RE: that rMBP, maxed out...
The main things I'm worried about are lag. What are the programs that if you install them the processor worst be able to keep up with?
What if I plug in my external projector and it lags when I do inertial scrolling?
What if I find that Logic has less processing power? Are the graphic cards worse?
I dunno it's not looking good man.
But then I see people say stuff like once you go retina you'll never go back.
Or the 768 SSD just might be enough to hold everything I need to dump on it.
But hyper expensive.
I dunno it could be that I just need to figure out what is real and what isn't. The screen fading is fine but the lag is what I'm worried about.
Maybe if I get a maxed out rmbp 15 with 768 and 16RAM it will be powerful to not worry. But if I get a umbp 15 I get it for so much less and its more sloppy and work.
If I can feel certain I can get the expected user experience I can bite but I can't stop worrying about paying so much and then seeing lag or problems down the line after 30 days. Or having win8 not work right (or at all??)
Hi Bobby,
...just two cents of free advice, the quality of which is precisely what you pay for it...
It sounds like from your comments that you would be much happier with a "maxed out" 2012 uMBP. It has the same CPU, same GPU, larger HDD, a 1680x1050 display, and you can replace the optical drive with a third party SSD. No lag and no image retention issues here. And since your stated use (Logic + plugins) does not require nor will benefit from the retina screen, then why are you considering a rMBP? You haven't mentioned the smaller size and weight of the rMBP, so this is not a concern for you. In fact, you mention that it will be plugged into your external projector so the extra portability is not an issue. You also appear to be perfectly capable of switching the optical drive for a SSD, so the uMBP will ostensibly allow you a Fusion Drive, albeit with the SSD on the "wrong" interface so the FUD may not be as fast as if you were to switch the HDD and SSD around.
In my opinion, the maxed out uMBP is the machine that best satisfies your needs and concerns.
Good luck and have fun with whatever new machine you choose,
Switon
P.S. If portability is really not an issue at all for you, then you might consider the new Mac mini with the 2.6GHz quad-core i7, 16GB memory, Fusion Drive, but no GPU. This machine has the CPU power and memory of both the uMBP and the rMBP and will most likely easily run your external projector without problem (even without the GPU), it has the speed of a SSD and the size of a HDD (1TB Fusion Drive), and it costs roughly 1/3 of what you will pay for the maxed out uMBP or rMBP. Use the extra cash saved to buy a MBA for those times when you require portability.