I notice a lot of people complain about boot camp drivers not being very optimal when running Windows, but I wonder if Apple themselves use Windows for their CAD and some design software. Most of the full featured CAD design software that I know of is Windows only and I would guess that Apple themselves use it. It would be fascinating to know what software they use when designing all the different aspects of their hardware. If they have to use Windows software and only use Apple hardware they must either be using boot camp or virtualizing it.
I have an interesting take running Windows via boot camp vs just buying a windows laptop from another manufacturer. I have a 2016 MacBook Pro 15" (Radeon pro 455) as well as a decked out Dell Precision 5530 (64gb ram, 1tb 970 Pro, Quadro P2000, i7 8850h). The Dell of course is much higher specced since the Mac only has 16gb of ram and a comparatively anemic GPU. I use the Dell for photogrammetry so the 64gb of ram is useful there. I use Autodesk Civil3D everyday as part my job and I have a unique situation where I'm not tied to using a corporate managed machine. Both laptops handle most of my drawings just fine (some drawings are fairly large with several complex surfaces) with the Dell having the obvious performance advantage if a drawing is a little slow on the Mac. Both machines have about equal usability for me in Civil 3D.
The Mac is substantially quieter than the Dell. Doing the exact same amount of panning, zooming and orbiting on the Precision 5530 results in the fans hitting their max rpm within a fairly short amount of time (couple of minutes) while the Mac stays completely silent. The fans on the Precision 5530 also ramp up in steps (0 to 2200 to 2900 to 3600 to 4500 to 5300 as an example [note I don't know the exact fan speeds, this was just an example]) which makes the whole fan ramp up and down even more bothersome, at least to me. Apple has a very nice fan curve built into the firmware so it's never a jarring experience. The MacBook Pro will keep it's fans at their idle speeds (inaudible unless you put your ear directly next to the exhaust vents [less than an inch]) while doing the exact same workload in Civil3D (panning, zooming, orbiting, etc.) as the Precision 5530. The experience using the Mac is so much more pleasant that I actually choose to use it over the more powerful Dell when working on my projects in Civil3D. Both machines are plugged into two external monitors (one 4k and one 1080p) when I'm working so they are subjected to the same graphical display load). They are of course both running Windows 10 in this situation since Civil3D is windows only software.
I would love to see reviewers talk about fan noise when laptops are plugged into docks and external monitors. The Precision 5530 seems to be affected by this since it tends to ramp the fans up more frequently and more aggressively when it's plugged in to a thunderbolt dock for exmaple. I also notice that people are very concerned with thermals (i.e. cpu hitting 100 is bad), but I would rather the CPU run at a higher temperature and the fans stay quieter as long as component longevity isn't affected. Of course being able to improve thermal performance through clever engineering/design, better heatsink performance, larger volume of air pushed through fin stacks, etc. is always welcome.
Looking forward to the 16" MacBook review because it seems like it would be a great replacement for my late 2016 15". It seems like the performance of the new one would outclass my Precision 5530 while working in Civil3D. It's nice to see we get Radeon Pro drivers under boot camp (haven't we always gotten "workstation" drivers?). Attached is a screenshot of the Radeon settings for my machine.