This will likely be the last small update before my full review of the next-gen MacBook Pro with Retina Display. Many of you have asked for information about the behavior of Windows running on the next-gen Pro. After getting both Windows 7 and Windows 8 running on the machine, here are some quick thoughts.

Windows 7 by default starts up at 800 x 600 on the Retina MBP, Windows 8 defaults to 1024 x 768. This behavior isn't specific to this system, the GeForce GT 650M doesn't have native driver support in either OS at this point and these are the defaults for the standard VGA driver in both cases. Windows 7 won't expose any resolutions higher than 1600 x 1200 without an actual NVIDIA driver, while Windows 8 will let you select the full 2880 x 1800 panel resolution:

The problem is Apple doesn't provide a Boot Camp driver set for the Retina MacBook Pro yet. I had to use the Broadcom wireless driver from my SNB MacBook Pro to get WiFi working under Windows. Unfortunately, NVIDIA doesn't offer a downloadable GeForce GT 650M driver for either Windows 7 or Windows 8 just yet. The R302 Verde drivers are supposed to be due out in the not too distant future with support for the 650M, but until then you're mostly out of luck. I tried modified drivers to get 650M support and even tried modifying some myself, but I haven't been successful thus far. Just as before, switchable graphics isn't functional under Windows - the discrete GPU (650M) is the only one exposed.

Even without a working NVIDIA driver, I was able to get a feel for what a 2880 x 1800 setting would look like on a traditional desktop under Windows 8. If you remember back to our scaling and display analysis articles, Apple doesn't offer a desktop resolution equivalent higher than 1920 x 1200 under OS X. The thinking being that unscaled 2880 x 1800 would just be too small for the desktop, icon text and default UI elements. The screenshot below shows the Windows 8 desktop at default (no DPI scaling) settings at 2880 x 1800:

Note that the Skyfall trailer is actually a full 1920 x 1080 window. Text is indeed very small, but I suspect those with very good eyesight could actually be ok with this. I would love to see Apple actually expose a native resolution option under OS X.

Here's a look at the unscaled Metro start screen at 2880 x 1800:

Text does get a bit more legible if you turn up DPI scaling. The gallery below has three shots of the same desktop comparing default (unscaled), 125% and 150% scaling options. There's also a shot in the gallery comparing the Retina MBP to Apple's previous highest DPI Mac display: the 11-inch 2011 MacBook Air to give you some perspective.

Quick conclusions? Windows users will have to wait a bit for official driver support, and NVIDIA needs to hurry up with a GT 650M Verde driver.

This is just an insane panel. I'm typing this on my 27-inch 2560 x 1440 display, and to think that the 15.4-inch panel next to it has 40% more pixels is mind blowing.

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  • Sfasciacarene - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    How the other resolution look like? For example the 1600x1200 has the same problems due to a resolution changes to the non native resolution?
    Another question, in osx you can't go down (for now) to really (non native) at 1440x900 native resolution?
    Becouse in theory it would look identical, without the problems about scaling to nominative resolutions (what happen for example when you go to 1280x800 in a display with 1440x900 native resolution), due to fact Who each 4px of retina display become exactly 1px at that resolution. There is any one can try and approve this fact?
  • Sfasciacarene - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    I see in the gaming session you can choose 1440x900, how it lolla like compared to a standard MacBook pro display's with a 1440x900 native resolution?
  • drvelocity - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    Anand, after a couple days with the new RMBP, what are the chances that this is your new daily driver?
  • melgross - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    I'm sure before too long, someone will come out with some free utility to allow the full Rez.
  • lilmoe - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    @author

    Other than the traditional DPI scaling of Windows (desktop mode), there's also a Metro "size" scaling in the metro display settings. It makes things considerably larger for metro apps on that resolution. Give it a shot. It scales perfectly.
  • hfm - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    It appears these guys got the drivers working with a modified .inf

    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=13854...

    Give it a shot Anand.
  • kazsud - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    I hear it gets pretty hot on the osx side
  • Ahmad - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    Just awesome. This MBP with Retina Display is in my list of gadgets to buy.

    I was wondering how Metro Apps would look like on the Retina Display of MBP. Would they need scaling or they are also Retina Display ready.
  • dcuccia - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    Anand, any hint at changes/improvements in the sensitivity/fluidity of MBP trackpad input/gestures in Win8 Metro and Win8 Desktop compared to Win7? Compared to OSX? Thanks, David
  • tipoo - Thursday, June 14, 2012 - link

    Is it possible that you could throw a decibel reading in the review with a few points of reference? I'm curious about that new cooling system. Apparently the Macbook Airs already used the asymmetrical fan and those aren't that quiet at load, but they have some other improvements in the MBP-R so I'm curious how that fares.

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