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Macbook Pro Capacity Hard Drive

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  1. Changing Hard Drive Macbook Pro
  2. Hard Drive Capacity For Macbook Pro

This is one of the fastest high capacity hard drives you can plug into your Mac, with a huge 4TB of storage space that zips along its USB 3.0, eSATA or FireWire connection.

  • Discover the world of external hard drives for Mac. Compare portable, USB and external hard drive models for office and home and shop online. MacBook Pro (13-inch.
  • Apple MacBook Pro (13-inch, space gray, 256GB, 2017) mpxt2lla $899.99. Hard Drive Capacity 128 GB Introduced.
  • Shop for macbook pro hard drive at Best Buy. Find low everyday prices and buy online for delivery or in-store pick-up. Show Hard Drive Size filter description. Less than 250GB Less than 250GB. 250GB - 479GB 250GB - 479GB. 480GB - 999GB 480GB - 999GB. Total Storage Capacity. Less than 250GB Less than 250GB. 250 - 480GB 250 - 480GB.
  • Mid-2013 and Later MacBook Air & MacBook Pro with Retina Display. Aura SSDs for mid-2013 and later MacBook Air and MacBook Pro with Retina display laptops make the impossible possible. With 480GB, 1TB and 2TB capacity options, now you can upgrade your Mac laptop with a capacity boost up to 8x the original PCIe-based flash SSD.


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PowerPC :: Maximum Hard Drive And RAM Size For Upgrading?

Sep 17, 2009

Few questions about this, what is the max harddrive and ram that can be put into it? and what is the latest OS that can be installed on it, I am currently running panther on it.

Macbook Pro Capacity Hard Drive

MacBook Air :: Finding Maximum Size Of Windows 7 Partition Size

Dec 17, 2009

i read may post about this but still do not have a solid answer. Apple keyboard redesign. Will 20GB partition be fine with my Macbook Air SSD drive ?
I only plan on installing a antivirus software and thats about it, maybe 1 program.

MacBook Pro :: Hard Drive Replacement (Supported Maximum Capacity)

May 30, 2010

I bought my Macbook Pro in February or March of 2006 and it's still running strong. The hard drive, however, is full and I'd like to get a new, larger, faster one. I'm aware that I need a SATA drive and that it's form factor should be 2.5'. I'm also aware that the max transfer rate for my drive is 1.5 Gb/s, can I use one that is 3.0 Gb/s? I think the current drive is 4200 or 5400 RPM, can I use one that is 7200RPM (this computer is mostly used while on AC power)? What about maximum capacity? Are there any limitations due to BIOS or the motherboard? Here is the drive I'm looking at, please let me know if this will work or if you have a similar, better solution.
Here are some of the specs from my MBP:
Model Name: MacBook Pro
Model Identifier: MacBookPro1,1
Processor Name: Intel Core Duo
Processor Speed: 2 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache: 2 MB
Memory: 2 GB
Bus Speed: 667 MHz
Boot ROM Version: MBP11.0055.B08
SMC Version (system): 1.2f10
TOSHIBA MK1032GSX:
Capacity: 100.03 GB (100,030,242,816 bytes)
Model: TOSHIBA MK1032GSX
Revision: AS024B
Native Command Queuing: Yes
Queue Depth: 32
I'm looking for at least a couple of different peoples' opinions, or if you have a link that points to replacement HD requirements that would also be very helpful.

OS X :: Maximum Size HDD That Will Work In MacBook?

Oct 3, 2009

Just wondered whats the largest capacity harddrive that would work in my Macbook unibody.

MacBook Pro :: Vpn Maximum Log File Size?

May 28, 2012

I'm trying to figure out how to change the maximum log file setting for my Cisco VPN. I think on a Windows machine you are able to do this:
[Instructions for Windows: right-click 'Computer' on your desktop, and select 'Manage'. Expand 'Event Viewer' and then 'Applications and Services Logs'. Right-click on 'Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client) and select 'Properties. There will be a 'Maximum log size' and a 'When maximum event log size is reached' option.]
I can't seem to figure out how to do this on my Macbook Pro. I'm running 10.7.4
Have tried viewing in Console and while i can see the ppp file - there's no way to see maximum file size settings.
Info:
iCal, Mac OS X (10.7)

Changing Hard Drive Macbook Pro

Mac Pro :: Maximum MP(2006) Hard Drive Capacity?

