
It maxes out at 500 nits of brightness and supports P3 Wide Color and Apple’s True Tone feature. It’s a 13.3-inch LED-backlit IPS display with a resolution of 2,560×1,600 pixels-that’s 227 pixels per inch. The screen is unchanged compared to the previous one. The entry-level specification is priced at $1,299 (though the one with the Touch Bar starts at $1,799).

Let’s start with the 13-inch model's specs. So what kinds of professionals are the newly revised MacBook Pros for? Is it a worthwhile investment for consumers? We recently spent a week with the top spec of the 2018 15-inch MacBook Pro to find out. These users buy it because it’s simply the best-performing Mac laptop. Lots of people buy MacBook Pros who aren’t professionals-at least, not professionals at doing the sorts of things they might actually need a $3,000 computer for.

Then there’s the fact that the MacBook Pro has lived a double life not just as a pro workstation but as the high-end consumer Mac. Further Reading We tested throttling on the MacBook Pro-now Apple says it has a firmware fix
