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STAYCOOL 16in / 40cm Wall Fan / 3 Speed Settings / 90 Degree Oscillation/Vertical Tilt/Pull Cord Operation / 45w / Quiet Motor/Easy Installation/Safety Grill/Wall Mountable / F1421WH / White

£17.495£34.99Clearance
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These include “HDR Video”, which sets the display so professionals working on HDR10 video can preview material correctly. In this mode, the brightness is capped at 1,000cd/m2, the colour space set to P3 and the gamma to ST.2084. Folks that need a productivity-focused ultrabook that offers a strong balance between performance and price should look towards the Acer Swift 3's 16-inch option. Between its 11th Gen Intel i7-11370H, Intel Iris Xe integrated graphics, 16GB of RAM, and up to 1TB SSD, the 16-inch Acer Swift 3 delivers reliable and respectable performance for productivity. On top of that, the FHD display has great colors and contrast, though it's not as sharp as the panels you'll find on more expensive laptops. The battery life of the device comes in at a cool 10-11 hours. READ NEXT: Our guide to the best laptops you can buy Apple MacBook Pro 16in (2021, M1 Pro) review: Performance

But it still isn’t quite a perfect ten. As I mentioned above, the bathtub notch housing the 1080p FaceTime HD camera is still, in my view, an unnecessary compromise. The fact that there’s no USB-A port is an annoyance, too. I understand Apple has to draw the line somewhere, otherwise there would be no end of holes littering the edges of its otherwise pristine devices, but one small nod to legacy devices is surely not too much to ask. READ NEXT: Our guide to the best laptops you can buy Apple MacBook Pro 16in review: What you need to know I’m also surprised there’s no AdobeRGB colour calibration mode, which would be useful for professional photographers. However, it is otherwise a staggeringly good display capable of delivering enough brightness and colour accuracy for professional content creators from all walks of life. And it’s also great for watching a little streaming video once you’ve finished work for the day. The display itself is a stunner. I said at the time of my iPad Pro 12.9in (2021) review that I consider mini-LED technology to be a better choice than OLED for mobile devices with larger screens such as laptops and this MacBook Pro display confirms that for me. While mini-LED screens will never be able to quite match the perfect contrast of OLED – there will always be a little blooming in areas of strong contrast – and there is some of that here – they are in many ways more practical.The last significant overhaul to the MacBook Pro’s design came with the first generation of Pro 14in and 16in laptops in 2021. I wasn’t expecting any changes with this generation and so it proved.

These are just starting points, however, as there’s a whole lot more flexibility to the configuration process. For instance, looking at these three builds, you might think there were only two processor options available but that’s not the case. Apple sells the 16in MacBook Pro in a wide selection of options and configurations, but every build begins with one of three standard models with the following specifications and prices: READ NEXT: The best laptops to buy today Apple MacBook Pro 16-inch (M2 Pro, 2023) review: Design and featuresREAD NEXT: The best laptops to buy today Apple MacBook Pro 16-inch (M2 Pro, 2023) review: Performance READ NEXT: Huawei MateBook 14s review Apple MacBook Pro 16in (2021, M1 Pro) review: Price and competition I loaded it up with 17 simultaneous clips of 8K H.265 video and used DaVinci Resolve to output to 4K ProRes 4444 XQ and it popped out in 4mins 5secs. Compared to my M1 Mac mini, which completed the same task in 9mins 31secs, that’s seriously fast. A millimetre (American spelling: millimeter, symbol mm) is one thousandth of a metre, which is the International System of Units (SI) base unit of length. The millimetre is part of a metric system. A corresponding unit of area is the square millimetre and a corresponding unit of volume is the cubic millimetre. Much though we’d have loved Apple to send us the top-end model, the model on test is more representative of the sort of specification most people will opt for, with an M1 Pro processor supplemented by 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD.

We tested the HDR Video and the Internet and Web presets and found both to be pretty much spot on in terms of colour accuracy. In these tests, in the HDR Video mode I measured an average DeltaE colour error score of 0.98 and P3 gamut coverage of 98.8%, while in Internet and Web, I measured an average DeltaE colour error score of 0.5 and an sRGB gamut volume of 98.1%. In benchmarks, it’s a beast. You can see where it sits in comparison to other M1 and M2 Macs I’ve tested previously in the charts below. Suffice it to say, though, it’s faster than every other Mac we’ve tested so far, apart from the M1 Ultra-based Mac Studio: While there aren't a ton of 16-inch laptops on the market, it's not a form factor that you should overlook when buying your next laptop. In many cases, 16-inch devices offer much of the same powerful hardware that you can find in larger 17-inch laptops, but in a chassis that's less cumbersome and easier to carry around. On top of that, 16-inch laptops also tend to have better battery life than 17-inch options, and are often less expensive. This makes them a great alternative if you want something larger than 13, 14, or 15 inches, but don't want something as big or as expensive as 17-inch devices typically are. I can’t comment on the M2 Max chipset’s performance levels in this review as Apple supplied an M2 Pro (12-core CPU, 19-core GPU) for testing. If my results are anything to go by, though, most users won’t need anything more. As with the M2 Pro Mac mini, this is an absolute beast of a machine, that will take everything from 8K video editing, colour grading and editing to 3D rendering in its stride. Perhaps the most impressive aspect of the performance of the MacBook Pro 16in, however, isn’t the raw power of its CPU or GPU but its efficiency. Normally, you’d expect a big, beefy machine like this to be a terrible choice as a carry-around, work on the move laptop but not a bit of it. Battery life is fantastic, lasting a highly impressive 16hrs 20mins in our video rundown test.Both the Apple M1 Pro and Apple M1 Max CPU chip options offer blistering performance in creative workloads, and the laptop also comes with up to 64GB of RAM and up to (a ridiculous) 8TB of SSD space for even more power. Its mini-LED 3456x2234 display looks incredible as well, and the device also has an impressive max battery life of 14-15 hours. It has 12 CPU cores for the grunt work, comprising 8 performance cores running at up to 3.5GHz and 4 efficiency cores for tasks demanding less power. That’s two more cores in total than the maximum you could get with the M1 Pro and four more than in the Apple M2. There’s also a 19-core GPU, three more than on the M1 Pro and nine more than on the M2. However, the lower brightness caps mean these modes aren’t particularly useful for viewing content, so you’ll be spending most of your time with the Apple XDR Display (P3-1600nits) mode for browsing and watching streaming content. That’s fine, though, as this is plenty colour accurate for casual browsing. I recorded an average Delta E of 0.93 compared with Apple’s Display P3 standard, and an average Delta E of 2.2 versus sRGB.

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