Quote from: Deez Nuts on June 04, 2020, 05:17:00The MacBook Pro is a winning formula that has been refined year after year by Apple who has unlimited R&D money and can afford to pull out all the stops. 92% seems about right to me tbh.
If you can afford to spend a little more on this MacBook Pro, you will be getting a much more finished product compared to the Dell.
Quote from: Tov on June 05, 2020, 10:51:21
He compare the Swift which is price 1/3 of MBP while its cpu has twice the cores and more powerful. So his AMD superior claim is fair enough.
Quote from: _MT_ on June 03, 2020, 12:47:34He compare the Swift which is price 1/3 of MBP while its cpu has twice the cores and more powerful. So his AMD superior claim is fair enough.Quote from: Rick on June 02, 2020, 12:15:23Their TDP is configurable. The highest configuration is 25 W I believe. In this regard, it's pretty similar to what Intel is offering (this is also a 15 W chip that's configurable to 25 W; except Apple has a special version which is rather irrelevant anyway). Of course, they calculate TDP differently so 15 W of Intel is not the same as 15 W of AMD. I don't know if Acer allows you to choose. Yes, it's a little beast even in the 15 W configuration (if I had a choice, I would probably stick with 15 W). And the elephant in the room is motherboard/ BIOS.
The difference with the Acer Swift 3 is remarkable. The Ryzen 4700U is a nominally a 15W CPU (Anandtech found a sustained 18W consumption, if I am not mistaken).
As far as the difference, you have to keep in mind that you're comparing a 4 core with an 8 core processor. 8 cores would probably win even with the same architecture. As long as the benchmark scales well, more cores are going to win (up to a point). Because higher frequencies are less efficient (cutting power to a half doesn't reduce frequency to a half; it's going to be stable with lower voltage). If you have more cores with the same budget, you have less power per core therefore it's going to run slower and more efficient (again, up to a point).
Quote from: Deez Nuts on June 04, 2020, 05:17:00Quote from: John Doe on June 03, 2020, 08:01:26
Notebookcheck was clearly paid by Apple for this review. Just look at the device, it looks way too outdated for a 2020 device and the prices are absurd.
92% is a joke. Also considering the Dell XPS 13 9300 was given a lower percentage for a clearly and obviously better device (also cheaper).
Are you kidding me lol. Dell XPS is barely in the same league let alone "obviously better". Every XPS I have laid hands on feels cheap. Creaky squeaky plastic that smudges as soon as you touch it. The MacBook Pro is a winning formula that has been refined year after year by Apple who has unlimited R&D money and can afford to pull out all the stops. 92% seems about right to me tbh. This isn't the best value but it is the best ultrabook you can buy full stop especially considering it can be a 13 inch gaming rig replacement with an eGPU. The CPU is only 9% slower than the 45W i7-9750H on userbenchmark.
The XPS is a toy that you would be satisfied with for about 6 months, whereas the MacBook Pro will easily serve you for 5+ years. If you can afford to spend a little more on this MacBook Pro, you will be getting a much more finished product compared to the Dell.
Quote from: John Doe on June 03, 2020, 08:01:26
Notebookcheck was clearly paid by Apple for this review. Just look at the device, it looks way too outdated for a 2020 device and the prices are absurd.
92% is a joke. Also considering the Dell XPS 13 9300 was given a lower percentage for a clearly and obviously better device (also cheaper).
Quote from: Mate on June 03, 2020, 14:50:12You're forgetting that different categories use different scoring. That 14" beast might be considered to be in a different category with different standards and priorities.
Unfortunately your score formula is completely outdated and ridiculous.
1. Performance - 2 years ago MBP 13 2018 scored 98% in application performance and 97% in games(lol!). In new model performance dropped to 96% and 75% in games, still ridiculous given that 24 months is a lot and we have now 14inch laptops that massacres maxed out MBP16.
Quote from: Rick on June 02, 2020, 12:15:23Their TDP is configurable. The highest configuration is 25 W I believe. In this regard, it's pretty similar to what Intel is offering (this is also a 15 W chip that's configurable to 25 W; except Apple has a special version which is rather irrelevant anyway). Of course, they calculate TDP differently so 15 W of Intel is not the same as 15 W of AMD. I don't know if Acer allows you to choose. Yes, it's a little beast even in the 15 W configuration (if I had a choice, I would probably stick with 15 W). And the elephant in the room is motherboard/ BIOS.
The difference with the Acer Swift 3 is remarkable. The Ryzen 4700U is a nominally a 15W CPU (Anandtech found a sustained 18W consumption, if I am not mistaken).