Typical Mac easy to use
Manufacturer: Apple
The response times are awesome
Have you ever seen a bird sitting contently on a tree and wondered whether it will be afraid of the branch breaking? The bird in all likelihood doesn’t have that fear because fundamentally it’s trust doesn’t lie in the branch — it lies in its wings.
Sleek design, Impressive performance, Great battery life
After 10 years of working with my aging Apple MacBook Pro with busted speakers, undetectable Airport card, and ...
The MacBook Air (M1) is a small revolution. As much power as you could need in a light and silent design, with giant battery life.
Stunning performance; Fantastic battery life; Excellent build quality; Good screen
More ports would be nice; Webcam still not great; Some potential niche software compatibility issues
M1 Apple MacBook Air (2020): M1 Apple MacBook Air (2020): Why buy anything else?
Fast and quiet; Great battery life; Superb display
Some software may not run; M1 MacBook Pro has better sustained performance
It's difficult to recommend against the M1-based MacBook Air. Apple Silicon support still needs a little work, but rivals all have compromises versus the Air in terms of performance, price or portability.
Crisp display; Performance is super-fast; Fanless design; Brilliant keyboard; Not a bank-breaker; Apple Silicon transition is going well; 256GB minimum storage welcome
Maximum memory of 16GB; Large bezels beginning to look dated; No Face ID login; Some key apps don't run on Apple Silicon natively yet
All of which brings us to the question of whether you should leap in and buy this first-generation M1 hardware or wait for “M2”. There are reasons to wait, especially if you were hoping for a more radical redesign that takes advantage of reduced power demands and no fans.
Phenomenal performance Whisper-quiet operation Flawless display
No design change from previous generation
If you were looking to buy a new laptop for the new year and your budget is in the Rs 1,00,000 range then look no further. Also if you were planning to buy the MacBook Air, then only buy this version as it costs the same as the Intel version.
Apple has never been afraid to break with the past, especially when it leads to one of the best laptops on the market. When it decided the floppy disk was outdated, for example, it dropped it and went all-in on USB. It did the same with Motorola CPUs, dropping them for Intel when the PowerPC could no longer keep up. Now, it’s done it again, this time putting its own ARM-based silicon inside the MacBook Air, the MacBook Pro 13, and the Mac mini and leaving Intel behind. That might be a scary proposition for some MacBook fans, because how well could the Apple M1 perform when ARM’s only showcase so far has been the very underwhelming Windows 10 on ARM initiative? If you’ve read our MacBook Pro 13 M1 review, then you already know the answer to that question. At least on that machine, there’s no reason to fear. I put the MacBook Air M1 through its paces to see if the fanless version of Apple’s initiative could perform as well. For this review, I was sent the entry-level $1,000 MacBook Air M...
Apple's M1 blows Intel away; Phenomenal battery life; Excellent keyboard and touchpad; Rock-solid build quality; Simple good looks;
Supports only one external display;
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