MacBook Air: top 10 things to love about it

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Danny Gorog21 January 2008, 6:52 AM

Despite the criticisms, still got a nagging feeling that the new MacBook Air might actually be for you? Check out the top ten reasons why it probably is.


While my colleague Dan Warne opined about ten things wrong with the new MacBook Air I've been occupying myself thinking about what's good about it, and why it's a new, positive direction for Apple.

From a positioning perspective the MBA isn't really designed as a replacement for your current Mac but rather as a partner to it. If your main machine is a desktop then the MBA makes perfect sense. I agree that it's harder to justify a MBA if your main machine is already a portable but with technologies like Back to my Mac and .Mac syncing, Apple make it easier than any other PC manufacturer to run two or more machines in tandem.

So with this point in mind let's go.

1. 80GB iPod hard drive is big enough. 80GB's is ample for *most* people on a portable. This isn't going to be your primary machine so 80GB should be adequate for storing all the apps, and most of the media you need while you're on the road. If it's not, then keep your iTunes and iPhoto libraries on an external drive and move between machines. Would you consider a MBA with a 160GB drive? If the answer is yes then just wait a few months.

2. 2GB is more than most. Like the 80GB argument, 2GB is more than enough for most people to perform most tasks. You're not buying a MBA if you need to do HD video editing all day, so what else, except for virtulisation programs like Parallels do you need more Ram for? My bet is that 2GB is enough for 90% of the population - it's certainly adequate to watch a move, work on a spreadsheet and be running Mail and Safari at the same time. If you need to use Windows, install Boot Camp where 2GB is more than enough to run Vista as well

3. 64GB flash-memory SSD is expensive - If it's too expensive, don't buy it. Sure, Dell are only charging $1102 for the same drive SSD drive but this option isn't for those who are price sensitive. It's priced for early adopters to get into and expand the market so value buyers like you and me can access this technology sooner.

4. One USB port is enough for most things on the road. What's the right number of USB ports the MBA should have? 2, 3 or 4? Some people will never be satisfied - If one USB port isn't enough for you then you're not in the target market for this machine. At home I use a USB hub because not even my MacBook Pro has enough ports. While you're out on the road I'll bet you can manage fine with just one and if you need more invest in a $20 USB hub.

It's easy to dismiss the MacBook Air as under-powered, but when you hold one, you might just change your mind.It's easy to dismiss the MacBook Air as under-powered, but when you hold one, you might just change your mind.


5. No wireless broadband: Apple manufacture for a global market and I don't think you'll ever see them build wireless broadband into a machine, mainly because there are too many competing standards in the US. Also I think built-in wireless broadband is an option for the corporate market - a market that Apple doesn't 'officially' play in. Think I'm wrong? How many people do you know who paid for their own laptop and chose a built-in wireless broadband option?

6. Processor that's powerful enough for most tasks: What sort of raw-processing power does a computer that checks email, surfs web pages and creates Word documents actually need. My bet is that the standard 1.6 Core2Duo is more than enough for anybody interested in a MBA.

7. No microphone port: Who cares? When was the last time you needed an external microphone anyway? This machine wasn't called 'MacBook Podcast studio' for a reason.

8. Non-replaceable battery: If you're buying one of these machines, you'll replace it before the battery dies. And if you do need a new battery, Apple will replace it for you without a service charge. Would you rather be able to change the battery yourself, or have a lighter machine?

9. Thin but not that thin: 'Steve Jobs says the MacBook Air is thinner at its thickest point than competing notebooks. But the Fujitsu Q2010 is only 19.9mm thick at its thickest point, and that's 0.5mm -- yes half a millimetre -- thicker. However, in the Lifebook, you get integrated HSDPA/3G/GPRS, an ExpressCard slot (34/54), SD card slot, two USB ports, inbuilt VGA out, Ethernet, Firewire, fingerprint sensor. I'd say that functionality is worth an extra half millimetre' - But you don't get OS X.

10. No built-in Ethernet port, no optical drive: Apple has always been a company known for making or breaking technologies. The original Bondi Blue iMac for example shipped sans floppy drive - the market reacted then as it's reacted now to the lack of optical drive, 'Give it back'! But seriously, when was the last time you needed an optical drive out on the road? If you need Ethernet buy the $39 adaptor and keep it in your bag. I did the same with the Apple USB modem, and in two years have used it once.

