Thanks to Rose for bringing her MacBook Pro to the club last night for me to try. Rose's machine is in a fetching shade of lilac which complemented her outfit perfectly. I am now imagining that she has a MacBook in every conceivable hue to match everything she has in her wardrobe.
Apart from, for me*, the surprising fashion commentary, the MacBook is impressive. Despite being a relatively compact 13.3", the display somehow seemed bigger and not at all cramped. The performance with Lightroom and Photoshop was on a par with my desktop, possibly a bit quicker. A downside was that the PowerPoint presentation I tried was not fully compatible with Keynote. The fonts did not match, the background did not display correctly and some of the more whizzy effects were broken. OS X does not have a PowerPoint viewer, so the options are either to install PowerPoint or create Keynote versions of the presentations.
If I do end up with a MacBook, I was thinking about buying it from PC World. Until yesterday there was a 10% discount** on offer, but that appears to have just finished. So that leaves paying full price to Apple or the wonders of Amazon Marketplace where the keenest prices seem to be. Based on people's feedback, some care needs to be exercised there to ensure that a UK spec model is supplied. I am not interested in the training offer at additional cost which is only available by purchasing at an Apple store and I can get it in the bog standard aluminium finish, which is all I want. Neither should it affect the purchase of Applecare if I want it, although I would need to check.
* My wife will no doubt attest that I hardly ever notice what she is wearing. I am a man. Enough said.
** I did ask John Lewis if it would price match under its "never knowingly undersold scheme", but it declined. As the sticker price is the same as theirs and the discount was only available by using a voucher code. Apparently that does not count even though the amount being charged to my card is lower at the till. Bizarre, but that's the way the company wants to conduct its business.