The MacBook Pro 14 still obliterates this Windows laptop

The Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14 tries its hardest to keep up with the class-leading MacBook Pro 14. But poor battery life and an inconsistent display hold it back.

The MacBook Pro 14 still obliterates this Windows laptop
Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14 front view showing display and keyboard deck.Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

Several of Apple’s latest MacBooks are on our list of the best laptops around, and the MacBook Pro 14 is arguably the best 14-inch laptop you can buy today. Any new machine that wants to compete has to offer an incredibly compelling combination of features and value.

Lenovo’s Slim Pro 9i 14 is a laptop that’s obviously aimed directly at the MacBook. It has some powerful components inside and it performs just as well. It’s also less expensive. Unfortunately, even those things fail to give it a leg up.

Specs and configurations

  Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14 Apple MacBook Pro 14
Dimensions 12.9 inches x 9.64 inches x 0.85 inches 12.31 inches x 8.71 inches x 0.60 inches
Weight 3.7 pounds 3.5 pounds
Processor Intel Core i7-13705H Apple M2 Pro (10-core, 12-core)
Apple M2 Max (12-core)
Graphics Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050
Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060
16-core GPU
19-core GPU
30-core GPU
38-core GPU
RAM 32GB LPDDR5X-6400Mhz 16GB
32GB
64GB
96GB
Display 14.4-inch 16:10 3K (3072 x 1920) mini-LED touch, 165Hz 14.2-inch 16:10 Liquid Retina XDR 3024 x 1964
Storage 1TB PCIe SSD 512GB SSD
1TB SSD
2TB SSD
4TB SSD
8TB SSD
Touch Yes No
Ports 2 x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4
2 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1
1 x HDMI
1 x 3.5mm audio jack
1 x SD card reader
3 x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4
1 x HDMI 2.0
1 x 3.5mm audio jack
1 x SD card reader
Wireless Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2 Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3
Webcam 5MP with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello 1080p
Operating system Windows 11 MacOS Monterey
Battery 75 watt-hour 70 watt-hour
Price $1900+ $1,999+
Review 3.0 out of 5 stars 4.5 out of 5 stars

Currently, there’s just one configuration of the Slim Pro 9i 14 available. It’s $1,900 for a Core i7-13705H CPU, 32GB of RAM, a 1TB SSD, and a 14.5-inch 3K Mini-LED display. Other configurations are likely, including the option for slower CPUs and an RTX 4060 GPU.

The MacBook Pro 14 has a wider range of options. It’s more expensive from the outset, at $2,000 for an M2 Pro processor with 10 CPU cores and 16 GPU cores, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and a 14.2-inch Mini-LED display. Note that the smallest SSD is slower than larger options, something demanding users should keep in mind. The most you’ll spend on the laptop is a heart-stopping $6,300 for an M2 Max with 12 CPU cores and 38 GPU cores, 96GB of RAM, and an 8TB SSD. We reviewed a $4,000 MacBook Pro 14 with the high-end M2 Max, 64GB of RAM, and a 2TB SSD.

So, keep this price difference in mind when we talk about performance.

Design

Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14 rear view showing lid and logo.Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

The Slim Pro 9i 14 inherits the rounded design of its lower-end sibling, the Slim 9i, meaning it has a simplistic design that’s quite attractive and comfortable to use. It’s made of aluminum and doesn’t bend, flex, or twist, marking it as one of the best-built laptops. The MacBook Pro 14 is even better, carved out of solid chunks of aluminum and presenting an incredibly high-quality feel in hand. It’s also elegantly designed, with simple lines that accentuate rather than take away. Both laptops offer excellent designs, and which appeals more is down to personal taste.

Interestingly, both laptops have a notch to accommodate high-resolution webcams, but the Slim Pro 9i 14’s is a reverse notch extending from the top of the display, while the MacBook’s is embedded in the display. Many people would prefer Lenovo’s approach.

The 14-inch MacBook Pro on a window sill.Digital Trends

The MacBook Pro 14 has the best keyboard available on a laptop today, Apple’s Magic Keyboard. It provides large keycaps, excellent key spacing, and switches that are consistently precise and snappy. The Slim Pro 9i 14 has slightly deeper switches that are also light and precise, with sculpted keycaps and equally good key spacing. The MacBook’s Force Touch haptic touchpad is superior, with greater precision, the ability to use the entire surface for clicking, and extra features. The Lenovo’s mechanical touchpad is spacious and works well, it’s just not as good as Apple’s.

The Slim Pro 9i 14 has more legacy connectivity support, while the MacBook Pro 14 has an additional Thunderbolt 4 port. The MacBook also uses Apple’s MagSafe 3 charger, which frees up a port and provides protection again possible damage. Both laptops have the fastest wireless connectivity available.

Finally, the Lenovo has a higher-resolution 5MP webcam, but Apple’s optimizations of the MacBook’s 1080p image are also excellent. Both provide great quality. The Slim Pro 9i 14 has an infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello support, while the MacBook Pro 14 uses a Touch ID fingerprint reader embedded in the power button. Both allow for quick and easy logins without entering a password.

