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thegreathuntingdolphin said, "Dell has had i5s and i7s in their laptops for several months now. Heck, you can get a Dell laptop with a core i7 920QM, 320 GB HDD, and 4 GB of ram for under a grand."
But you're making the same mistake as the author of this article. That Core i7 920QM is a Clarksfield processor, not the just recently released Arrandale mobile family. It's pretty frustrating that SO MANY people are making this mistake. Just any Core i7/i5 does not equal Arrandale and thus does not mean suitable for use in a thin and light, long-battery life MacBook Pro. Apple isn't going to release a new product that gets 2 hours of battery life when their current products are advertised as delivering 7 hours (which, in itself, is an overstatement with reality probably being closer to 4 or 5 hours). Furthermore, as I said earlier there were no mobile versions of the Core i3/i5 until Arrandale and those chips are just now hitting the market (Dell lists ship times for their "new 2010" i3/i5 laptops as 3/16/2010). The Core i5s that were being used in laptop computers last year were DESKTOP parts (which Intel doesn't even classify as being mobile chips).
In any case, Apple is using Core i7/i5s in their current product line -- for the iMac, a desktop machine. But the Core i7/i5s that Apple uses in the iMac and all those that shipped last year were desktop chips (except for the afore mentioned Clarksfield, which was a high-power-consumption mobile chip which in many reviews showed less than 2 hours of battery runtime while still being more than 3 pounds heavier than the current 15" MacBook Pro).
But you're making the same mistake as the author of this article. That Core i7 920QM is a Clarksfield processor, not the just recently released Arrandale mobile family. It's pretty frustrating that SO MANY people are making this mistake. Just any Core i7/i5 does not equal Arrandale and thus does not mean suitable for use in a thin and light, long-battery life MacBook Pro. Apple isn't going to release a new product that gets 2 hours of battery life when their current products are advertised as delivering 7 hours (which, in itself, is an overstatement with reality probably being closer to 4 or 5 hours). Furthermore, as I said earlier there were no mobile versions of the Core i3/i5 until Arrandale and those chips are just now hitting the market (Dell lists ship times for their "new 2010" i3/i5 laptops as 3/16/2010). The Core i5s that were being used in laptop computers last year were DESKTOP parts (which Intel doesn't even classify as being mobile chips).
In any case, Apple is using Core i7/i5s in their current product line -- for the iMac, a desktop machine. But the Core i7/i5s that Apple uses in the iMac and all those that shipped last year were desktop chips (except for the afore mentioned Clarksfield, which was a high-power-consumption mobile chip which in many reviews showed less than 2 hours of battery runtime while still being more than 3 pounds heavier than the current 15" MacBook Pro).