Just days after Apple started to ship its
newest lineup of MacBook Pro units, the company has already issued a firmware update. Why so fast,
you ask? For whatever reason, Apple decided to ship some of its hard
drive-based MacBook Pro units with a SATA drive interface pegged at
"just" 1.5Gbps. Apple followers would know that the non-Pro 13"
MacBook--which the 13" MacBook Pro replaced--didn't have such a
limitation.
Needless to say, a standard hard drive wouldn't be bothered by such a
limit, but if you ever decide to replace the stock HDD with a solid
state drive, you just might run into a bottleneck. A small cadre of
consumers were evidently vocal enough to convince
Apple to change
things, and now the MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.7 upcaps the
interface to enable the full 3Gbps interface. Apple does mention
(rather strongly, even) that any drive that would actually take
advantage of the new speed isn't supported by Apple. The entire file is
just 3.35MB, so evidently its a simple change of code that uncaps it.
In related news, the iMac EFI Firmware 1.4 Update for 20" and 24" early
2009 iMacs makes those quirks with ATI's Radeon HD 4850 GPU go away. In
some cases, machines with that card experienced odd bouts of
non-responsiveness, not to mention problems with waking from sleep while
in Boot Camp. The 1.7MB download can be found right now and requires OS
X version 10.5.6 or later.