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| View Poll Results: New iMac or 13" Retina MBP? | |||
| New iMac 21.5" (CPU + Fusion Drive upgrades) |
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16 | 51.61% |
| 13" Retina MacBook Pro (CPU upgrade + MAYBE 512GB SSD) |
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15 | 48.39% |
| Voters: 31. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#1 |
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New iMac or MBP Retina?
Hello,
I currently own a Mid 2009 13" MacBook Pro. I understand that it isn't really that old. It still works fine, however the battery life has become poor with around 950 battery cycles. Here are my options: 1) 13" Retina MBP, Top Model with CPU upgrade, and MAYBE a 512GB SSD. 2) New iMac 21.5", Top model with CPU upgrade, Fusion Drive. As I have mentioned I am currently using a MBP. I do like to ability to move around with it but saying that, I will be keeping it if I get an iMac. I would just like to know your opinions on which is best. Obviously no one owns the new iMac but previous gen. iMac owners, Retina MBP owners. Anyone who has their opinion, please share it. Thank you for reading, I look forward to reading your replies!
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21.5" iMac 2012, 3.1GHz i7, 16 GB RAM, 1TB Fusion 13" MacBook Pro, 2.53GHz, 4 GB RAM, 250 GB HD iPhone 5 16GB iPad 3 WiFi + 3G 32GB |
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#2 |
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I'm in a similar boat, except I'm having a difficult time deciding between an rMBP 15 topped out or an iMAC 27" topped out with 3rd-party memory and a MBA.
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iMac i7 3.4 32gb 768GB SSD | Macbook Pro 2012 Retina, 16GB, 2.7, 768GB | IP5 16GB White |
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#3 |
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Actually, add an option (3) - cMBP 15"
Here's the deal. You're going from one dual core machine to an arguably faster dual core machine. However, the iMac has a quad core (single threaded), which is a better upgrade to aid with the hyperbolic phrase "future proofing". With the iMac though, you lose your portability. If you're looking for a faster machine, get the low-end cMBP with the high-res screen [matte or glossy]. You'll get you a quad core with an easy upgrade path to add your own high capacity SSD and 16GB ram for what could be a lower price [haven't priced it].
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cMBP 2012/2.6 i7/16GB/512GB SSD/Hi-Res Antiglare Macbook Air 2011/1.7 i5/4GB/128GB SSD Time Capsule 2TB iPhone 5 64GB |
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#4 |
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if you don't need portability the iMac is 100% better choice. Seems like you do need portability though so I would get the retina macbook pro maxed out. Sucks that you cannot replace the battery by yourself anymore
. That steers me away from macbook pros big time
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#5 |
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id still rather have a 15 rMPB over a 27 iMac
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2008 MB 5'1 2.0/8/500; iPhone 5 |
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#6 | |
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Quote:
For instance, I work from home most of the time, and at the office 1-2 days a week. I can have two machines or just a single laptop with two thunderbolt displays in each location. But I also enjoy working from the couch or my theater room downstairs. But I can use an MBA to remote into either machines if I decide to buy an iMAC + MBA vs rMBP + TB's. |
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#7 |
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This poll is little help to you right now.
![]() I would also consider the 15" base rMBP. I checked out the new iMacs today at Best Buy and must say the screen is better than previous gen but still doesn't compare to retina. |
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#9 |
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rMBP 15" with a TB display. My wife has a second TB display and I steal it and use it, and quite honestly nothing beats that setup.
Also, it's nice having all your work with you. No syncing, no issues. TC will backup whenever i'm home and got to admit, the rMBP is handling everything perfectly. Granted, once you throw some real real hard stuff on it, fans spin, but I don't see it downclocking yet.
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iMac i7 3.4 32gb 768GB SSD | Macbook Pro 2012 Retina, 16GB, 2.7, 768GB | IP5 16GB White |
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#10 | |
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#11 |
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I tried it.. and except for video does not feel any faster. Infact a bit slower, since I was testing one with a fusion drive (I was testing vm machines). Unless you get an imac with 768gb ssd, not sure it's worth it.
The only real difference is fans spin up on rMBP when pushing it. With iMac they are not as audible
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iMac i7 3.4 32gb 768GB SSD | Macbook Pro 2012 Retina, 16GB, 2.7, 768GB | IP5 16GB White |
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#12 |
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I think I am going for the iMac.
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#13 |
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I own a 15 rMBP that im typing this on right now and i love it. It has the same power as an iMac, and also boots and launchs apps faster. I just have the base model and it's fine for whatever I need to do (HD video editing, COD Black Ops, anything). Also it's thinner than the other MBPs and is only about a pound more than the 13 rMBP, so I say go for the 15 rMBP
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2012 15" Retina MBP, 2.3GHz, 8GB RAM, 256 GB SSD iPod Touch 2G 8GB iPod Nano 3G 4GB
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#14 |
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For design
I have a similar choice to make outfitting a bunch of designers at work. Portability is nice, but raw power wins. Would love your thoughts or experiences.
The situation: - we have spare 24" monitors around, so screen res is not a factor - we have older MBPs around for one-off offsite situations - we are in Photoshop and Illustrator plus email etc all day. That is it. No 3d,no sound, no video. - storage is a nonissue, put your files on the server where I can find them. I would choose between a high end 27" iMac with fusion drive and 3rd party ram upgrade and a retina MBP. I actually only go retina because there is no cost penalty compared to an MBP with an SSD grade. What do you think? The rMBP benchmarks a bit faster which I assume adding a fusion drive to the iMac might negate. Personally I would prefer one 27" monitor to laptop + 24" monitor, but my question is really about raw performance in ai and photoshop, for the money. |
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#15 | ||
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Quote:
Otherwise I agree with the below poster (that I've quoted) in that you want a 15" cMBP simply because you have iMac-like power, with non-retina expansion (which is something that both your 13" rMBP and your 21.5" iMac both lack and is something that you're likely not going to find on any Mac for too much longer). Unless 15" is too large for you, in which case I'd still recommend a 13" cMBP as the expansion factor still exists and, again, really is a wonderful thing. Quote:
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MacBook Pro (15" Mid 2012); PC Tower (3.4GHz Phenom II x4; Radeon HD 6850); 5th Gen iPod touch Blue 64GB; 3rd Gen tv; 1st Gen iPad Wi-Fi 32GB; Galaxy Nexus LTE"Don't Cry, Eat Pie" |
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| Tags |
| 2012, imac, macbook pro, retina |
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. That steers me away from macbook pros big time


2012 15" Retina MBP, 2.3GHz, 8GB RAM, 256 GB SSD
Hybrid Mode
