
Martin Hajek is known for his concept renders of upcoming products. And while his concept images of upcoming iPhones are always a hit among fans, the artist decided to take a shot at the much-rumoured MacBook Pro refresh. And the results certainly look good.
The renders bring to life the rumours and leaks that we have seen so far. From the first hint by KGI analyst Ming Chi Kuo, who made a statement that Apple would replace the function keys at the top of the Pro’s keyboard with an OLED strip, to the recently leaked out images of the machined metal frames of the same, it’s all in here.
The images below show off the MacBook Pro in its slimmest form factor yet, sitting alongside the upcoming iPhone 7 Plus (or Pro) with the with the Smart Connector pins on the back along with that dual lens camera.
The renders bring to life the rumours and leaks that we have seen so far. From the first hint by KGI analyst Ming Chi Kuo, who made a statement that Apple would replace the function keys at the top of the Pro’s keyboard with an OLED strip, to the recently leaked out images of the machined metal frames of the same, it’s all in here.
The images below show off the MacBook Pro in its slimmest form factor yet, sitting alongside the upcoming iPhone 7 Plus (or Pro) with the with the Smart Connector pins on the back along with that dual lens camera.

The focus soon moves to the MacBook Pro with close ups showing what the final product may look like, with a droolworthy OLED display showing off crisp looking notifications. Notifications and widgets indeed seem to be the secondary functions as the primary function is to do with the standard function key layout show below.

Hajek seems to have taken inspiration from the existing MacBook model as well and also shows off the large trackpad sitting right below the keypad.

According to rumours the upcoming refresh for the MacBook Pro models are expected to go slimmer and lighter with highlight being a multi-function OLED strip. The OLED strip is expected to function similar to a touchscreen and will accept touch inputs since its first priority is to display the function keys that have been a standard on MacBook laptops for long.
source by firstpost.com