

You could send iMessages from your computer or phone, answer calls wherever you were, and throw files to other devices with ease - and so I was tempted away in early 2013 when Apple released its second-generation 15" Retina MacBook Pro. It was obvious the company had no strategy or vision, and while Windows 7 smoothed things over a little, Apple’s side had something I wanted: everything worked together nicely. To tell the truth, I’m a life-long Windows user that grew to be disillusioned by Microsoft after Windows Vista. “In another sign that the company has prioritized the iPhone, Apple re-organized its software engineering department so there’s no longer a dedicated Mac operating system team,” Bloomberg reported. Their hardware is underpowered, focusing on thinness and a gimmicky touch bar rather than power or functionality, the previous tentpoles of the Mac. The new MacBook Pros, released in late 2016, where interesting, but something of a half-hearted shrug in the direction of users: they’re okay machines, but they sure aren’t interesting at all. Should I make some changes on the power setting by going to Control Panel -> Power plan-> Advanced power setting -> processor power management -> minimum processor state and then set it for around 5%? Someone mentioned these steps from an old BootCamp group forum.Bloomberg reported in late 2016 that Apple had dismantled the Mac team, rolling it into the iOS team, and it shows. The overheating is definitely not caused by accumulated dust (there's some dust hanging on the cooling fan duct but it's still not enough to cause any issue). I'm concerned about hardware components, such as the logic board and RAM, getting deteriorated due to the heat. Also my MBP overheats more often on Windows partition. It'll remain pretty darn noisy during the Windows update and regular software installation.

But the laptop will make awful fan noises when I switch back to Windows partition. My old MBP has less trouble overheating thanks to a new SSD.

Is this normal for all old and new MBP models? I don't get this issue from Yosemite or Sierra and even if I run Adobe programs the fans don't spin as much as they do on Windows partition. Whenever I run BootCamp Windows 8.1, my MBP's fans are spinning like jet turbos.
