That'll be the next upgrade or computer:)
Egun On, Lagunak! Basque for G'day, Mates
Louie P. (Pete) Nalda
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On Jun 14, 2012, at 2:26 AM, Ricardo Walker wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Yup,
>
>
Hi,
Yup,
But an SSD is probably the upgrade that you will definitely see a noticeable
difference in everything you do on your computer. I put an SSD in my mid 2010
MBP and from a cold start, voiceover is talking in 16 seconds. Apps launch
faster, files transfer quicker, etc. I no longer get
I just upgraded my early 2009 model MBP to 5 gb, and can really see a change in
speed from the original 2gb ram it came with. XPlane and ableton Live load up
in a quarter of time, and I can have 4 tabs open in safari with 400mb ram free
at any given time. with the 500 gb upgrade I also did to t
I'm surprised that apple still includes a 64 gb drive with the first model, I
would think 128 GB should be the minimum, 64 gb is too small to really be
useful.
On Jun 13, 2012, at 9:43 AM, Neil Barnfather - TalkNav wrote:
> This has not been answered so I'll give it a bash.
>
> There is more to
This has not been answered so I'll give it a bash.
There is more to consider here than just processor, all the MBA's have an SSD,
solid state drive, and as such, notably out perform their native MBP units
which are fitted with traditional SATA drives. Of course it is possible to up
spec an MBP
Hi there,
After been friend with IMac and trial on older generalation of MBP for
a while, and the fact that my 5.5 year old Dell laptop is slowly
giving up due to overheating, i think i'm quite ready to slowly but
surely move in to the Apple Mac family completely.
Can i have some general fit back