MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuff - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-11-29T23:20:41Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/58203http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff6MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffJedi Master Spooky2008-09-12T02:36:20Z2009-08-06T03:46:21Z
<p>I am about to buy a notebook and I am between the MB or the MBPro any recomendation?</p>
<p>Other Stuff is Presentations and Word Processing</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58217#582170Answer by Chris Karcher for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffChris Karcher2008-09-12T02:48:58Z2008-09-12T02:48:58Z<p>Are you going to be doing your development inside a virtual machine?</p>
<p>Even if you aren't, I'd go with the Macbook Pro for the beefier specs.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58221#5822113Answer by KiwiBastard for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffKiwiBastard2008-09-12T02:51:42Z2008-09-12T02:51:42Z<p>I have both and have used both for .Net development - here would be my pros for both:</p>
<p><strong>Macbook:</strong></p>
<p>Good Size for portability</p>
<p><strong>MBP:</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>Nicer Keyboard </li>
<li>Bigger Screen Better</li>
<li>Graphics</li>
</ul>
<p>I guess it comes down to resolution
in the end for me. Both are fast and
nice to use. I prefer a bit more
real estate for coding, but if you
can hook an MB to an external
monitor for day to day use then it's
probably ideal (for coding) given
the lesser price. Depends what
"other stuff" is - games or anything
video related, then the MBP with
it's non onboard graphics would be
the winner.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58223#582230Answer by Michael Sharek for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffMichael Sharek2008-09-12T02:53:14Z2008-09-12T02:53:14Z<p>13 inch screen is OK for word processing and surfing the net but it's just NOT enough real-estate for development work.</p>
<p>That means a 15 or 17 inch Pro.</p>
<p>My 2 cents.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58231#582317Answer by jwarzech for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffjwarzech2008-09-12T02:57:32Z2008-09-12T14:23:50Z<p>I use VMWare Fusion to run Visual Studio and I ended up having to sell my Macbook and get a Macbook Pro. The performance requirements (especially when debugging an ASP.net app) were too much (my Macbook could only handle 2GB of ram and had a 2.0 C2D). With my Macbook Pro (2.5 C2D 4 GB of ram) I can forget I even have my development environment running in another space. If you are doing .Net work professionally I would highly recommend going with the MBP.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58243#582430Answer by Brannon for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffBrannon2008-09-12T03:03:51Z2008-09-12T03:03:51Z<p>Some specifics:</p>
<p>The MB has a 13" screen with a max resolution of 1280x800.</p>
<p>The 15" MBP supports 1440x900, while the 17" MBP has options for either 1680x1050 or 1920x1200.</p>
<p>I currently use a Latitude D620 which also maxes out at 1440x900. I used to have a laptop that supported 1920x1200 and after several months I really miss the higher resolution for dev work.</p>
<p>I would recommend <em>at least</em> 1680x1050. Though it's worth noting that the 17" MBP with the 1680x1050 screen uses a CCFL backlight and gets slightly worse battery life than the LED backlit screens.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58254#582545Answer by Marc for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffMarc2008-09-12T03:12:34Z2008-10-09T18:15:41Z<p>Wait about a month for the new MB and MBP to come out, you won't be disapointed!</p>
<p>-Update: Your wait is nearly over; Apple will unveil the new models October 14th at 10:00!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58312#583120Answer by Nic Wise for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffNic Wise2008-09-12T04:45:47Z2008-09-12T04:45:47Z<p>I have a macbook. I love it, but I'd like to be able to do 4GB of ram (I have an older one, the new ones can do this I think). 2GB means I can run 1 VM, and sometimes, I need VS.NET AND AD/Exchange/SQL etc, so 2-3 VM's at a time.</p>
<p>With an external monitor / kbd / mouse, it's fantastic, and portable too.</p>
<p>If I was just doing dev on it, full time, I think I'd get a pro with 4GB. But if you need to move it a lot (eg you travel - I use mine for offloading our cameras when travelling - infact, I'm in LAX about to get on a 14 hour flight from LA to New Zealand right now), the macbook is REALLY hard to beat.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58398#583981Answer by Matt David for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffMatt David2008-09-12T06:15:41Z2008-09-12T06:15:41Z<p>I love my macbook. For me, it runs Vista/VS2008/Code Rush just fine using bootcamp. I haven't run the Vista partition in OS X with vmware yet...I just haven't needed to with my work/workflow. Even so, other vm images(XP, ubuntu, etc) run perfectly well with it. My specs are a 2.x GHz proc with 4 Gb RAM.</p>
<p>Most of the time I'm running it with a 20" external LCD from Dell with an external mouse and key board. Vmware images are run off of a usb drive. It just rocks. </p>
<p>If you plan on working off of the laptop by itself without external mouse/kb/monitor more than 60% of the time, than the macbook pro with it's larger keyboard and monitor would be better suited.</p>
