News

Here’s another adidas collaboration: Pokémon time

Gotta catch ’em all

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Image by GadgetMatch

A lot of brands have partnered up to end the year with a bang. In the recent weeks, adidas has been in the limelight of collaborations: Star Wars, Prada, and even with the ISS National Lab. This time, they’re pairing up with Nintendo’s Pokémon.

Image by GadgetMatch

Unlike their recent collabs that featured the newest Ultraboost 20s, they opted to use the more affordable Advantage. The material doesn’t look cheap though as it still uses the classic white leather upper with perforated three stripes on each side — reminiscent of the ever-popular Adidas Stan Smith. The 8-bit Pikachu is showcased on the outer sides for fans to brag it around.

Image by GadgetMatch

Other than that, several 8-bit Pokémon characters can be seen wrapping around the padded lining. The white rubber cup, black heel tab, and the custom-branded insole completes the overall look of the sneaker.

Pricing and availability in select stores and regions are yet to be followed.

Computers

Apple unveils Studio Display and all-new Studio Display XDR

Powering up the desk.

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Apple Studio Display

After taking the MacBook Pro to Super Saiyan levels, Apple is now doing the same for the display it pairs with.

With its latest Studio Display family, Apple is splitting the lineup into two clear tiers. The regular Studio Display already feels powered up. The all-new Studio Display XDR transforms.

If this were Dragon Ball Z logic, the Studio Display is Super Saiyan. The Studio Display XDR is Super Saiyan Blue — calmer, more controlled, and operating on an entirely different plane.

A strong base form

The new Studio Display sticks to what already worked: a 27-inch 5K Retina panel with over 14 million pixels, 600 nits of brightness, and P3 wide color. It’s sharp, bright, and more than capable for photo editing, design work, music production, and daily tasks.

Apple upgrades the experience around the screen, too. There’s now a 12MP Center Stage camera with improved image quality and Desk View support. The three-mic array and six-speaker system return, this time with deeper bass and Spatial Audio support.

Connectivity jumps to Thunderbolt 5, allowing users to daisy-chain up to four Studio Displays for nearly 60 million combined pixels. It also delivers up to 96W of charging power for a connected MacBook Pro.

It’s the dependable powered-up form. Strong. Confident. Already more than enough for most creators.

The controlled transformation

Then there’s Studio Display XDR.

This is where Apple goes full Super Saiyan Blue.

The 27-inch 5K Retina XDR panel uses a mini-LED backlight with over 2,000 local dimming zones. It pushes up to 1000 nits of SDR brightness and 2000 nits of peak HDR brightness, alongside a 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio. Highlights hit harder. Blacks stay deep. Blooming stays minimal.

The display also adds Adobe RGB support on top of P3, covering more than 80 percent of Rec. 2020 for HDR workflows. For video editors, colorists, and print professionals, this shifts the XDR from “great display” to “reference-grade tool.”

Motion gets smoother, too. A 120Hz refresh rate with Adaptive Sync dynamically adjusts between 47Hz and 120Hz, reducing latency and making everything from scrubbing timelines to gaming feel more fluid.

Apple even introduces DICOM medical imaging presets and a Medical Imaging Calibrator for diagnostic radiology use in the U.S., pending FDA clearance. It’s a reminder that this panel isn’t just about aesthetics. It’s about precision.

Built for the pro desk

Both displays share the same upgraded 12MP Center Stage camera, studio-quality microphones, six-speaker Spatial Audio system, and Thunderbolt 5 connectivity. The XDR model goes further with up to 140W charging power and additional downstream ports, effectively acting as a high-speed hub.

Pricing and availability

In the U.S.

The new Studio Display starts at $1,599 (U.S.) and $1,499 for education, while the Studio Display XDR begins at $3,299 (U.S.) and $3,199 for education. Both models can be pre-ordered starting tomorrow, March 4, with availability beginning March 11 in select Apple Store locations and authorized resellers.

In Singapore

Pre-orders open on March 9 via apple.com/sg/store and the Apple Store app. Pricing starts at S$2,199 for the Studio Display (S$2,059 for education). The Studio Display XDR begins at S$4,499 (S$4,359 for education).

Optional accessories such as the Magic Keyboard, Magic Trackpad, and Magic Mouse remain available in white and black color options. Apple also offers nano-texture glass and adjustable stand configurations for professional setups.

The message from Apple is consistent: the base Studio Display remains a strong professional companion, while the Studio Display XDR targets workflows demanding reference-grade performance and HDR capability. Pre-orders go live soon, with deliveries and in-store availability following in mid-March.

In the Philippines

Customers can pre-order starting March 4 at apple.com/ph/store.

Studio Display starts at ₱104,999, and ₱97,990 for education. Studio Display XDR replaces Pro Display XDR and starts at ₱219,999, and ₱212,990 for education.

Additional technical specifications, including nano-texture glass and a choice of stand options, are available at apple.com/ph/store.

Magic Keyboard with Touch ID and Numeric Keypad (from ₱10,490), Magic Trackpad (₱6,990), and Magic Mouse (₱5,490) in black or white color options are available at apple.com/ph/store.

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Laptops

Apple unveils MacBook Pro with M5 Pro and M5 Max

Up to 8x AI gains, faster SSD, Wi-Fi 7, and bigger starting storage

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M5 Pro M5 Max

Apple has introduced the new 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pro powered by the all-new M5 Pro and M5 Max chips — bringing what feels like a full Super Saiyan moment to its pro lineup.