A better way to think about the MBA is as an engineering exercise for Apple to see how small they could make a laptop, and how the market responds to the compromises it introduces. In twelve months from now, the MacBook Air will probably have a 160GB drive as standard, and may ship with 4GB RAM for the same price. How much better does a machine with those specs sound?

Even if you can't justify the MacBook Air now, don't underestimate the design cues it introduces - my bet is that you'll see them filter down the line and end up in your next MacBook and MacBook Pro.


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Me:

Crumbled under the Mac Fanboys' onslaught, hey APC ?

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Dan Warne:

LOL -- no :-) Just providing the alternate point of view. 

People always accuse us of being anti-Mac because we're an MSN Network site, or anti-Microsoft, because we publish so many stories about Linux, or anti-Linux because we publish so much about Windows... etc. Nowadays it just makes me chuckle.

What people always forget to do is look at the sum of all the articles we publish -- we don't pull any punches when any company does the dodgy, and we don't assume any company's new product release is bad just because past efforts have been.

In short: we just commentate on the whole industry and try to provide as many different sides of the debate as possible! 



29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Me:

Just joshin' !
Keep up the good work APC !!

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

FrostySonic:

"But seriously, when was the last time you needed an optical drive out on the road?"

Uh, like all the time! Who hasn't used their laptop to watch a DVD on the road, play someone else's CDs on the road, burnt a disc for a client at their office?

I really am amiss that they left out an optical drive and an ethernet port. Probably the two biggest deal-breakers for me.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

David Flynn:

My previous laptop was an Acer TravelMate 3000 series, which was an ultraportable 12in widescreen with no optical drive, but it included a FireWire CD/DVD drive for when you needed it (and this was one of the reasons I settled on the TM3000 in the end).

I was surprised how little I ended up needing the optical drive, even at home, let alone trips. I never used the Acer to watch DVDs or listen to CDs - the only videos watched were downloads, the only music listened to was download or already ripped into iTunes.

(Although of course, when I needed the drive I really needed it, no question.)

What I'd like to have seen Apple offer would have been an optical drive which included a USB hub, so plugging in the drive gave you an extra 3-4 USB ports; or even make the drive part of an expansion module that was also a port replicator so you got USB ports, Ethernet and whatever else may have been most useful in a home or 'mobile office' environment.



29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

MBEN:

I'm on the road constantly and never use a DVD or CD- one of my favorite laptops was my Powerbook "Bronze" where you could leave the optical drive at home (and carry an extra battery, that was nice!).

but for watching movies on the road, isn't that what itunes is for? Especially now with rentals. For other movies, there's Handbrake! I mean, why carry all the disks with you if you're trying to reduce the stuff you're carrying?

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tech runner:

Seriously if you like playing DVDs on the go you could always use a program called iDVD which let's you cache your DVD to your harddrive legally.That means you wouldn't have to carry DVDs around. I've been using this for my iBook. And if you wanted to get the DVD cache onto your MacBook air if you go that way (its not for everybody) you could use remote disk to cache it. Go to flip for mac web and click downloads if you want to use it on your computer.

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

adsl2exchanges:

Personally i am glad they have left out the DVD Rom, waste of power.

"Who hasn't used their laptop to watch a DVD on the road, play someone else's CDs on the road or burnt a disc for a client at their office?"

If you have all the space to carry around DVDs then you have the space to carry the usb powered dvdrom, or even better, just copy it to your hard drive and save on power.

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

MacFan:

What I really LOVE about the MA is how powerful it makes my Macbook look beside it!

For $600 less than the MA I picked up a Macbook (white) with a built-in Superdrive, maxed it to 4GB DDR2 RAM and a 200GB 7200RPM drive. Those add-ons cost me $400, so I'm still $200 in the black and have a far more powerful, almost equally portable notebook that knocks the stuffing out of anything a PC vendor can make.

And contrary to previous posters, OS X is worth its weight in gold (if that's even possible!). I've been a PC user all my life, but once you've used a Mac, everything else feels cheap and nasty.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Theo:

10 things right or wrong, I love reading these armchair opinions of people who have never touched an ultaportable or a desktop replacement.

