16in MacBook Pro 2021: Everything we know about the MacBook Pro 16in

Back in November 2019 the largest MacBook Pro gained a new design with a larger screen, but other than the outward redesign the 16in MacBook Pro kept the components of the 15in model. Those components date back to June 2019.

With nearly two years having passed since those components used in the 16in MacBook Pro were introduced it’s high time for the 16in MacBook Pro to get an update. What can we expect and when can we expect it?

In this article we’ll look at the rumours about the 2021 16in MacBook’s new Apple-made processor and graphics options, talk of a redesign – maybe even a titanium case – and reports that the MagSafe charger will be making a comeback, while the Touch Bar makes a departure.

16in MacBook Pro: Release date

Hopefully we won’t have to wait much longer for Apple to update the 16in MacBook Pro.

In a May 2021 report for Bloomberg Mark Gurman has revealed that, according to his sources, an updated MacBook Pro will launch this summer.

We were already expecting to see a new 14in MacBook Pro at WWDC in June, but, if Gurman is correct, we could also see the 16in MacBook Pro and a Mac mini update at the same time. Read more in: Apple to overhaul entire Mac line up – Bloomberg.

In January 2021 another Bloomberg report indicated that both sizes of MacBook Pro would launch around the middle of the year. As Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman tweeted:

WWDC is certainly starting to look like the likely venue for a 16in MacBook Pro launch. On 24 May 2021 Apple confirmed details of WWDC with the image below – and clues can be found if you studythe reflection in the glasses of the developer memoji on the left.

WWDC 2021

As Twitter user Jane Manchun Wong pointed out – if you mirror the image and translated the reflected unicode snippets you can translate it to eat, sleep, MacBook:

This could, of course, just represent the typical day of a developer: eat, sleep, code. But infamous Apple leaker Jon Prosser agrees with Wong’s deduction. He says he “can confirm” that a new MacBook Pro will launch at WWDC 2021.

Read more about the clues here: Hidden clues indicate MacBook Pro launch at WWDC.

However, we could have a longer wait. The usually accurate analyst Ming-Chi Kuo believes that the MacBook Pro is being held up by coronavirus-related delays affecting a new screen technology Apple is using (more on that below).

Kuo reiterated this in January 2021, and again in February 2021, in notes to investors where he said that the new MacBook Pro models won’t launch until the third quarter of 2021.

Kuo shortages in the mini-LED panels that Apple wants to use for the new MacBooks as one reason for the delay, but it’s not only mini-LED panels that are facing delays. According to Asian newspaper the Nikkei, global component shortages mean Apple’s MacBook Pro is delayed. Some components that should have been available before the summer are now not expected to be delivered untli the autumn.

This shortage of chips that is said to have led to difficulties getting the circuits mounted on the motherboard on the MacBook model, according to Nikkei.

As a result of these shortages Nikkei in March 2021 suggested the MacBook launch could be pushed back to autumn.

What seems certain is that there will be new MacBooks in 2021. Apple apparently has an “aggressive production schedule” for its MacBook Pro 2021, so the company certainly has something big planned. Read: New MacBook Pro in 2021.

Read our review of the 2019 16in MacBook Pro.

16in MacBook Pro: New features and specs

What can we expect from the 16in MacBook Pro update when it does arrive? The most obvious improvement will be the inclusion of Apple Silicon – either the M1X Chip, or perhaps an M2 Chip. We can expect a few more new features and changes as well.

New Apple processor

Two of the 13in MacBook Pro ditched Intel for Apple’s own processor line in November 2020 along with the MacBook Air and Mac mini. The same processor has since made its way into the iMac – a new 24in model that Apple launched in April 2021.

We’ve seen impressive benchmarks from these M1 processors, but those who use more processor intensive apps will no doubt be anticipating that something amazing is in the pipeline, and of that we are certain.

The 16in MacBook Pro has always been targetted at high-end use, with creative pros being the group most likely to be impatitently awaiting the launch of a new, Apple powered machine. What can we expect from the successor to the M1 that will almost definately feature in this new MacBook Pro?

There are rumours indicating that Apple could be working on an M1X Chip or an M2 chip. What exactly will these chips offer?

LeaksApplePro tweeted in November 2020 about a 12-core chip for the 16in MacBook Pro.

While a Bloomberg report in December 2020 indicated that: “For its next-generation chip targeting MacBook Pro and iMac models, Apple is working on designs with as many as 16 power cores and four efficiency cores.”

Now a Bloomberg report from May 2021 is suggesting that the new MacBook Pro will offer “processors designed in-house that will greatly outpace the performance and capabilities of the current M1 chips.”

That report indicates that these more powerful iterations of the M-series chips will have “more graphics and computing cores”.

Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman’s sources claim that there will be two different chips for the 14in and 16in MacBook Pro models. These are codenamed Jade C-Chop and Jade C-Die.

Both chips will offer eight high-performance cores and two energy-efficient cores – bringing a total of 10, according to that report. Read more here: Apple to overhaul entire Mac line up – Bloomberg.

The question is will the new processor in the 16in MacBook Pro be an M1X or M2? According to a surprisingly accurate, but not so well known, Apple leaker, it’s the M1X we should be expecting.

Dylan suggested in April 2021 that the M1X will be the chip that Apple will use:

He then went on to confirm that:

Dylan correctly predicted that the 24in iMac would use a M1 chip when many were anticipating an M1X chip for that machine.

