Description
The MacBook Pro "Core i7" 2.0 15-Inch (Early 2011/Thunderbolt) features a 32 nm "Sandy Bridge" 2.0 GHz Intel "Core i7" processor (2635QM), with four independent processor "cores" on a single silicon chip, a 6 MB shared level 3 cache, 16 GB of 1333 MHz DDR3 SDRAM (PC3-10600) installed in pairs (two 8 GB modules), a 256GB Solid State Drive, an 8X DL "SuperDrive", dual graphics processors -- an AMD Radeon HD 6490M with 256 MB of dedicated GDDR5 memory and an Intel HD Graphics 3000 graphics processor that shares 384 MB of memory with the system -- and an integrated FaceTime HD webcam. The standard configuration of this model has an LED-backlit 15.4" widescreen TFT active-matrix "glossy" display (1440x900 native resolution), but it also was available via custom configuration with a "high-resolution glossy" 1680x1050 display and a "high-resolution antiglare" 1680x1050 display for an additional US$100 and US$150, respectively. Connectivity includes AirPort Extreme (802.11a/b/g/n), Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, Gigabit Ethernet, a Firewire "800" port, two USB 2.0 ports, separate audio in and out ports, an SDXC card slot, and a new "Thunderbolt" port that is backwards compatible with Mini DisplayPort and, likewise, supports an external display at 2560x1600 and passes an audio signal. Thunderbolt also supports other peripherals that use the Thunderbolt standard which provides up to 10 Gbps of bandwidth in both directions. This model uses a "Unibody" aluminum case design -- milled from a single piece of aluminum -- and has a backlit keyboard, a "no button" glass "inertial" multi-touch trackpad, and a non-swappable battery design that provides an Apple estimated 7 hours of battery life.
Apple MacBook Pro 15in Laptop Intel Quad Core i7 2.0GHz (MC721LL/A), 16GB Memory, 480GB Solid State Drive, Thunderbolt (Renewed)
Price is below average
Current Price
$949
Average
$1 291.54
Min Price
$949
Max Price
$1 499.77
Price dynamics
27%
Description
The MacBook Pro "Core i7" 2.0 15-Inch (Early 2011/Thunderbolt) features a 32 nm "Sandy Bridge" 2.0 GHz Intel "Core i7" processor (2635QM), with four independent processor "cores" on a single silicon chip, a 6 MB shared level 3 cache, 16 GB of 1333 MHz DDR3 SDRAM (PC3-10600) installed in pairs (two 8 GB modules), a 256GB Solid State Drive, an 8X DL "SuperDrive", dual graphics processors -- an AMD Radeon HD 6490M with 256 MB of dedicated GDDR5 memory and an Intel HD Graphics 3000 graphics processor that shares 384 MB of memory with the system -- and an integrated FaceTime HD webcam. The standard configuration of this model has an LED-backlit 15.4" widescreen TFT active-matrix "glossy" display (1440x900 native resolution), but it also was available via custom configuration with a "high-resolution glossy" 1680x1050 display and a "high-resolution antiglare" 1680x1050 display for an additional US$100 and US$150, respectively. Connectivity includes AirPort Extreme (802.11a/b/g/n), Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, Gigabit Ethernet, a Firewire "800" port, two USB 2.0 ports, separate audio in and out ports, an SDXC card slot, and a new "Thunderbolt" port that is backwards compatible with Mini DisplayPort and, likewise, supports an external display at 2560x1600 and passes an audio signal. Thunderbolt also supports other peripherals that use the Thunderbolt standard which provides up to 10 Gbps of bandwidth in both directions. This model uses a "Unibody" aluminum case design -- milled from a single piece of aluminum -- and has a backlit keyboard, a "no button" glass "inertial" multi-touch trackpad, and a non-swappable battery design that provides an Apple estimated 7 hours of battery life.
Price will be lower
in next 2 weeks
in next 2 weeks
According to the data, price will be lower in next two weeks, so not waste your money and track better price!
Product review & video
what's up guys my name is Brandon and
before I got my 2019 MacBook Pro 16 inch, I was using my 2011 MacBook Pro for
pretty much everything: web browsing, video editing, photo editing, even some
light gaming. Basically any time I was on the go, I was using this 2011 MacBook Pro
all the way up until the beginning of 2020 and surprisingly it was still
performing just fine a whopping nine years later so in this video I wanted to
talk to you guys about how a 2011 MacBook Pro runs in 2020 and if you
should consider buying one since they are insanely cheap these days and also
if you should hold on to yours if you still have one right now so this is the
base model early 2011 MacBook Pro which has a 2.3 gigahertz I 5 processor and 8
gigabytes of ddr3 RAM now every 2011 MacBook Pro actually came with 4
gigabytes of RAM but of course I did double that - aka good bytes later on
down the road with s


Similar products