It's just another laptop to complement the already hundreds?! of other laptops on the market. The reason for having so many? Maybe becasue each person want's something slightly different. So the new "Air" (by the way I am not a fan of the Mac) simply fills a gap for the Mac lovers out there, between the MacBook and the MacBook Pro. All this ranting and raving why it's the best thing since sliced bread, or the worst thing since Hitler, is just meaningless. But as I stated at the beginning is great to read when one needs laugh.

I bet it's also great for the advertisers and owners of this website, seeing us, day in day out have our two cents worth.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

CJM:

It's also great for people who more than likely have owned numerous laptops and are not technological philistines to speak and or see public opinion before parting with good money for their next appropriate upgrade.

Do you expect all opinions to be neutral?

I would beg to differ that the Mac Air "fills a gap" in Apple's product line, in fact I think they've missed the boat.

That said, If the MA was adequately functional for serious use, I would buy one without hesitation.

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Jimbo:

And if you want something faster, 400g lighter, with better expansion ports, better battery life (and a changeable battery) - try the Toshiba Portege R500.

And it has an awesome backlight feature - when outside it uses reflection so you can actually see the screen, and it saves battery power.

http://www.toshibanotebook.com.au/r500/default.html

Sure it *is* 1mm thicker. 1mm!

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

tin:

Wow. For the most part I actually agree with Danny for a change.

I don't agree about MacOS being enough to beat the Fujitsu, but the rest I generally do. I mean, if it doesn't suit your needs, you don't buy it, right?

BTW, part of me is considering this as my first ever Apple purchase. Pity it can't be bought without OSX... I only really want the hardware.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

shrike:

If you've never used OS X, I highly recommend giving it a go. I'm a lifelong Windows user who was looking for something different, and after being disappointed by every Linux distro I tried I bought a mac mini. Tiger was ok, but Leopard has been a absolute joy to use. I can do everything I need to on it, I don't have to fight with every program I want to install(or have to re-write the kernel to make simple things work) and it is simply stunning to look at.

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

sirron:

Leopard is the best OS on the planet. Try it you'll like it. Ron.

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Anonymous21323123:

There is no best OS on the planet just deluded fanbois.

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

well-howdy-doo:

like you, Anonymous21323123?

29 February 2008, 8:50 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Anonymous21323123:

Nope I use Windows/Linux/OSX. I use what ever works best for the job I am doing and its seldom the OS its the program that determines which OS I am using. What is the best OS for 1 job isn't necessarily the best for all jobs. Its only fanbois (for any of the OSes) that think they know best for everyone.

29 February 2008, 8:50 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Kelvin:

I think Danny's made some fair points to balance Dan's article. I use my MacBook on the road on a daily basis (since it first came out in 2006), and agree with some of his arguments.

I purchased a spare battery for the MacBook when I got it, and it still hasn't been taken out of its packaging. The ethernet port never gets used (except when I have to reconfigure the wireless router at home) - I'm pretty much using WLAN instead. 2Gb RAM is certainly enough for the majority of applications run on this type of computer.

Nevertheless I agree with Dan that the hard drive is much too small, and the single USB port is too limiting. Even the Asus Eee manages 3 ports (AND an SD card reader)!

Last, and certainly not least, is the astronomical price. The MacBook is much the same form factor if you ignore the width (it still fits in an A4 envelope!) and saves you around $1000. A few more sheckels will get you a MacBook Pro with all the trimmings.

I think hard disk space, an extra USB port or two, and lower price would make the MB Air a more attractive proposition.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

shem:

Astronomical price? ahem... Have you even bothered to compare the pricing to other subnotebooks in it's class??? The Panasonic and Toshiba, and Sony models I was looking at yesterday start at over $2000 and when configured end up around $2500 easy.
The 'Air' starts at $1799... And for an Mac! Thats a great price.

The pricing on these models has nothing to do with pricing on other Mac laptops or any other laptops for that matter. You've always had to pay a premium for portability with these. Go do a comparison before you blabber out some nonsense!

29 February 2008, 8:49 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

danny borog:

ummm, isn't the title of this article "MacBook Air: top 10 things to love about it" there is not one positive thing there about it, more like a fanboys trying to defend half hearted product. really, you keep turning out garbage danny. guess what, i;m on the road at the moment and i just made a voip phonecall with an external mic plugged into my laptop.... some people do use them you know.... and when i get home i can plug both my thumbdrive and my printer in at the same time....

