My wife has an early 1911-380 Black Label, non-"Pro". The lack of the "Pro" in the name indicates that it uses the old style front sight, inherited from 1911-22.
It's a nice enough gun, although it has some quirks. First of all, it's rather small. Second, the magazines have short lips, so slamming one in may cause the topmost cartridge to stand up or even fly out of the ejection port due to the inertia of the bullet.
The magazine disconnect is just a little nub on the magazine release. You can file it down to remove the disconnect feature, although doing so is permanent.
Overall, it stays in stark contrast with "1911 style" guns in .380: Colt Government, Colt Mustang and its clones Kimber Micro, SIG P320, and Springfield 911, as well as the Spainish guns like Llama and its clone RIA Baby Rock. All of those may be inspired by 1911, but they do not copy it exactly. Grip angle is wrong, all the proportions are different, and none of them have grip safeties. But Browning chose to make an exact miniature model of 1911. It reminds me the most of the tiny railroad layouts with miniature cars, trees, houses, and of course the trains.