
- 2012 MACBOOK PRO HARD DRIVE INSTALL
- 2012 MACBOOK PRO HARD DRIVE UPGRADE
- 2012 MACBOOK PRO HARD DRIVE MAC
In the Geekbench 64-bit benchmark, the 101’s base CPU is only 16% slower in single-threaded tasks and 25% slower in multi-threaded tasks than the 2015 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro’s base CPU.
2012 MACBOOK PRO HARD DRIVE INSTALL
If you install an SSD, it’s even competitive on performance.

The low-resolution screen is the most obviously outdated part, but a lot of people simply don’t care enough. It has Thunderbolt, USB 3, and a multitouch trackpad (not Force Touch, although I consider that a plus). For many buyers, they’d rather save the $1100 and get the bulkier, slower, more expandable machine. While it’s thinner and lighter and has better battery life, and the SSD is way faster than hard drives, it lacks the DVD drive, FireWire, Ethernet, and repairability. 1Ī modern 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro with a similar CPU, 16 GB of RAM, and a 1 TB SSD is $2700. If you’re willing to use third-party RAM and disks, you can put 16 GB RAM and a 2 TB disk into Apple’s fast-CPU model for a total of only $1457. $1400 buys the fastest CPU, 8 GB of RAM, and a 1 TB disk from Apple. It’s very inexpensive, even when specced up. Third-party RAM options are not only cheaper, but sometimes have higher limits: Apple won’t sell more than 8 GB in the 101, but OWC sells 16 GB for just $108.
2012 MACBOOK PRO HARD DRIVE UPGRADE
Many buyers can’t afford top specs up front, but would gladly upgrade down the road to extend the machine’s lifespan.
2012 MACBOOK PRO HARD DRIVE MAC


A programmer, writer, podcaster, geek, and coffee enthusiast.Ībout Why the 2012 non-Retina MacBook Pro still sells
