers/devices, improve system performance and stability. New system information tool. Detailed hardware inventory. Hardware temperature monitor. Protect your CPU, GPU and HDD. New system transfer assistant. Upgrade/degrade your windows system easily. New SSD Speeder. Improve your disk performance and reliability. New System booster provides over 90 optimization options that make your computer run faster and smoother. New System Cleanup can help you to clean up the temporary files and cache files or other junk files in system. Driver Genius 25.0.0.143 changelog: Enhanced detection for Windows Runtime components. Update the hardware detection component to support more new hardware. Update the compression component to address security issues. Download: Driver Genius 25.0.0.143 | 20.7 MB (Shareware) View: Driver Genius Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • We do it all the time on our IT Service desk mailbox to add a reference, in the subject line, once it's been logged and then it's filed into the appropriate sub-folder. Other companies probably do the same thing.
    • "No. The "New Outlook for Windows" does not support non-cloud mailboxes (such as on-premises Exchange servers). Furthermore, because the New Outlook effectively functions as a web-based client, it requires all connected accounts—even standard IMAP or POP accounts—to route and cache data through Microsoft's cloud servers. You can verify the accepted account setups using the Microsoft Supported Account Types Guide." Built to fail "New" Outlook is basically just webmail in a window wrapper and it's usefulness reflects that.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Carru_123 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      250
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      67
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      60
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!