


At this time we do not know if they apply to the new Unibody model. See our macOS Sierra page for more details and a link.Įditor’s note: The next two paragraphs are from the profile of the previous version of the MacBook Pro. Memory and the hard drive are easily accessed from the bottom of the computer.Īlthough it is not officially supported, the Mid 2009 MacBook Pro can run macOS Sierra using Colin Mistr’s Sierra Patch Tool. 2 GB of RAM is standard on the 2.26 GHz model, 4 GB on the 2.53 GHz one (8 GB is the maximum the MBP supports).

The new model comes in 2.26 GHz and 2.53 GHz versions. The 13″ MacBook Pro only comes with a glossy screen. The black keys look sharp with the aluminum enclosure. The 13″ MBP uses the same keyboard as the MacBook Air, complete with backlighting. The entire trackpad functions as the mouse button. It supports 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-finger gestures. The glass trackpad is the same one found in the previous generation of MacBook Pro models. The new model puts all the ports on the left side, leaving the right side for the SATA SuperDrive. In the case of the 13″ MacBook Pro, the battery is rated at 7 hours. The 13″ MacBook Pro takes the successful Unibody Aluminum MacBook, ups the speed a bit, and adds an SD Card slot and FireWire, a feature the Unibody MacBook lost (in this case, it’s FireWire 800).įollowing the example set by the Early 2009 17″ Unibody MacBook Pro, the entire MacBook Pro line now has built-in batteries. All models were discontinued in April 2010, replaced by the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2010).The long-awaited replacement for the 12″ PowerBook has finally been delivered. Built-to-order options included a 320 or 500 GB hard drive, a 128 or 256 GB solid-state drive, and up to 8 GB of RAM. The MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) shipped in two configurations, priced $100 below the previous models, despite the inclusion of more pro-level features: 2.26 GHz/2 GB RAM/160 GB HD/$1199, 2.53 GHz/4 GB RAM/250 GB HD/$1499. The MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) also included the integrated battery introduced with the MacBook Pro (17-inch, Early 2009). These included a FireWire800 port, an SD card slot (an Apple first), an improved LED-backlit screen, and a backlit keyboard on all models. Apple chose to "upgrade" the name to include Pro because of several key improvements, felt to be professional-level features. Introduced in June 2009, the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) replaced the MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008). A single 3.5mm jack could be used for analog or optical audio out, or analog audio in. Though reported as a 256 MB graphics system, the chipset actually used up to 272 MB of RAM. The MacBook Pro's graphics chipset used a portion of main memory as VRAM. Optical Drive: 24x/24x/10x/8x/8x/4x/4x CD-RW/DVD±RW/DVD±R DLĪudio Out: stereo 24 bit mini, Optical S/PDIF Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 32 kB instruction CPU: Intel Mobile Core 2 Duo (P7xxx/P8xxx)