Nov 29, 2010

So, I have a 2006 model MacPro. Currently, I have (3) 500GB hard drives and (1) 750GB hard drive.
I would like to possible add a 2TB or at least 1.5TB internal hard drive to it (I have so much clutter with my external drives already)
I called Apple and they said that model only went to 750GB..
Is there really a limit? It's a SATA drive so I figure it would keep going? has anyone had any luck with larger drives??!

PowerPC :: Maximum Hard Drive Capacity For G4

Jan 8, 2009

I just purchased a Mac mini g4 1.5ghz and it came with a 120gb hd does anyone know the max hd capacity I can put into it?

Hardware :: Maximum EMac Hard Drive Capacity

Apr 5, 2008

G4 eMac 1.25, OS 10.4.11 What maximum capacity of internal hard drive can I put inside my eMac? 250 Gb drives (in NZ) are selling for under 40c/Gb, and I definitely need to increase the hard drive size in the eMac.
The present installed HD in the eMac is a Seagate Barracuda ST340015A, manuf. 2003
Capacity: 37.27 GB
Model:ST340015A
Revision: 3.01
Serial Number:5LACNJ0R
Its spindle speed is 5800 rpm, whereas most modern drives are 7200 (or faster). Will that affect any proposed hard drive change?
eMac details:
Machine Name: eMac
Machine Model: PowerMac6,4
CPU Type: PowerPC G4 (1.1)
CPU Speed: 1.25 GHz
L2 Cache (per CPU): 512 KB
Memory:768 MB
Bus Speed: 167 MHz
Boot ROM Version: 4.8.2f1

MacBook :: Maximum Size / Capacity Of HD That Model Supports?

Sep 1, 2010

Howdy all, just been scouring the web but can't find anything on this. I have a late 2008 aluminium MB 2.4ghz. I currently have a 500gb HD but want to increase this. Is there a max size/capacity that my model supports or can I go nuts and say put a 1TB inside with no dramas?

MacBook Pro :: Maximum Internal Disk Size Accepted By OS X Lion?

Apr 30, 2012

What's the maximum size of an internal HDD I can use with my late 2011 MacBook Pro 17'? And how much memory can I squeeze into it?
Info:
MacBook Pro (17-inch Late 2011), Mac OS X (10.7.3)

Mac Mini :: Maximum Supported Capacity - Upgrading Internal Hard Drive

Jan 9, 2009

Alright I have a current rev Mini 1.83ghz, and want to upgrade the stock 80gb HD, wondering if this drive will work. [URL]. I want the 7200RPM, but wasn't sure 3.0GB would work on the intel controller, thinking it may only support 1.5GB. Also, when I reinstall leopard, does it allow me to format the drive to HFS+ or how would I do this?

Mac Mini :: Hard Drive - Same Physical Size As Macbook Pro?

Jan 4, 2010

Does the Macbook Pro and the Mac Mini use the same type/size hard drive? (Looking to take a hard drive from a macbook pro and put it in the mac mini as a replacement)

MacBook :: Any Limit For Hard Drive Size For Upgrading?

Feb 7, 2012
Macbook Pro Capacity Hard Drive

MacBook Air :: Finding Maximum Size Of Windows 7 Partition Size

Dec 17, 2009

i read may post about this but still do not have a solid answer. Apple keyboard redesign. Will 20GB partition be fine with my Macbook Air SSD drive ?
I only plan on installing a antivirus software and thats about it, maybe 1 program.

MacBook Pro :: Hard Drive Replacement (Supported Maximum Capacity)

May 30, 2010

I bought my Macbook Pro in February or March of 2006 and it's still running strong. The hard drive, however, is full and I'd like to get a new, larger, faster one. I'm aware that I need a SATA drive and that it's form factor should be 2.5'. I'm also aware that the max transfer rate for my drive is 1.5 Gb/s, can I use one that is 3.0 Gb/s? I think the current drive is 4200 or 5400 RPM, can I use one that is 7200RPM (this computer is mostly used while on AC power)? What about maximum capacity? Are there any limitations due to BIOS or the motherboard? Here is the drive I'm looking at, please let me know if this will work or if you have a similar, better solution.
Here are some of the specs from my MBP:
Model Name: MacBook Pro
Model Identifier: MacBookPro1,1
Processor Name: Intel Core Duo
Processor Speed: 2 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache: 2 MB
Memory: 2 GB
Bus Speed: 667 MHz
Boot ROM Version: MBP11.0055.B08
SMC Version (system): 1.2f10
TOSHIBA MK1032GSX:
Capacity: 100.03 GB (100,030,242,816 bytes)
Model: TOSHIBA MK1032GSX
Revision: AS024B
Native Command Queuing: Yes
Queue Depth: 32
I'm looking for at least a couple of different peoples' opinions, or if you have a link that points to replacement HD requirements that would also be very helpful.

