The wireless web test measures battery life by wirelessly browsing 25 popular websites with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. Testing conducted by Apple in November and December 2022 using preproduction 14‑inch MacBook Pro systems with Apple M2 Pro, 12‑core CPU, 19‑core GPU, 16GB of RAM, and 1TB SSD.Battery life varies by use and configuration. The Apple TV app movie playback test measures battery life by playing back HD 1080p content with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. The wireless web test measures battery life by wirelessly browsing 25 popular websites with display brightness set to 8 clicks from bottom. Testing conducted by Apple in May 2022 using preproduction 13‑inch MacBook Pro systems with Apple M2, 8‑core CPU, 10‑core GPU, 8GB of RAM, and 256GB SSD.1TB = 1 trillion bytes actual formatted capacity less.When measured as a standard rectangular shape, the screens are 14.2 inches and 16.2 inches diagonally (actual viewable area is less). The displays on the 14‑inch and 16‑inch MacBook Pro have rounded corners at the top. More details are available from Apple’s trade‑in partner for trade-in and recycling of eligible devices. Apple or its trade‑in partners reserve the right to refuse or limit quantity of any trade-in transaction for any reason. Some stores may have additional requirements. Offer may not be available in all stores, and may vary between in-store and online trade-in. In-store trade-in requires presentation of a valid photo ID (local law may require saving this information). Sales tax may be assessed on full value of a new device purchase. Actual value awarded is based on receipt of a qualifying device matching the description provided when estimate was made. Trade-in value may be applied toward qualifying new device purchase, or added to an Apple Gift Card. You must be at least 18 years old to be eligible to trade in for credit or for an Apple Gift Card. * Trade-in values will vary based on the condition, year, and configuration of your eligible trade-in device.View full terms and conditions of offer here. Only one Promotion Product per eligible Mac or eligible iPad per Qualified Purchaser. ◊ Qualified Purchasers receive an Apple Gift Card when they purchase an eligible Mac or iPad at a Qualifying Location.Hat tip to MAX Underground for spotting this. *Actually, the announcement was made last week. Read the thread about the news on Otoy’s forum (Not much more information) Read Otoy’s press release on ORBX and ORBX.js However, as the controversy over Adobe’s decision to move to a cloud-only licensing model for its own creative tools indicates, that would be a move best handled with care. If Autodesk were to make its DCC software available as a cloud service – as it has begun to do with its engineering tools – it would resolve the longstanding user plea for Mac and Linux editions of tools like 3ds Max. The original announcement focused on cloud rendering, but noted that the partnership “will enable continuous integration of Otoy’s technology across Autodesk’s portfolio of software and services”. However, Otoy entered a development partnership with Autodesk in 2011. So far, there’s no indication of when the new streaming system will be made available in a commercial service. How long will it be before you can try this? The company’s cloud application hosting system then enables CPU and GPU draw commands to be virtualised on a cloud server and rendered inside a standard HTML5 webpage using the ORBX.js library. Otoy’s HTML5 client is powered by ORBX, a new “high-performance media codec built from scratch to decode 1080p video entirely in JavaScript”. Performance is slightly, but noticeably better, in the streamed version, with viewport previews resolving faster.Īccording to the news release, Otoy has also demonstrated the system in use to stream Valve’s Steam client and Photoshop CS6, although we haven’t been able to locate a video of the latter. The demo above shows a test scene running locally in 3ds Max 2014 on a $5,000 Alienware portable and being streamed from Otoy’s cloud service to the browser of an (unspecified, but presumably cheaper) MacBook Pro. Watch 3ds Max running faster on a Mac than a PC – kinda The system works on all HTML5 browsers, including Firefox, Chrome, Opera, Safari and IE10, including those running on tablets – and yep, on Macs and Linux machines. Cloud services specialist Otoy has unveiled ORBX.js: a JavaScript library that enables tools like 3ds Max and Photoshop to be virtualised in the cloud and streamed to any HTML5-enabled browser*.
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