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

manhinli:

"Steve Jobs says the MacBook Air is thinner at its thickest point than competing notebooks."

That's actually wrong. He only compared it to the Sony VAIO TZ during the keynote.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Andreas:

> If you're buying one of these machines, you'll
> replace it before the battery dies.

Um no. My two-year old MacBook is on its 2nd battery. And I'm not totally oblivious to the problems of hi-tech waste.

If I'm buying an Air it'll be for a usage period of 5 years or so (whether I'll be sticking to it or handing it over to someone else if Apple delivers an even lighter version some time in the near future).

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Shrike:

I can't believe some of the things people find to complain about. First of all, have any of you seen the usb hubs available now? They're so small you'd think Apple had designed them, and are powered from the usb port. Second, the MBA has a microphone built in, right next to the isight camera(how many other laptops can say that?), so no need for an external one. Third, Leopard is easily the best Unix based OS I have ever used, and gives any version of Windows a run for it's money.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

David Johnston:

True that Apple was the first to shed the floppy drive in the first iMac, but for the next five years after that the top selling item on the Apple store was a third party external USB floppy drive. This is not the best example of Apple's foresight - especially considering the round mouse (the original sans textured dot at the top) was another innovation of the original iMac.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Feldwebel Wolfenstool:

A Mac-Addict can live in denial, and spin almost anything..like how LESS is MORE...I bet you could rationalize it if, it didn't even have a speaker for audio...

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

James Katt:

The MacBook Air is a fantastic machine for what it is.
It is not a desktop replacement. It is not a full-featured notebook.

It is a lightweight, full sized-keyboard, Macintosh.

It is perfect for writing. It is perfect for reading eBooks. It is fantastic for surfing the web while sitting on a couch.

It is a great second laptop.

Those who buy the Macbook Air will have a primary computer. Even when traveling with the Macbook Air, I will carry my MacBook Pro. But for use on a plane, the Macbook Air is perfect.

For those who need an ethernet port, it is so easy to carry the Airport Express. I carry it with me when traveling so I can have my own built-in wireless network to share with family. If needed, I can easily carry an Airport Extreme for g-speeds.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Feldwebel Wolfenstool:

Connsider saving your money, and buy a PDA instead...

29 February 2008, 8:50 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

CJM:

10 things to hate about Mac Air:

1 - the wide screen bezel appears to deny potential screen real estate and looks dated already
2 - the rounded wedge design looks like something out of a Jetsons cartoon, this is not timeless design.
3- no firewire - travelling photographers, digital artists and media pros would see great benefit in an ultra-portable, but not having Firewire denies the use of fast card readers, fast HD's and audio interfaces.
4- one USB port, means carrying a hub and extra wiring. Its also very lame for data transfer.
5- no optical drives means carrying around external drive and wiring. DVD backup is standard everyday practice for many.
6- no ethernet port means carrying around another extra component - If it's designed to be a '2nd computer' you would likely need to plug into a network conveniently. And not everyone wants to habitually use wireless networks due to uncertain health concerns.
7- the price is too high - especially if equated by feature count
8- non swappable battery -surely it was not impossible to design an accessible battery. This limits the concept of 'ultra portable' if you can only be away from a power source for a MAXIMUM of 5 hours usage.
9- solid state drive option overpriced
10- because I feel like it :p

Granted, this 1st generation prototype has positive indications of things to come but has little to offer for most of us.

Unless you have no plans to do anything but basic computing and have a wad of cash to splurge with, my suggestion would be to steer clear!


29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Joe:

Isn't this circular reasoning? The MBA has/doesn't have x component. Yeah, that might not usually be any good, but if you're looking at buying a MBA that would be okay with you. You could use that argument for anything. Sure, the Ford Tripod only has three wheels. But if you're interested in buying the Ford Tripod, three wheels is fine with you.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Darko:

Anyone fancy a beer?

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Dan Asti:

I think the the AIR is an extremely overpriced gimmick with a fatally flawed feature set. My intuition tells me that the market will back this up when we find out exactly how many units Apple sells this year. A 13 inch mac book is cheaper, similar in size and has a dvd drive and a firewire port... "Thinovation"; we'll see how many people buy into the buzz of that. Maybe my "Thintuition" is off and it'll sell like lemonaid on the 4th of July.

29 February 2008, 8:33 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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