If what you want out of your Mac laptop is the best combination of speed and price, the MacBook Airs not for you. But if the specs that matter most to you are light weight and small size, the MacBook Air is the system for you. If the MacBook Air always appealed to you, but you were turned off by the price tag, its time to reconsider the Air, now that the price has been reduced.
The MacBook Air is a product that lives on the margins. Its the slowest laptopindeed, the slowest computerin the Mac line. It omits many features that are standard on other Mac laptops, including multiple USB ports, FireWire ports, Ethernet port, and optical drive. And the latest top-of-the-line MacBook Air is actually slower than its predecessor in many of our tests. In short, the MacBook Air is an odd duck.
Its also Apples thinnest, lightest laptop. And I still love it.
MacBook Air
Let me explain. I love the MacBook Air because its a full pound and a half lighter than the next-lightest Apple laptop. In a world of netbooks that compromise on screen and keyboard size in order to get small, the MacBook Air has an excellent 13-inch widescreen display and a full-sized, backlit keyboard.
The MacBook Air is designed for people who appreciate the fact that this Mac laptop weighs 3 pounds and measures .76 inches at its thickest point, and are willing to sacrifice all sorts of other features for that lightness. Which leads to the real question: Do the new MacBook Air models sacrifice too many features to make them worth the trade-off in both price and size?
Lets ponder, for a moment, how far the MacBook Air line has come in terms of price. When the MacBook Air premiered, the top-of-the-line model-featuring a 1.86GHz processor and a 64GB solid-state drive cost $3,098. The low end of the line was a $1,799 model with a 1.6GHz processor and an 80GB hard drive.
So in 18 months, the top-of-the-line Air has dropped $1,299 (you could buy a whole second MacBook for that) while adding 330MHz of processor power and doubling the storage space. The base configuration, meanwhile, has dropped in price by $400 while also gaining a modest processor boost and double the hard-drive space. In other words, the MacBook Air is far more affordable than it was when it was introduced.
This is not to say that its a great deal in terms of price/performance. Youre still paying for that super-light chassis. For the same price as todays entry-level 1.86GHz MacBook Air ($1,499), you can buy a 13-inch MacBook Pro with a 2.53GHz processor, double the RAM of the MacBook Air, more than twice the hard-drive space, more USB and FireWire ports, an optical drive, and an SD card reader. Its also thicker and weighs a pound and a half more.
Small, light, and limited
On the outside, these new MacBook Airs look just like the original MacBook Air models introduced in January 2008. And as always, the Airs physical connectivity options remain quite limited: Theres just a single USB 2.0 port, a headphone jack, and a Mini DisplayPort. Theres no FireWire connectivity, and everything else you connect to the system has to go wireless (via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi) or filter through that single USB port.
Apple includes a 10/100 USB-to-Ethernet adapter in the box now, which is generous, but the fact remains that if youre trying to download a file over Ethernet while backing up to a USB hard drive, you will tax that single USB port to the limit. (Youll also need to invest in a serious USB hub.) Whats worse, the $99 MacBook Air SuperDrive must be attached to the MacBook Air directly and doesnt offer any passthrough ports of its own, making it impossible to boot from a DVD and then restore from a Time Machine backup stored on an external hard drive. Well, impossibles too strong a word: I was able to pull the trick off by using Apples $900 LED Cinema Display (), which will also power the SuperDrive, as the worlds most expensive USB hub.
But with the update to the MacBook Air line in late 2008, Apple seriously upgraded the Airs internals. The first-generation Airs used Intels slow onboard video circuitry and couldnt cope with warm temperatures at all, but the new models added Nvidia GeForce 9400M graphics circuitry, improved bus and memory speeds, and generally coped with heat much better. These new models also incorporate those improvements, which dramatically improve the MacBook Air experience.
New MacBook Airs: Speedmark performance
Longer bars are better. Blue bars in italics represent reference systems. Macworld Lab testing by James Galbraith, Blair Hanley Frank, Chris Holt, and Helen Williamson.
Despite the improved graphics and the faster processors, its important to point out that these two MacBook Air models are the two slowest Macs currently shipping. Even the $999 2.13GHz MacBook () managed a Speedmark score of 198 in our tests, compared to a score of 175 for the top-of-the-line 2.13GHz Air. The $1,499 13-inch 2.53GHz MacBook Pro () scored 239, while the 1.86GHz MacBook Air with the same price scored 156.
Whats weird about the new high-end MacBook Air model is that although it cost dramatically less than its immediate predecessor, it was also slower than that model. The late-2008 1.86GHz MacBook Air was faster than the new top-of-the-line model in 11 of our 18 tests, and as a result, the old systems final Speedmark score was slightly higher. The low-end 1.86GHz model did a better job versus its predecessor, besting it on most tests and improving on its Speedmark score.