OS X :: Maximum Size HDD That Will Work In MacBook?

Oct 3, 2009

Just wondered whats the largest capacity harddrive that would work in my Macbook unibody.

MacBook Pro :: Vpn Maximum Log File Size?

May 28, 2012

I'm trying to figure out how to change the maximum log file setting for my Cisco VPN. I think on a Windows machine you are able to do this:
[Instructions for Windows: right-click 'Computer' on your desktop, and select 'Manage'. Expand 'Event Viewer' and then 'Applications and Services Logs'. Right-click on 'Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client) and select 'Properties. There will be a 'Maximum log size' and a 'When maximum event log size is reached' option.]
I can't seem to figure out how to do this on my Macbook Pro. I'm running 10.7.4
Have tried viewing in Console and while i can see the ppp file - there's no way to see maximum file size settings.
Info:
iCal, Mac OS X (10.7)

Changing Hard Drive Macbook Pro

Mac Pro :: Maximum MP(2006) Hard Drive Capacity?

Nov 29, 2010

So, I have a 2006 model MacPro. Currently, I have (3) 500GB hard drives and (1) 750GB hard drive.
I would like to possible add a 2TB or at least 1.5TB internal hard drive to it (I have so much clutter with my external drives already)
I called Apple and they said that model only went to 750GB..
Is there really a limit? It's a SATA drive so I figure it would keep going? has anyone had any luck with larger drives??!

PowerPC :: Maximum Hard Drive Capacity For G4

Jan 8, 2009

I just purchased a Mac mini g4 1.5ghz and it came with a 120gb hd does anyone know the max hd capacity I can put into it?

Hardware :: Maximum EMac Hard Drive Capacity

Apr 5, 2008

G4 eMac 1.25, OS 10.4.11 What maximum capacity of internal hard drive can I put inside my eMac? 250 Gb drives (in NZ) are selling for under 40c/Gb, and I definitely need to increase the hard drive size in the eMac.
The present installed HD in the eMac is a Seagate Barracuda ST340015A, manuf. 2003
Capacity: 37.27 GB
Model:ST340015A
Revision: 3.01
Serial Number:5LACNJ0R
Its spindle speed is 5800 rpm, whereas most modern drives are 7200 (or faster). Will that affect any proposed hard drive change?
eMac details:
Machine Name: eMac
Machine Model: PowerMac6,4
CPU Type: PowerPC G4 (1.1)
CPU Speed: 1.25 GHz
L2 Cache (per CPU): 512 KB
Memory:768 MB
Bus Speed: 167 MHz
Boot ROM Version: 4.8.2f1

MacBook :: Maximum Size / Capacity Of HD That Model Supports?

Sep 1, 2010

Howdy all, just been scouring the web but can't find anything on this. I have a late 2008 aluminium MB 2.4ghz. I currently have a 500gb HD but want to increase this. Is there a max size/capacity that my model supports or can I go nuts and say put a 1TB inside with no dramas?

MacBook Pro :: Maximum Internal Disk Size Accepted By OS X Lion?

Apr 30, 2012

What's the maximum size of an internal HDD I can use with my late 2011 MacBook Pro 17'? And how much memory can I squeeze into it?
Info:
MacBook Pro (17-inch Late 2011), Mac OS X (10.7.3)

Mac Mini :: Maximum Supported Capacity - Upgrading Internal Hard Drive

Jan 9, 2009

Alright I have a current rev Mini 1.83ghz, and want to upgrade the stock 80gb HD, wondering if this drive will work. [URL]. I want the 7200RPM, but wasn't sure 3.0GB would work on the intel controller, thinking it may only support 1.5GB. Also, when I reinstall leopard, does it allow me to format the drive to HFS+ or how would I do this?

Mac Mini :: Hard Drive - Same Physical Size As Macbook Pro?

Jan 4, 2010

Does the Macbook Pro and the Mac Mini use the same type/size hard drive? (Looking to take a hard drive from a macbook pro and put it in the mac mini as a replacement)

MacBook :: Any Limit For Hard Drive Size For Upgrading?

