The OLED panel on the Dell XPS 15 reached a much higher 626 nits, and the non-OLED 4K model hit 418 nits, which is just below the MacBook Pro. In terms of brightness, the 16-inch MacBook Pro's display registered 429 nits, which is very bright but below Apple's 500-nit rating. The panel on the 16-inch MacBook Pro (2019) is one of the most accurate around, as it turned in a Delta-E score of 0.27. The OLED version of the HP Envy x360 reached 258%. However, the OLED and non-OLED version of the XPS 15 scored 239% and 210%, respectively. This is important for editors who want the refresh rate to match the frame rate of their content.īased on our lab testing, the 16-inch MacBook Pro's screen can reproduce 113.9% of the sRGB color gamut, which is good. True pros will appreciate the ability to change the refresh rate on the display.
iPhone 13 release date, price, specs and leaks.
#Latest amd graphics card for macbook pro 16 upgrade
This upgrade may be pricey, but it's rated to be 75% faster than the 4GB 5500M. For an extra $700, you can upgrade from the 4GB Radeon Pro 5500M to an 8GB AMD Radeon Pro 5600M, which uses HBM2 memory. On June 15, 2020, Apple added a new GPU option for the 16-inch MacBook Pro.
For example, we've seen the 16-inch MacBook Pro for $200 off with a starting price of $2,199. However, there are plenty of good MacBook Pro deals out there. That's pricey, especially when you consider a comparably configured Dell XPS 15 costs about $900 less. Our review model is quite steep at $3,899, as it offers 32GB of RAM, a 2TB SSD and the Radeon 5500M GPU with 8GB of RAM. The $2,799 upgrades you to a faster Core i9 CPU, faster Radeon Pro 5500M graphics and 1TB SSD. This model replaces the 15-inch MacBook Pro, which started at the same price. The 16-inch MacBook Pro starts at $2,399 for the standard model with a Core i7 CPU, AMD Radeon 5300M GPU and 512GB SSD.