After Apple released a fix for the battery issue that caused Consumer Reports' MacBook battery tests to go crazy,Women Who Have Tasted Swapping [Uncut] the organization now recommends Apple's 2016 MacBook Pros -- just like all MacBooks that came before them.
The issue originally caused CR not to recommend Apple's new MacBook Pros after it tested them in December. Known for rigorous testing standards, CR found the battery life on all new MacBook Pros wildly erratic, ranging from 3.75 to 16 hours on one model.
SEE ALSO: Apple responds to damning MacBook Pro battery testAs it turned out, the problem was a combination of two factors: an icon-reloading bug in Safari, which Apple has now fixed, and the fact that CR turns off browser cache for its battery test, which -- according to Apple -- is unconventional and does not reflect actual real-life usage.
After re-doing the battery tests, CR concluded that the issue no longer exists.
The average battery life in CR's testing are now actually quite spectacular -- 15.75 hours for the 13-inch Pro with a Touch Bar; 18.75 hours for the 13-inch pro without a Touch Bar, and 17.25 hours for the 15-inch Pro with a Touch Bar.
"With the updated software, the three MacBook Pros in our labs all performed well, with one model running 18.75 hours on a charge," the organization wrote in a blog post Thursday.
With the battery life issue all fixed now, CR says, all three of Apple's new MacBook Pros fall "well within the recommended range in Consumer Reports ratings."
CR's original findings caused a lot of interest as they followed a number of user reports that the battery life on the new MacBook Pros is far below Apple's promised 10 hours. These prompted Apple to remove the "time remaining" estimate from the battery drop down menu in the menu bar.
In Mashable's testing, the new MacBook Pros performed well, with battery life being just as good or better than Apple promises.
Topics Apple MacBook
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best Hydro Flask deal: Save $10 on a 24
Marvel star Anthony Mackie buys 20 acres in New Orleans for movie studio
U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch kindly reminds Google that he's still alive
The Anatomy of Liberal Melancholy
Russia officially bans Facebook and Instagram
You still can't block followers on Spotify, and users are not happy
Astronomers saw one galaxy impale another. The damage was an eye
Welp, here's a photo of a Putin impersonator riding a famous bronze bull covered in dildos
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。