Performance

Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14 side view showing ports and lid.Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

The Slim Pro 9i 14 uses a 45-watt Intel 13th-gen CPU, the Core i7-13705H with 14 cores (six Performance and eight Efficient) and 20 threads. It’s a fast performer in both productivity and creative tasks. The laptop is also equipped with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050, an entry-level GPU that can speed up many creative processes.

The MacBook Air 14 that we reviewed used Apple’s top-end M2 Max with 12 CPU cores and 38 GPU cores. It also was stocked with 64GB of fast RAM compared to the Lenovo’s 32GB.

The M2 Max is a fast processor, but the Core i7-13705H is also quick, especially in the Slim Pro 9i 14’s performance mode. The two laptops traded blows in our CPU-intensive benchmarks. And in the Pugetbench Premiere Pro benchmark that runs in a live version of Adobe’s Premiere Pro and can use the GPU to speed up various tasks, the two laptops were surprisingly evenly matched.

Either laptop will handle demanding workflows. It’s possible the MacBook Pro 14 will perform better in some other creative applications, but in this one at least, the Slim Pro 9i 14 manages to keep up.

Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14
(Core i7-13705H)
Apple MacBook Pro 14
(M2 Max)
Geekbench 5
(single/multi)
Bal: 1,898 / 11,691
Perf: 1,893 / 12,780
Perf: 1,973 / 14,596
Perf: N/A
Handbrake
(seconds)
Bal: 92
Perf: 74
Bal: 85
Perf: N/A
Cinebench R23
(single/multi)
Bal: 1,913 / 14,024
Perf: 1,906 / 15,680
Bal: 1,608 / 14,789
Perf: N/A
Pugetbench Premiere Pro
(higher is better)
Bal: 837
Perf: 1,067
Bal: 1,093
Perf: N/A

Display and audio

Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14 front view showing display.Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

Both laptops use Mini-LED displays, which promise incredible brightness and deep contrast, along with good color width and accuracy. The MacBook Pro 14’s implementation of the technology is much better than the Slim Pro 9i 14’s, but it’s not Lenovo’s fault. Every Mini-LED display we’ve tested on a Windows laptop has performed similarly.

In a nutshell, when Windows is running in default standard dynamic range (SDR) mode, Mini-LED displays are plenty bright and colorful but the contrast is lacking. Switch Windows to HDR mode and you get much deeper contrast, but with slightly less brightness and colors that aren’t nearly as wide.

In its default XDR mode, the MacBook Pro 14’s Mini-LED display provides a better balance, with brightness that’s not as high as the Slim Pro 9i 14’s (which is one of the highest scores we’ve seen on a laptop), but with much deeper contrast and inkier blacks. Play HDR content and the MacBook’s display can blaze up to 1,600 nits. Overall, it’s a much better experience.

Both displays are at least excellent for productivity work and very good for creators. But Apple is doing a much better job with Mini-LED.

Lenovo Slim Pro 9i 14
(Mini-LED)
Apple MacBook Pro 14
(Mini-LED)
Brightness
(nits)
708 511
AdobeRGB gamut 100% 100%
 sRGB gamut 87% 89%
Accuracy
(DeltaE, lower is better)
1.17 1.13
Contrast ratio 2,710:1 35,450:1

The MacBook Pro 14’s quad speakers also sound much better than the Slim Pro 9i 14’s. In fact, the MacBook provides the best audio on a 14-inch laptop, period. There’s deep bass and the clearest mids and highs around, with tons of distortion-free volume. The Slim Pro 9i 14’s audio is fine, but it’s not in the same class.

Portability

The port selection of the MacBook Pro 14-inch.Digital Trends

The MacBook Pro 14 is slightly less narrow and wide and it weighs slightly less. The biggest difference, though, is in thickness. The Slim Pro 9i 14 is a rather chunky 0.85 inches compared to the MacBook Pro 14’s 0.60 inches. Both are portable, but the Apple is a lot thinner.

Battery life is another story entirely. While the M2 Max is a very fast processor, it’s also incredibly efficient. The MacBook Pro 14 managed almost 20 hours of web browsing, compared to the Slim Pro 9i 14 at less than five. We didn’t benchmark using our video-looping test, but those results would have been even higher.

Apple managed to pack a superfast processor into its MacBook Pro lineup that beats the vast majority of Windows laptops in battery life. There’s just no comparison here.

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 10
(Core i7-1260P)
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 11
(Core i7-1355U)
Web browsing 4 hours, 54 minutes 19 hours, 20 minutes

The MacBook Pro 14 is worth the extra money

The MacBook Pro on a wooden table.Digital Trends

Yes, the MacBook Pro 14 is considerably more expensive than the Slim Pro 9i 14, and the latter equals it in performance. But the MacBook lasts four times as long on a charge, and its display is superior even though both laptops use the same Mini-LED technology.

Overall, the Slim Pro 9i 14 just can’t keep up with the MacBook Pro 14. It’s not as refined and its poor battery life and inconsistent display performance hold it back. The MacBook Pro 14 is worth the extra investment.

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