Testseek.com have collected 284 expert reviews of the Apple MacBook 12 inch Retina - Early 2015 MJY42 / MJY32 / MK4N2 / MK4M2 / MF855 / MF865 and the average rating is 79%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Apple MacBook 12 inch Retina - Early 2015 MJY42 / MJY32 / MK4N2 / MK4M2 / MF855 / MF865.
April 2015
(79%)
284 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(91%)
3241 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
790100284
The editors liked
So thin and light that it out-MacBook-Airs the MacBook Air
Excellent Retina display. You won't even notice that it's not using its native resolution out of the box
Gray
Silver
And gold finish options look great and give the MacBook a touch of personal
It's lighter than Air! (the MacBook Air
That is)
Backlit keyboard w/ individual LEDs
Retina display is gorgeous
Crazy fast PCIebased storage
Long battery life
Sexy design
Simplicity and ultra-portability
Fanless
Noiseless operations
Tomorrow's technology today
Premium experience over price
Wonderfully light yet sturdy aluminum design
Three color options
Keyboard remarkably fast
Awesome stereo speakers
Strong battery life
The new ultraportable
Fanless design is great
Retina display finally comes to Apple's thin-and-light MacBooks
New color options
Force Touch trackpad and 256GB minimum storage space
Incredibly thin. Weighs less than 2 pounds. 14 hours of battery life in testing. Retina Display. Great-sounding speakers. Available in three colors.
Thin and light
With great battery life
Beautiful Retina display
Force Touch trackpad
The new 12inch Apple MacBook is amazingly thin and light
Has a premium look and feel
And is available in three colors. It offers better battery life than other laptops with Intel's Core M processors
And performance that's as good as or better than thos
Incredibly light
Thin
And compact
Epic battery life
Brilliant Retina display and backlit keyboard
Insanely light and gorgeous. Superb display
Great Force Touch trackpad
Ample storage and RAM
Stunning design
Superlight
Excellent battery life
Full of new technology
New Retina display is stunning
Force Touch trackpad is a technical marvel
Revised keyboard is excellent
Outstanding design and build quality
Supremely light and compact
Gorgeous 12inch Retina display
Light
And feels solid
Wonderful battery life
Bright keyboard backlight
OS X (why you buy a Mac in the first place)
Excellent integration with iOS devices
This is about as well as you can design a clamshell PC
I still don't understand how a laptop can be this light. The screen will make every Air owner jealous. If only all laptop chargers were this small
Very usable keyboard and trackpad. Silent fanless operation. Highly portable with impressive battery life.
Incredibly thin
Great keyboard
Careful build quality and very high stability
Extremely low weight as well as compact dimensions
Excellent touchpad
Bright Retina display with wide viewing angles
Good everyday performance
Decent battery runtimes
Powerful speakers
The editors didn't like
Performance is a step or two behind recent Broadwell-U Macs
In 1440×900 mode
The integrated GPU sometimes struggles to keep up with the high-res screen
Upgrades are impossible. Everything from the RAM to the SSD is soldered to the tiny motherboard
Med
Overall performance isn't on par with competitors' laptops
High-performance processors or graphics
A large number and variety of ports
Deep
Clackity keyboards
Low
Low pricing
Must use dongle to plug in most devices
Pricey
Loss of MagSafe could lead to a costly accident
No USB-C adapter
Splitter or hub in the box
Starting at $1
299
The MacBook is expensive for what it offers
Only one USB-C port
With no adapters included. USB-C is not Thunderbolt-compatible. New keyboard and Force Touch trackpad take some getting used to. Can only be upgraded at initial purchase
Weak keyboard
Single USBC port for charging and peripherals
Slow Core M processor
Single USB-C port for charging and peripherals
Its performance and battery life falls short of the MacBook Air and Pro. The new keyboard is shallow and takes some getting used to
And sharing a single port for all accessories as well as the power cord is almost immediately frustrating
USB Type-C port won't fit existing peripherals
No SD card slot or MagSafe power connector
Shallow keyboard travel takes some getting used to
Core M CPU isn't as powerful as Core i5
Lack of keyboard travel is disconcerting at first. Expensive
Limited performance
Very expensive relative to performance
Only slightly more powerful than iPad Air 2
Specific target audience
So it will not please everyone
No touchscreen. Come on
Apple
Single USB TypeC port limits desktop/office use (adapter not included)
Average processor performance (slower than expected)
Worthless 480p webcam
Expensive to the point of being hard to recommend. A little slow when you push it. The battery is just shy of being as worryfree as it wants to be. USBC isn't yet everywhere
Published: 2015-04-20, Author: Will , review by: newatlas.com
Abstract: After more than four years of identical-looking MacBook Airs , Apple finally made a next-generation MacBook that ticks all those boxes we've been asking for. The "new MacBook" is lighter and thinner than the Air, but also has a Retina Display like its big...
Gorgeous 12inch Retina display, Thin, light, and feels solid, Wonderful battery life, Bright keyboard backlight, OS X (why you buy a Mac in the first place), Excellent integration with iOS devices
No touchscreen. Come on, Apple, Single USB TypeC port limits desktop/office use (adapter not included), Polarizing keyboard typing experience (shallow travel, limited feedback), Average processor performance (slower than expected), Worthless 480p webcam,
Abstract: The new Apple MacBook (2015) is the next generation of Apple notebooks. It's crazy thin, crazy light, and it only has one port on it, called USB Type-C. That's probably the hardest thing to accept as of now but check out our unboxing and first impressions...
Abstract: Help support Bare Feats by clicking our Apple display ads or THIS Apple USA link when ordering any Apple product or Apple compatible product.Live outside the USA? No problem. We are also an affiliate of these Apple Stores:PowerMax not only sells new and u...
Simplicity and ultra-portability, Fanless, noiseless operations, Tomorrow's technology today, Premium experience over price
High-performance processors or graphics, A large number and variety of ports, Deep, clackity keyboards, Low, low pricing
Small, light, Retina display, single port — make no mistake, this is an iPad in MacBook clothing. Apple wants the iPad to be the iPad and the Mac to be the Mac, but the company clearly continues to want everything great about the iPad to make the Mac even...
Abstract: Take a look at Apple's newest MacBook in all of its shiny, gold glory.This is Apple's thinnest, lightest notebook yet; it's only half an inch thick. It also features a Retina display, a single USB-C port , a new keyboard and a new Force Touch trackpad.Thi...
Weighing in at just 2 pounds and a hair over half an inch thick (at its chunki...
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Published: 2015-04-09, Author: Vincent , review by: slashgear.com
Abstract: Well it's about damn time the MacBook grew up. For years now, many of us OS X devotees have peered over the fence with envious eyes as Windows machines were given far more portable form-factors. Lenovo has been leading the pack in svelteness, and Microsof...
Published: 2015-04-09, Author: Andrew , review by: arstechnica.com
So thin and light that it out-MacBook-Airs the MacBook Air, Excellent Retina display. You won't even notice that it's not using its native resolution out of the box, Gray, silver, and gold finish options look great and give the MacBook a touch of personal
Performance is a step or two behind recent Broadwell-U Macs, In 1440×900 mode, the integrated GPU sometimes struggles to keep up with the high-res screen, Upgrades are impossible. Everything from the RAM to the SSD is soldered to the tiny motherboard, Med
Enlarge / The 2015 MacBook.Andrew CunninghamThe 2015 MacBook is a much better first take on a new kind of laptop than the first MacBook Air was. The first Air was expensive and slow and not really plausible as a replacement for either the MacBook or the M...