<p>It really is too bad that Apple doesn't have a showcase MB/MBP with Windows running in the Apple stores. I know from a business perspective that they shouldn't, but it would show everyone what versatile machines they have.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58407#584071Answer by Stu Thompson for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffStu Thompson2008-09-12T06:22:13Z2008-09-12T06:22:13Z<p>I recently moved from a MB to MBP, and the difference is huge. The MB was just not powerful enough to use a primary development machine, but my MBP is. (Java, btw, but that would not matter I think.) There are thee key things that make the MBP significantly better over the MB:</p>
<ul>
<li>4GB of RAM upgrade (vs. 2GB on the MB)</li>
<li>7,200 RPM drive upgrade (vs. 5,400 only on the MB)</li>
<li>The 15" screen</li>
</ul>
<p>These things matter!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58474#584743Answer by robsoft for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffrobsoft2008-09-12T07:58:59Z2008-09-12T07:58:59Z<p>I've a 17" 1stGen MacbookPro (C1D, 2Gb ram, 120Gb HD, 1680x1050) and run VMware Fusion on it, with 16-20Gb VMs which I keep on various 2.5" Firewire external drives. It's an <b>awesome</b> road machine, and has repaid me every penny I ever spent on it, in spades. The battery life is excellent (once the machine settles down from booting and I'm mostly just coding/IDE work, I can get 3 hours out of a full charge - not bad on a 2-year-old battery). I have a spare battery too for those days when the mains sockets on the trains/in the coffee shops are hard to come by.</p>
<p>My gripes would be <b>weight</b> - at 17", anything you look at will be heavier of course - and the one most relevant for you I think, <b>screen resolution</b>. I develop apps that run at 1024x768 for point-of-sale systems (Delphi, not VS) and I find that the vertical resolution of 1050 makes this a pain to work on 768 screens at times. I would imagine that VS at 900 would be limiting too. Whenever I can, I plug into an external monitor and leave things like the browser/mail app/ref docs running on the laptop screen.</p>
<p>One other concern might be the <b>keyboard</b> - you should definitely spend some time with both before you make a decision, as the keyboards on these 2 models are quite different beasts and each has it's strengths and weaknesses.</p>
<p>Finally, it's worth noting that the product range traditionally gets 'refreshed' in October and you might find in 3-4 weeks time that you would get <b>more machine for your price point</b> - well worth hanging-on for a little longer if you can, just to see what comes out.</p>
<p>Hope that helps!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58683#586830Answer by Konrad Rudolph for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffKonrad Rudolph2008-09-12T10:59:31Z2008-09-12T10:59:31Z<p>I find the MB relatively expensive. The cost-benefit ratio isn't right, unless you're prepared to pay for the fancy design. While the MBP is even more expensive, its price is on par with comparable professional notebooks so I find the cost-benefit ratio much better.</p>
<p>Additionally, I find 15" too small for development in Visual Studio but that's just me.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/58720#587200Answer by Matthew Watson for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffMatthew Watson2008-09-12T11:22:57Z2008-09-12T11:22:57Z<p>MBP, it allows more memory, I find that is the most important thing for any development environment, I never seem to be able to have enough.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/59830#598300Answer by Shaun Austin for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffShaun Austin2008-09-12T20:02:23Z2008-09-12T20:02:23Z<p>Crikey, I'm doing some on a MacBook Air!!!!</p>
<p>Most annoying aspect? On my (UK) keyboard there is no # key!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/59860#598601Answer by Redbeard 0x0A for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffRedbeard 0x0A2008-09-12T20:20:05Z2008-09-12T20:20:05Z<p>If battery life is the most important thing, then the Macbook is the winner.</p>
<p>My Black Macbook (C2D 2.0, 2GB, 120GB) can last close to 3.5 - 4 hours compared to my wife's Mackbook Pro (C2D 2.4, 2GB, 120GB, LED Backlight) which gets 2.5 to 3 hours on similar tasks.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/189397#1893970Answer by Chris Schreiner for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffChris Schreiner2008-10-09T22:12:08Z2008-10-09T22:12:08Z<p>The keyboard on the MacBook is clearly superior to the MacBook Pro. I have both, but I like the other aspects of the MBP, so I bought this thin external bluetooth keyboard from Apple. Firewire 800 port is also nice when you have external disks running MacOS (since windows must be installed on the internal). Enough said.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/958975#9589750Answer by Ahmed for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffAhmed2009-06-06T04:12:18Z2009-06-06T04:12:18Z<p>I do all my development on my macbook and enjoy its portability. It can handle all the coding and uses a lot of power but the only drawback is the screen. if you are going to developing i would go with a bigger screen MBP preferably a 17" but if you cannot afford it stick with the 15" MBP. MB are great but I tend to use the spaces feature very often since i have a debugger running on one space and the IDE running on the other. regarding speed both do the job if you are coding or working with photoshop. For developing purposes i would go with a MBP 15" the graphics and speed are great and the size is portable and doesn't weigh much.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/58203/macbook-vs-macbook-pro-for-net-development-and-other-stuff/1236868#12368681Answer by zhou for MacBook vs MacBook Pro for .NET development and other stuffzhou2009-08-06T03:46:21Z2009-08-06T03:46:21Z<p>i love my macbook</p>