- MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 SERIAL
- MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 BLUETOOTH
- MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 SERIES
- MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 MAC
One open optical drive bay for optional second SuperDrive.
Writes CD-R and CD-RW discs at up to 32x speed.Writes DVD+R DL and DVD-R DL discs at up to 8x speed.Writes DVD+R and DVD-R discs at up to 18x speed.18x SuperDrive with double-layer support (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW).
MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 MAC
MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 SERIAL
MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 BLUETOOTH
MACBOOK PRO EARLY 2009 VS MACBOOK EARLY 2009 SERIES
8-core: Two 2.26GHz, 2.66GHz, or 2.93GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon 5500 series processors.PS: I have a buyer of my current MBP for $900 (comes with 500GB and mDP-to-HDMI cable) and I bought an Intel X25 SSD and Optibay with 1TB HDD to replace my ODD. CPU bump, 3 more hours of battery, audio-out on mDP port, much better IGP, 4GB RAM, and force sensitive trackpad all for less money than I paid last year. I was considering a 15" MBP this time but went with another 13" MBP because the offering was so strong. He even missed out some Pros I would have expected, like dynamic switchable graphics. You compare the Core-i3 with Intel HD to C2D with Nvidia 320M and you see why Apple made the right choice. No Arrandale CPU options on 13 inch model when that would mean Intel HD IGP in the 13" MBP, which is a major downgrade. Apple's SSD and RAM options are reasonably priced, It's the SSD options that are the Con as Apple doesn't use the fastest SSDs and still doesn't offer TRIM. The cons are all pretty wonky: - No built-in HDMI port when mDP can output HDMI A/V signaling with a cheap cable or adapter. How is no blu-ray a *legitimate* downside?