If M5 Pro is Super Saiyan, then M5 Max is Super Saiyan 2.

Both chips are built using Apple’s new Fusion Architecture, combining two dies into a single system on a chip. The result: massive gains in CPU, GPU, memory bandwidth, and on-device AI performance.

Apple says the new CPU includes the world’s fastest CPU core, with up to 18 cores total — 6 “super cores” and 12 performance cores — delivering up to 30% faster performance. The next-generation GPU now includes a Neural Accelerator in every core, pushing AI workloads significantly further.

Compared to M1 models, the new MacBook Pro delivers:

  • Up to 8x faster AI image generation
  • Up to 6.9x faster LLM prompt processing
  • Up to 5.4x faster video effects rendering

Compared to the previous M4 Pro and M4 Max generation, AI workloads see up to 4x gains, while graphics performance improves by as much as 50%.

This isn’t just about benchmarks. Apple is positioning this as a serious local AI machine. Developers can run advanced LLMs directly on device. Creators can train models, render 3D scenes, process massive photo libraries, and edit complex 8K timelines without leaning on the cloud.

And unlike many performance laptops, it does this with up to 24 hours of battery life.

Storage, bandwidth, and wireless get upgrades too

The performance bump isn’t limited to silicon.

The new MacBook Pro delivers up to 2x faster SSD speeds, reaching up to 14.5GB/s read and write performance. Starting storage also gets a major upgrade:

  • M5 Pro models now start at 1TB
  • M5 Max models now start at 2TB
  • The base 14-inch M5 model also now starts at 1TB

Memory bandwidth scales aggressively depending on configuration:

  • M5 Pro supports up to 64GB unified memory and 307GB/s bandwidth
  • M5 Max supports up to 128GB unified memory and 614GB/s bandwidth

Connectivity gets a boost as well. Apple introduces its new N1 wireless chip with support for Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6. Thunderbolt 5 ports come standard, alongside HDMI with up to 8K support, SDXC, and MagSafe 3 with fast charging.

The laptop retains its Liquid Retina XDR display with up to 1600 nits peak HDR brightness, now with a nano-texture option. It also features a 12MP Center Stage camera, studio-quality microphones, and a six-speaker system with Spatial Audio support.

All models run on macOS Tahoe, which deepens integration with Apple Intelligence and introduces updated Spotlight, Live Translation, and more customizable UI elements.

Pricing and availability

In the U.S., pre-orders begin March 4, with availability starting March 11.

U.S. pricing starts at:

  • 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro: US$2,199 (US$2,049 education)
  • 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro: US$2,699 (US$2,499 education)
  • 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max: US$3,599 (US$3,299 education)
  • 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max: US$3,899 (US$3,599 education)

The 14-inch MacBook Pro with base M5 starts at US$1,699 (US$1,599 education), now with 1TB standard storage.

In Singapore, pre-orders also begin March 4 via apple.com/sg/store, with availability starting March 11.

Singapore pricing starts at:

  • 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro: S$2,999 (S$2,789 education)
  • 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro: S$3,649 (S$3,379 education)
  • 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max: S$5,099 (S$4,669 education)
  • 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max: S$5,449 (S$5,029 education)

The 14-inch MacBook Pro with base M5 starts at S$2,299 (S$2,159 education).

In the Philippines, customers can order the new 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max soon on apple.com/ph/store and Apple Authorized Resellers.

Philippine pricing starts at: 

  • 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro starts at ₱149,990 (₱139,990 for education)
  • 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro starts at ₱179,990 (₱166,990 for education)
  • 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max starts at ₱239,990 (₱219,990 for education)
  • 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Max starts at ₱259,990 (₱239,990 for education)

All models are available in space black and silver.

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Computers

Apple debuts M5 Pro, M5 Max to supercharge pro workflows

Fusion Architecture, advanced AI

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Apple has introduced the M5 Pro and M5 Max, chips designed for professionals who need high-performance computing and AI acceleration.

Built on the company’s new Fusion Architecture, the chips combine two dies into a single system on a chip (SoC), integrating a CPU, GPU, Media Engine, unified memory controller, Neural Engine, and Thunderbolt 5 support. This design increases performance and AI capability while maintaining Apple’s focus on efficiency.

The M5 Pro features an 18-core CPU with six super cores and 12 performance cores, delivering up to 30 percent faster performance for demanding workloads compared with the previous generation. The GPU scales to 20 cores and includes Neural Accelerators in each core, boosting AI compute and graphics performance. Unified memory supports up to 64GB with bandwidth reaching 307GB/s, enabling faster data handling in complex professional applications.

The M5 Max expands capabilities further with up to 40 GPU cores and unified memory of up to 128GB. Memory bandwidth reaches 614GB/s, accelerating workflows involving large datasets, 3D rendering, and AI models. According to Apple, the GPU delivers more than four times the peak compute of the prior generation for AI tasks and up to a 20 percent graphics improvement over the M4 Max.

Both chips include a faster 16-core Neural Engine for on-device AI features, support hardware-accelerated media formats such as AV1 and ProRes, and incorporate memory safety protections via Memory Integrity Enforcement. Thunderbolt 5 ports with dedicated controllers enable high-speed connectivity for professional peripherals.

With the M5 Pro and M5 Max, Apple aims to push professional computing forward, particularly for developers, researchers, and creatives who require advanced AI and graphics performance. The new chips will power the latest MacBook Pro lineup, available for pre-order soon with shipments beginning March 11.

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