

It replaces the standard click mechanism with four force sensors and an electromagnet. It’s exclusive to the 13-inch MacBook Pro and new 12-inch MacBook at the moment – not even the 15-inch Pro gets it – and it takes the already excellent clickpad concept and makes it a little more refined. Related: 2015 MacBook vs MacBook Air: What’s the difference?Īnd all that’s before you consider the latest new feature, the Force Touch trackpad.

It’s a good 1cm narrower and shallower than the Air, so it’s handier in confined spaces like planes and trains. It’s not wafer thin by modern standards, but it has a smaller footprint than a MacBook Air. It weighs just 1.58kg – a shade over 200g heavier than the MacBook Air – and is 18mm thick.

It’s remarkably thin and light considering it uses “full-power” processors, as opposed to the low-voltage ones used in the MacBook Air, upcoming 12-inch MacBook, and potential rivals such as the Dell XPS 13 2015. The current MacBook Pro design is nearly three years old now, but it looks and feels as fresh as the day Apple first unveiled it. Related: MacBook Pro vs MacBook Air: Which should you buy? 13-inch MacBook Pro (2015) – Design & Force Touch TrackpadĪluminium unibody 1.58kg 314 x 219 x 18mm (WxDxH)