Feb 7, 2012

I'm looking to upgrade my internal hard drive, is there a limit on the size I can upgrade to? I have a 150G drive, and I'm running out of space. I'm thinking about going for the gold, and getting a 1T?
Info:
MacBook, Mac OS X (10.7.2), 2.2 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo-4G Ram

OS X V10.6 Snow Leopard :: Set Maximum Font Size?

Jul 2, 2012

Is there a way that I can set the maximum font size?� I want to limit the size of all fonts.
Info:MacBook, Mac OS X (10.6.6)

MacBook Pro :: Correct Size Screw Driver - Hard Drive

Nov 18, 2010

First off, I am very O.C.D when it comes to my electronics and I constantly worry about my stuff. Over the past month, I have been checking SMART status and benchmarking my hard drive at least once a day. I'm a little worried that my hard drive is dying.. Yea, I'm crazy..Regardless of the above, I would like some answers to a few questions.First, how durable are the unibody lower case screws? Do they strip easily? If I purchase the correct size screw driver (phillips #00), what are my risks of damaging the screws, or possibly wearing them out prematurely?Second, how difficult is it to realign the lower case and not cause a 'wobble.' I have read some people incorrectly screwing in the bottom case and basically bending the lower case, causing the machine to wobble on a flat surface.After reading my manual, Apple clearly indicates that users are permitted to service the hard drive. I'm technologically savvy but my only worries are damaging my $2500 machine..

MacBook Air :: Replacing Hard Drive - Suitable Size For Available Space

Mar 16, 2009

Someone I know wants to buy a macbook air. I've replaced hard drives on Sony's, lenovos, macbooks etc. But I know some Sony's come with special 'non-standard' drive sizes. Does anyone know if the Seagate Momentus laptop drive will fit in the newest macbook air? I saw on anandtech you could replace it on the previous model but I thought I'd double check as she needs much more space than 120GB that apple offers.

MacBook Pro :: Replacement Hard Drive - What Storage Size Is Recommended

Apr 10, 2012

It seems that the writing is on the wall for my macbook pro internal harddrive.. Currently limping along but I need to start in safe mode and occaisonally internet boot and run diskutil, fsck etc etc etc.. I think it's safe to say it's going to die soon!So, looking to buy a replacement internal hard drive for a 2011 15' macbook pro: currently I have the stock 750gb 5000rpm drive.Looking for recommendations: of course a 750gb solid state drive would be ideal but of course not realistic!
Info:
MacBook Pro (15-inch Early 2011), Mac OS X (10.6.8)

PowerPC :: HD Maximum Supported Size For IBook Clamshell?

Mar 2, 2008

I just got a Tangerine Clamshell that looks great w/ all original packaging. I was wanting to upgrade the 6GB hard drive with a 250GB, will the Clamshells take a hard drive this big? I know the iMac G3s can't take more than 127gb.

OS X V10.7 Lion :: Mail 5.2 - PDF Attachment Exceeds Maximum Size

Apr 23, 2012

When attaching a simple PDF (size 15.8MB) to a simple OS Lion email, when going out it expands to 21.4 MB. This exceeds my ISPs 20MB maximum file size. Why a simple PDF would expand by almost 5 MB.�The same email without the attachment is only 400 KB.
Info:
Mac OS X (10.7.3), Mail

OS X V10.6 Snow Leopard :: Login With Password And Screen Zooms To Maximum Size

Mar 9, 2012

This just started happening. Startup my Quad Core 2.66, with 10.6.8 (all SW updates), login, and screen zooms to maximum zoom with giant cursor in the middle. The only easy way get it back down to normal res is to do command+esc to get to Front Row, and then hit esc.

OS X :: To Increase The Size Of The Hard Drive Icon?

Jun 7, 2009

Like the title says, anyone know how to increase the size of the icon of the hard drive. I have a huge 24 inch monitor and would like my hard drive icon to be nice and big.

PowerPC :: Is There A Limit To The Size Of Hard Drive

Jun 1, 2008

I just purchased an iMac G5 (1.6GHz) w/ a bad hard drive. Is there a limit to the size of hard drive that I can put in it? I was wanting to put a 500GB SATA in it, will that be ok?

OS X :: Not Displaying Hard Drive Size Correctly?

