Testseek.com have collected 237 expert reviews of the Apple MacBook Pro 13.3 inch - Late 2016 MLL42 / MLH12 / MNQF2 / MLQF2 / MNQG2 / MLUQ2 / MLVP2 / MLL4 and the average rating is 80%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Apple MacBook Pro 13.3 inch - Late 2016 MLL42 / MLH12 / MNQF2 / MLQF2 / MNQG2 / MLUQ2 / MLVP2 / MLL4.
November 2016
(80%)
237 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(90%)
3645 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
800100237
The editors liked
Excellent design
Great keyboard and trackpad
Lighter and thinner than ever
Beautiful Retina screen
Solid performance
Excellent battery life
Gorgeous design
Lighter
Thinner
Smaller than last MacBook Pro
Touch Bar will win you over
Another great showcase for macOS
Excellent Butterfly keyboard
Rock-solid design that looks and feels great
Thunderbolt 3 is a tremendously versatile port
And Apple will benefit from increased adoption in the wider PC industry
Low-travel keyboard still isn't for everyone
But it's a marked improvement over the fir
Nice new designs that are thinner and lighter than their predecessors
Four Thunderbolt 3 ports each
Two on each side—this is super convenient for charging
Especially
But it's a marked improvement over the
Excellent chassis and build quality
Huge trackpad – still best in class
Silent without high workloads
Very good speakers
Fast WLAN
Very good display with perfect scaling (typical for macOS)
Huge trackpad with great precision
Quiet and good cooling
High WLAN transfer speeds
Very good display with perfect scaling
Good speakers
Good battery runtimes
Steady performance
Also on battery
4x Thunderbolt
Superb screen
Thinner and lighter than previous MacBook Pro models
Excellent touch pad is now bigger
Great battery life
First P3 color gamut Retina display in a Mac laptop
Excellent overall performance
Brilliant display
Powerful speakers
Superfast SSD
Compact design
Very bright and colorful display
Improved butterfly keyboard
Impressive stereo speakers
Almost 12 hours of battery life
Compact and sturdy chassis
Two USB-C/Thunderbolt 3 ports
Display supports DCI-P3 color spectrum
Fantastic build and good looks. Superb display
OS X Sierra is a fine OS
Useful
Versatile Touch Bar
Four USB-C/Thunderbolt 3 ports
An incredibly portable pro laptop
Blisteringly fast storage
The latest ports
Touch Bar and Touch ID
Strong
Sleek unibody design
Prettier. There's no such thing as a toobig trackpad. The Touch Bar is remarkably wellexecuted. The ability to charge from any port is pretty great
The inventive Touch Bar streamlines work and saves clicks
And Apple has improved almost every part of the thinner
Lighter MacBook Pro
Including a larger touchpad
Faster components and a flatter keyboard. iPhone's Touch ID is handy on the Mac
Too
So light
And so thin. Never buy a laptop without a screen this good. The battery is actually allday this time. There's almost certainly enough power here for you
Attractive and well-built
Thinner and lighter
Retina screen is brighter and more colorful than ever
Impressive audio quality
Fast performance
Especially the disk speeds
Touch ID is a useful addition
Spacious trackpad
The editors didn't like
No legacy ports
No signature innovation
You're still paying an Apple premium
This is a pricey 13-inch device
Information on Touch Bar too easy to miss
Limited number of ports
Limited port selection
And need for dongles will be inconvenient
Especially at first
Extremely limited repairability and upgradeability
Intel's CPU speed increases in the last few years have been discouraging
Occasional probl
13-inch Touch Bar model doesn't have the same battery life as the non-Touch Bar model
Need for dongles will be inconvenient
Esp
Connectivity issues with 2.4 GHz WLAN and USB-C devices
Clattering fan on our test model
Only 3 ports
Very expensive – especially the upgrades
Poor webcam
But reduced bandwidth for the ports on the right side
Neither USB-A nor HDMI-out
2.4 GHz WLAN issues with attached USB-C device
Pricey
Given the components
Only two ports
Requiring added-cost adapters for most users
Shorter battery life than previous-gen model
Last-generation CPU means some similarly slim Windows machines perform better
Last longer
Keyboard is a step backward from old MacBook Pro keyboards
Two Thunderbolt 3 ports instead of four
Limited to 16GB RAM maximum
And graphics aren't upgradeable
Expensive
No USB Type-A ports
Not as fast as 7th-gen Intel-powered laptops
No SD card slot
Shallow key travel
No USB 3
0 (Type-A) ports
Requires adapters for legacy peripherals
Expensive- what a price hike! More for good looks than Pro work
Oddball butterfly low travel keyboard
No legacy ports except headphone jack
0 ports
High end graphics
Large amounts of RAM
Legacy ports
Touch screen
Low
Low pricing
The world is not quite ready for USBC
And you're not either. The Touch Bar needs more customization
And soon. Laptops aren't supposed to be this expensive
Are they?