We also saw several cases in which the lower-end systems, with slower processors but with hard drives rather than solid-state drives, bested their high-end equivalents. Some of these results simply come down to the fact that solid-state drives are faster than physical hard drives at some tasks and slower at others. But on tasks we tend to consider particularly processor intensive, such as compressing video or rendering 3-D objects, the low-end systems also outperformed the higher-end systems. Were not quite sure why this is happening, though its possible that the Airs thermal-protection systems are aggressively ratcheting down the speed of the faster, hotter processors when theyre asked to perform those tasks, slowing their performance.
Benchmarks: MacBook Airs
Speedmark 5
Adobe Photoshop CS3
Cinema 4D XL 10.5
Compressor 3.0.4
iMovie HD
iTunes 7.7
Quake 4
Finder
Finder
Battery Life
OVERALL SCORE
SUITE
RENDER
MPEG ENCODE
AGED EFFECT
MP3 ENCODE
FRAME RATE
ZIP ARCHIVE
UNZIP ARCHIVE
LOOP MOVIE
MacBook Air/2.13GHz
175
1:18
1:37
3:17
1:25
1:43
25.3
6:12
1:03
2hrs 37mins
MacBook Air/1.86GHz
156
1:25
1:24
2:49
1:09
1:30
23.8
6:05
1:58
2hrs 49mins
13-inch MacBook Pro/2.53GHz (4GB)
239
0:53
0:50
1:52
0:46
0:58
39.3
4:11
1:14
3hrs 31mins
13-inch 2.13GHz MacBook
198
1:08
1:00
2:02
0:56
1:07
33.5
5:15
1:29
3hrs 22mins
MacBook Air/1.86GHz (Oct. 2008)
179
1:19
1:32
3:00
1:16
1:36
25.2
5:49
1:03
2hrs 21mins
MacBook Air/1.6GHz (Oct. 2008)
145
1:26
1:24
2:51
1:09
1:31
26.3
6:45
2:00
2hrs 29mins
Best results in bold. For Speedmark and Quake 4, higher scores are better. All other tests are timed results where lower times are better (except for Battery Life, where longer times are better). Reference systems in italics.
Speedmark 5 scores are relative to those of a 1.5GHz Core Solo Mac mini, which is assigned a score of 100. Adobe Photoshop, Cinema 4D XL, iMovie, iTunes, and Finder scores are in minutes:seconds. The systems were running Mac OS X 10.5.7 with 2GB of RAM except where noted. The Photoshop Suite test is a set of 14 scripted tasks using a 50MB file. Photoshops memory was set to 70 percent and History was set to Minimum. We recorded how long it took to render a scene in Cinema 4D XL. We used Compressor to encode a 6minute:26second DV file using the DVD: Fastest Encode 120 minutes - 4:3 setting. In iMovie, we applied the Aged Film ffect from the Video FX. menu to a one minute movie. We converted 45 minutes of AAC audio files to MP3 using iTunes High Quality setting. We used Quake's average-frames-per-second score; we tested at a resolution of 1,024 by 768 pixels at the Maximum setting with both audio and graphics enabled.. We duplicated a 1GB folder, created a Zip archive in the Finder from the two 1GB files and then Unzipped it.Macworld Lab testing by James Galbraith, Blair Hanley Frank, Chris Holt, and Helen Williamson.
Macworlds buying advice
When I was working on this review, I had to temporarily surrender my previous-generation 1.86GHz MacBook Air so it could be re-tested by Macworld Lab as a reference system. For five days I used a new 13-inch MacBook Pro, replete with ports and features that the Air lacks. And while I appreciated having dedicated Ethernet and hooking up my backup drive via FireWire 800, the truth is, the whole time I longed to return to the Air.
If those feelings make no sense to you, if the Air always struck you as being overpriced and underpowered, these arent the laptops youre looking for. Because the MacBook Air story is the same as it ever was: If what you want out of your Mac laptop is the best combination of speed and price, the MacBook Airs not for you. Its hobbled by having only a single USB port. Its processor is slow and its locked into 2GB of RAM. Theres no FireWire, no optical drive (without an expensive add-on with nonexistent connectivity or compatibility), and the only way to connect to an Ethernet network is via an included USB adapter.
But if the specs that matter most to you are light weight and small size, the MacBook Air is the system for you. These new models arent much faster than their predecessorsin fact, the high-end system is slower than the previous modelbut theyre cheaper. If the MacBook Air always appealed to you, but you were turned off by the price tag, its time to reconsider the Air.