Sep 14, 2009

I enabled view item info so it looks all snazzy and **** .The problem is it says 297.77 GB,..62 GB free when i have way more free space

Power Mac G5 :: Hard Drive Size / Buffer Compatibility

Oct 31, 2007

Am I limited as to the GB size or other specs, (other than case size), in installing a second drive in my G5? Is there a Gb limit that it can't handle? A buffer rate that it can't handle or is overkill? I need to get a HD for it ASAP, preferably tonight, and need to know what limitations I have if any.
Information:
G5 Dual 2.0 1.5gb Ram /Powerbook G4 1.67mhz 1gb Ram
Mac OS X (10.4.10)
G5 Soon to be OS X 10.5 5.5GB Ram w/ 256mb Video card

Power Mac G5 :: Upgrading Hard Drive To Larger Size?

Dec 15, 2007

I have a power mac G5 2.7 that is 2.5 years old. It came configured with two 400GB drives inside as it will only hold two. I now really want to change them out to either two 750 GB or preferably two 1TB drives. Apple, however, has told me it won't work and that my unit will not handle this huge additional power consumption. I have called mac mall and they say no way as well. OWC says they have many working like that and its never been a problem. Then I called Apple again and they said it will work fine. I have 6 more months of Apple care, but either way do not want to blow the interior of this system up. I know I need SATA drives and would ideally like to purchase the Hitachi Deskstar 7K1000.
Information:
Powermac G5
Mac OS X (10.4.3)

Intel Mac :: What Size Hard Drive Can Fit To 20-inch (MA876LL)

Apr 2, 2012

I want to upgrade the hard drive in an iMac, it has 250 GB today, ideally would-like 500 GB.

Intel Mac :: External Hard Drive Size Choice?

May 21, 2012

I am having issues with my iMac 3.06 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 4 GB 1067 MHz DDR3 (Random freezing up). I took it to the local Apple Store and an associate suggested I back up my hard drive before bring it in for diagnosis. He suggested a 2 TB external drive but others have told me that is way too large. I have heard everything from nothing larger than a 500 GB drive and even one self proclaimed computer wizzard says I can get by with a 10 GB thumb drive. What is the right size and if it is a 1 or 2 TB drive, why do I need such a large one.
Info:
iMac, Mac OS X (10.6.8)

OS X :: Snow Leopard - How To Change Hard Drive Size To Base 2

Aug 28, 2009

I am already aware that Snow Leopard reports hard drive sizes in base 10 and not base 2.
I'm not here to argue about proper use of SI unit prefixes, the HD manufacturer marketing cabal that reports base 10 and not base 2 sizes on the box or the merits of gibibytes vs gigabytes or GiB vs GB.
I'm just asking for a way to change the size reporting back to base 2.
I haven't yet found a way to change it back here in the forums or on Google and only a few others have asked in other threads.
I figured that making a new thread would be helpful for people who just want a solution instead of arguing about base 10 vs base 2 and having to dig through other threads full of that.

OS X :: Carbon Copy Clone - Size / Brand External Hard Drive

Nov 1, 2010

I have a MacBook from Christmas 2009. I'm very happy with it. I am using an external HD, a Western Digital Passport with 500 GB for my Time Machine backups. The MacBook seems to have a 250GB hard drive, but no firewire connection. So far I have used up about half of my WD Passport external with Time Machine backups. I have about 6500 photos and almost 12GB of iTunes music, and I don't want a catastrophic failure to cause me to lose it all. In addition to the Time Machine backup, I'm considering using Carbon Copy Clone with an additional external hard drive for a complete backup. I'm not very Mac or programming savvy, so I'm looking for an idiot proof method. What do you guys think of CCC, and what size/brand external HD do you recommend? I think CCC has to have an HFS+ formatted drive. I don't want to keep it connected all the time, but I would like to occasionally clone the MacBook harddrive so I always have a fairly current bootable backup.

Now that Apple has standardized on fast flash-based SSD drives, Mac lovers must pay attention to the amount of storage they need before they buy a new MacBook Pro or MacBook Air. The trouble is, while built-in SSD drives in MacBooks provide awesome performance, they are stingy on storage.

New laptops — the problem isn't limited to Apple — now come with 128GB, 256GB, or 512GB flash-based SSD drives as standard configurations. And many of these laptops are not easy to upgrade in the future like older hard drives used to be.

Here is how to tell if 256GB is enough storage for you.

Alert: B&H has a crazy good deal on an Apple 15.4″ MacBook Pro with 256GB of storage — save a whopping $800 on Black Friday only! This level of savings is rare.

Do you take a lot of photos or video?

If you are a shutterbug — or have an iPhone 6 or iPhone 7 — and you can imagine yourself taking a lot of photos and video that you want to keep forever on your MacBook, you should try to figure out how much storage your current photos and videos take up.