You're paying a hefty premium for the Touch Bar
Which supports only a limited handful of Apple apps for now. The USB-C-only ports mean carrying a bag full of dongles. The lack of high-end graphics or huge RAM options in the 13-inch model may frustrate ph
It is so
So very expensive. The transition from many ports to one is scary. No one's going to look good in this webcam
Expensive with the Touch Bar
Easy to accidentally hit the Touch Bar instead of the Delete key
Abstract: Posted November 4th, 2016 by rob-ART morgan, mad scientistHow does the 'slowest' 2016 MacBook Pro compare to the 'fastest' 2016 MacBook? And how do both compare to the 2016 Razer Blade Stealth (Windows 10) and 12.9 inch iPad Pro?GRAPH LEGEND13" MacBook Pr...
Published: 2016-11-02, Author: Andrew , review by: arstechnica.com
Rock-solid design that looks and feels great, Thunderbolt 3 is a tremendously versatile port, and Apple will benefit from increased adoption in the wider PC industry, Low-travel keyboard still isn't for everyone, but it's a marked improvement over the fir
Limited number of ports, limited port selection, and need for dongles will be inconvenient, especially at first, Extremely limited repairability and upgradeability, Intel's CPU speed increases in the last few years have been discouraging, Occasional probl
excellent chassis and build quality, huge trackpad – still best in class, silent without high workloads, very good speakers, fast WLAN, very good display with perfect scaling (typical for macOS)
connectivity issues with 2.4 GHz WLAN and USB-C devices, clattering fan on our test model, only 3 ports, very expensive – especially the upgrades, poor webcam
Before we can get our hands on Apple's highly praised Touch Bar, we can review the entry-level model of the new MacBook Pro 13, which is already available. It is also supposed to replace the less expensive Air models in the medium-term if you ask Apple. A...
Published: 2016-11-01, Author: Joel , review by: pcmag.com
Almost 12 hours of battery life, Compact and sturdy chassis, Two USB-C/Thunderbolt 3 ports, Display supports DCI-P3 color spectrum
Shallow key travel, No USB 3,0 (Type-A) ports, Requires adapters for legacy peripherals
The redesigned Apple MacBook Pro laptop is undeniably slim and sleek, with a better screen and improved performance over its predecessor. But because of its sole reliance on USB-C/Thunderbolt 3 ports, you'll have to either update all of your old periphe...
Published: 2016-11-01, Author: Will , review by: newatlas.com
Abstract: There's one 2016 MacBook Pro feature you're going to hear a lot about for the foreseeable future: the Touch Bar, an iPhone-like touchscreen strip that replaces the Fn keys, living just north of the keyboard. But if you don't want to fork over US$1,800 or...
An incredibly portable pro laptop, Blisteringly fast storage, The latest ports, Touch Bar and Touch ID, Strong, sleek unibody design
High end graphics, Large amounts of RAM, Legacy ports, Touch screen, Low, low pricing
Apple has been making computers into appliances for years now. It started with the iMac and, more recently, the MacBook Air and iPad. Step by step, Apple has sealed up everything from the minis to the pros and, in so doing, made them better for the mainst...
Published: 2016-10-27, Author: Jordan , review by: venturebeat.com
Abstract: The new MacBook Pro , available in 13- and 15-inch versions, looks like Apple's 12-inch MacBook. It borrows the extra-springy keyboard and the reflective Apple logo on the back. And it's slimmer and lighter like the MacBook. But as you would expect, the P...
Fantastic build and good looks. Superb display, OS X Sierra is a fine OS
Expensive- what a price hike! More for good looks than Pro work: oddball butterfly low travel keyboard, no legacy ports except headphone jack
I've been a Mac user since the late 1980's when they were tall beige boxes with floppy drives. Apple has had their ups and downs, but I've stuck with them because their OS is solid, their build and materials excellent, the hardware and features often abov...