Apple graphics

The graphics capabilities are another area where these MacBook Pro will need to improve if they are to be concidered truely Pro.

The current M1 Macs are beating the Intel integrated graphics in tests, but they are generally being left behind by the discrete graphics used in the 16in MacBook Pro (and the 27in iMac for that matter).

Currently the 16in MacBook Pro offers the AMD Radeon Pro 5300M or 5500M with 4GB RAM or the AMD Radeon Pro 5600M with 8GB RAM. Many will be concerned that the new Silicon 16in MacBook Pro will lack discrete graphics and will be less appropriate for high end use as a result of that.

Hopefully there is no need for concern. Reports suggest that Apple is working on a 16-core graphics solution for the successor to the M1.

In the May Bloomberg report Gurman indicates that there will be either 16 or 32 graphics core variations for the new MacBook Pro – compared to and seven or eight graphics cores for the M1.

When it announced the plans to move to ARM-based processors, Apple also sought to put minds at rest regarding graphics: in a developer document it said “Don’t assume a discrete GPU means better performance,” and “The integrated GPU in Apple processors is optimised for high performance graphics tasks.” Read this for more information about Apple’s graphics plans: Details of Apple’s Silicon graphics.

As we discuss in our Apple vs Intel article, Apple is setting expectations high – claiming that we can expect “higher performance GPUs” inside the new Apple Silicon Macs. It is entirely possible that Apple will be able to achieve its promise: Apple uses Tile Based Deferred Rendering (TBDR) rather than the Immediate Mode Rendering (IMR) as used by Intel, Nvidia and AMD GPUs and there are a number of benefits to this.

You might also like to read: Apple’s plans for the Mac Pro.

16in MacBook Pro

RAM updates

The current M1 Macs ship with 8GB RAM as standard and can be upgraded to 16GB RAM at point of sale. For many creative pros 8GB or even 16GB doesn’t sound like enough RAM and this has been an area of concern.

There are two reasons why this shouldn’t be a worry for the new MacBook Pro models. According to the May Bloomberg report: “The chips also include up to 64GB of memory versus a maximum of 16GB on the M1”.

The other reason why it shouldn’t be a concern is the 8GB RAM on the M1 isn’t the same as 8GB RAM with an Intel Mac. This is because it is integrated into the M1 chip, alongside the processor and the graphics, which means that tasks don’t need to be shunted around as much. Read more about Apple’s Unified Memory Architecture.

We can probably expect to see 16GB as standard in the new 16in MacBook Pro, but the way that RAM is allocated will be different, so it is less likely that the new MacBook Pro will have separate graphics memory.

As for whether a new Silicon MacBook Pro could support 64GB RAM, like the current model does, we don’t know.

New MacBook Pro design

Mini-LED screen

One reason why analyst Ming-Chi Kuo expects that the new 16in MBP will not arrive until 2021 is that his sources’ indicated that Apple is looking to adopt mini-LED screen panels for its Macs – these mini-LED screens have been suffering from COVID-related delays.

These new mini-LED panels offer a rich wide colour gamut as well as high contrast ratios, high dynamic range, and more. Mini-LED should also result in thinner, more power-efficient panels that don’t suffer from burn-in (which is an issue with OLED).

According to Kuo, the mini LED screens being used for the MacBook Pro will have slightly flatter edges – like the iPad Pro and the iPhone 12 models.

Camera and Face ID

Apple really needs to up its game with this camera, something that has become very apparent in this age of video conferencing.

The MacBook Pro still offers a shockingly poor 720p camera. As a comparison the FaceTime camera (aka Selfie camera) on the iPhone 11 range offers 1080p HD video recording and a 12MP camera.

Apple has already addressed the FaceTime camera with the 24in iMac, so it seems likely we could see a similar update in the new MacBook Pro.

We’d also like to see the TrueDepth camera appear on the MacBook range, enabling Face ID on the Mac. It looks like we might indeed get Face ID on the Mac – the Big Sur beta contains code that hints that the TrueDepth camera is coming to the Mac.

No Touch Bar

According to the January 2021 investor note from Ming Chi Kuo Apple is removing the Touch Bar from the new MacBook Pro. The physical function buttons will be restored. Read: MagSafe in and Touch Bar out for new iPhone-like MacBook Pro.

Kuo went on to reiterate this claim in an investor note in February 2021, so it looks like the Touch Bar’s days are numbered.

Alternatively, the new model could include an updated Touch Bar. Read: Apple Patents Force Touch for MacBook Pro Touch Bar.

MagSafe

As you can see from the above link, the return of MagSafe is also predicted for the new MacBook Pro. Both Kuo and a January 2021 Bloomberg report state that Apple will be restoring the ‌MagSafe‌ charging connector, which was popular with people who didn’t want their Mac to crash to the ground when they tripped over the power cable. Find out more about MagSafe here: What is MagSafe?

Kuo also suggests that we could see the return of other ports including the SD card slot and the HDMI port. Read more here: Apple will correct old mistakes with new MacBook Pro models.

Wi-Fi 6

Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) as a Wi-Fi standard is still in its infancy, but it is starting to arrive – and it features on the new 13in MacBook Pro and MacBook Air models.

It seems a safe bet to expect that it will be available on the new 16in MacBook Pro.

For more information about what Apple’s plans for the coming months, read our guide to the New Apple products coming in 2021.

Original Article