Last week, Apple announced its first three new computers built with the company’s new M1 chip. There’s a new M1-based MacBook Air, 13-inch MacBook Pro and Mac Mini. It marks the first time in 14 years that Apple has integrated its Macs with anything other than an Intel chipset, but it’s super exciting because of the huge leaps in both performance and battery life that the M1 chip promises.
When comparing Apple’s new laptops, the M1-based MacBook Air and M1-based MacBook Pro, the two are actually very similar. The MacBook Pro has a slightly brighter screen, a slightly heavier design and slightly improved performance (thanks to its active cooling system and larger battery), but the M1 chip kind of acts as a great equalizer. Or as John Gruber of Daring Fireball put it: “The [new M1 MacBooks] are best thought of not as three different computers, but rather three different manifestations of the same computer.”
Apple sent me a review unit of the new 13-inch MacBook Pro so I could check out the real differences that the M1 chip makes. The short version? These MacBooks are great.
The new Pro is outwardly identical to the old one.
For better or worse, the new MacBook Pro looks and feels like any of the MacBook Pros that Apple has sold in the past few years. Some of its details will be new to you if you haven’t updated in a few years, like the Touch Bar as well as the new-and-improved keyboard with scissor switches, instead of the much-maligned butterfly switches. But compared to last year’s 13-inch MacBook Pro, the M1 version is identical except for its guts. It still even has the same 720p webcam.
Also, only the entry-level 13-inch MacBook Pro has been updated with the M1 chipset. The more “pro” versions of the MacBook Pro — like the 13-inch model with four ports instead of two or the 16-inch MacBook Pro that was released earlier this year — are still kitted out with the trusty Intel chipset. It’s a decision sort of at odds with Apple’s branding of the M1 as it’s “most powerful chip,” but the switch is doubtlessly coming for the other MacBooks soon.