If you don't have much right now, 256GB will likely be plenty of storage for you for the foreseeable future.

If you have a lot of photos like me — I have more than 20,000 photos and videos in my iPhoto library, which takes up more than 100GB of space — then 256GB of storage on a MacBook Pro is flirting with danger. Why? I also have dozens of movies and some TV shows that I like to keep downloaded and handy directly on my MacBook Pro.

Of course, my habits are changing and so are the habits of others — for instance, I'm starting to stream more videos from Netflix and Amazon Prime Video instead of buying and downloading them. If you're streaming content instead of buying it, 256GB is probably sufficient.

Storage Eaters: Movies and TV Shows

TarDisk is an easy integrated storage upgrade for MacBook Air and MacBook Pro: Use code WICKEDDISCOUNT to get 10% off today.

While I'm watching more streamed content, I still like to buy and own some shows and movies. Consequently, I have too much to store on my MacBook directly, so I've saved hundreds of gigabytes of space by moving some photos, home video, television shows, and movies to a fast external hard drive. I just move the stuff I want to save — but won't access often — to the external hard drive. It's a peace-of-mind thing, really. Apple silver keyboard. I could probably delete it all and still live happily.

Here's another space-saving tidbit: If you have downloaded TV shows from Apple iTunes — or whole seasons of TV shows — you can safely delete these shows from your Mac. As long as you have your active Apple ID and iTunes account, Apple will know you bought those shows and provide you the ability to re-download them at will . . . or stream them to your Apple TV. I've personally deleted episodes of Homeland, The Walking Dead, Life, Firefly, and Castle with no ill effects. True Detective is still on there, though. I'll be watching that series again soon, I'm sure.

Wild Card Storage

Personal photos and video, along with purchased movies and TV shows, are the biggest storage culprits for most people. If you get a handle on these files, you'll know if 256GB is enough.

But, there are a few wild cards. If you download a lot of apps for multiple iOS devices in your family, and these family members are all downloading and storing large multi-media book files, videos, and iOS games (the graphically rich games can blow past 1GB easily these days) you can generate a surprising amount of iOS device backup storage and a large iTunes app library. Again, there are ways to delete and trim this storage, but it's something to be aware of.

Mac gamers can start eating up storage fast, but gamers are usually more in tune with their special needs.

If you get into creating and editing movies — say by generating a lot of footage with a GoPro or a waterproof rugged camera — your smartest move will be to invest in a fast external hard drive and store much of your video on it.

As for standard documents, most Microsoft Office, word processing, spreadsheets, and presentations take up very little storage space on a typical laptop — even for workaholics.

Heads-Up Alert:APPLE Super Sale at B&H — save hundreds on MacBooks, iPads, Apple Watches, and more! Free expedited shipping on most Apple products.

How to Choose the Right Mac System

All in all, 256GB is plenty of room for most every Mac lover . . . unless you also have a large iPhoto library and take a lot of photos and video — and you know that you will continue to take a lot of photos and video. If this is the case, your decision gets a bit more complicated. You can:

  • Choose a MacBook Pro or MacBook Air with 512GB of storage (about a $300 upgrade)
  • Choose an iMac, which comes with a 500GB hard drive or more
  • Choose an external drive or high-capacity thumb drive to go with a MacBook
  • Choose an iMac for the heavy-lifting at home and get a MacBook Air or iPad for on-the-go computing

For instance, you can get a 21.5-inch iMac with 1TB of storageas well as an iPad for less than the cost of a 15-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display. Or you could get a Mac mini for local home storage use and get a MacBook Air for mobile. If you're in a family situation, the iMac method is a good plan. For most individuals, I tend to recommend just getting a versatile 13-inch MacBook Pro or 15-inch if your budget allows it.

Hard Drive Capacity For Macbook Pro

The last option is to offload your personal photos to a cloud-based online storage service, but if you have a lot of photos, you'll be paying for it each month in installments for years (which is why I like onboard storage and external drives).

Special Note: If you already have a newer MacBook without enough storage, you still have two good storage upgrade options, both of which use tiny flash-based drives in the shape of camera memory cards. They plug into the SDXC card slot on your Mac. For all intents and purposes, the Transcend JetDrive Lite acts like a little USB thumb drive — but it fits flush into the SDXC card slot instead. The TarDisk Pear system, on the other hand, also uses the SDXC card slot but it combines with your built-in storage to form a single 'fused' drive. If you want a near-permanent, easy solution, the TarDisk Pear system might be your best bet.




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