The Screen: Very Good

Many netbooks and notebooks have shipped with 11.6 inch screens. They deliver a good balance between screen size and portability. But the 11.6-inch displays we’ve encountered in the past have been crap. It’s not rocket science, but rather a matter of cost. The majority of users will pick a cheap, bright, glossy display over something with better viewing angles, higher resolution or more accurate colors. And when you’re competing mostly based on price, it’s tough to make a decision that won’t increase sales (I’d argue that it makes the most important part of your customers happier but then again, I don’t run Acer/ASUS/Dell/Gateway).

Apple opts out of low margin competition. The cheapest MacBook Air starts at $999. You pay a premium, and part of that premium goes towards the best 11.6-inch display we’ve ever tested.

Notebook LCD Quality - Contrast

Notebook LCD Quality - White

Most 11-inch screens don’t get very bright and have sub-par contrast ratios. The 11-inch MacBook Air has neither of these characteristics. It’s 127% brighter than the Alienware M11x R2 and has twice the contrast ratio of anything in its class. It’s not the most amazing display we’ve ever seen, but it’s way better than the majority of what’s out there. In actual use it does look good. The contrast ratio in particular sells the display.

Notebook LCD Quality - Black

The 13-inch panel is pretty close in performance. The max brightness is a bit higher and black level a bit lower. The resulting increase in contrast ratio is appreciable. For the most part you don’t make any quality tradeoffs when going with one MBA over another. It just boils down to screen size and resolution.

Both the 11 and 13-inch MBAs use TN panels, but they are better than your standard TN panel. Viewed above center the display washes out, viewed below center the display gets very dark.


The dark underside of TN panels

Color reproduction is above average, but not quite as good as the 15-inch MacBook Pro we reviewed earlier in the year.

Notebook LCD Quality - Color Accuracy

Color gamut isn’t very impressive at all. It’s in line with what you’d expect from a panels of these sizes though.

Notebook LCD Quality - Color Gamut

The SSD: Not Half Bad The 11-inch MacBook Air: Faster than the old 13-inch MacBook Air
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  • Exelius - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    I don't know any company that will do this -- HP and Dell require you to mail your machine in as well (unless you pay the extra $500 for the "Gold" replacement plans; an option only available on their most expensive "business" machines.) Often you have to remove the HD before you send it off or else yours might get "lost" (along with all the data on it.)

    Not that it's a great situation to be in; but this is an issue with many more companies than Apple. You'd still be out a machine.

    I own an MBP because it was the only machine available with both discrete graphics and better than 3 hours of battery life. The screen is also dynamite. Were there other machines that were cheaper? Sure. But Apple is the only company that makes a machine comparable to the MBP at any price.
  • khimera2000 - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    M11x has a descreet, and intergrated, and better then 4+ battery life, in home repair (they send out technicions)

    ill give ya the screen though. mac books do have nice displays.
  • khimera2000 - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    FYI if you have a Fry's electronics near you, when you get a notebook from them they will give you a loaner laptop till they finish fixing your system. If your paranoid about hardware failing in your system its something to consider.

    On another note the way that the macbooks are built makes it so that when you drop them you can do serious damage to the internals. Ive seen several MBPs that needed an external disk drive becaus the aluminum mill next to the dvd tray was made to thing and warped to the point where it would scratch any disk going in, or would not be able to load a disk at all.
  • Roland00Address - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    You only get a loaner if you bough Fry's Protection Plan that they offer not if you get it repaired under a manufacturer warranty (which Fry's will gladly service since they are an authorized repair center for many brands.)

    I second the aluminum mill being able to be warped it happened with my 08 macbook pro. That said many samsung dvd external drives are so cheap (and work with OS-X). I am seriously considering buying another ssd and a mounting mechanism in my macbook pro and then booting from the ssd.
  • ajuez - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    According to Anand:
    "The SSD isn’t in an industry standard form factor, although the connector appears to be either micro or mini SATA. Presumably 3rd party SSD manufacturers (ahem, SandForce partners I’m looking at you) could produce drop in replacements for the MacBook Air SSD."

    And... bingo!
    http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/27/macbook-air-upg...
    "The Air USB 3 Adapter gives you not only a brand-spanking-new 256GB module with a Sandforce SF-1200 controller, but a speedy USB 3.0 flash drive too -- which smartly doubles as the mechanism by which you move your old files over, as you can just transfer everything through the USB port. Once you're done swapping modules, the company says you'll see a 30 percent speed boost over the original drive, with reported transfer rates of 250MB/s on both sequential reads and writes. "
  • lemonadesoda - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    Thanks for the link. Interesting.

    And matte screens are also available:
    http://www.techrestore.com/pr/macbook-air-matte-sc...

    All that is missing is an SD card slot
  • Exodite - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    It's a couple of very interesting machines, to say the least, but seem to suffer from much the same issues as previous generations.

    That said i'd be a pretty much perfect machine for me if it had;

    The traditional backlit keyboard.
    AMD's upcoming thin-and-light Fusion chips or an Intel Sandy Bridge ULV.
    USB 3.0 and HDMI ports.
    Matte screen options.

    Maybe the next version, eh?
  • SlyNine - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    "In practice I found the 2008 13-inch MBA launched applications quicker (short bursts of full clock speed), but after prolonged use or completing CPU intensive tasks it was tough to tell apart from the new 11-inch. What's even more troublesome is that Apple's aggressive clock throttling went relatively undetected until now. This is something I'm going to have to devise tests for and pay more attention to in future reviews. Sneaky, Steve, sneaky."

    And this isn't the first time, Your Dell XPS 16's throttled like crazzy, and still do.
  • ipredroid - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    Anand, can 13in MBA run 30FPS on StarCraft 2? I realize this isn't a support forum... sorry for the lazy question. Thanks for the review. I saw the 11in MBA FPS) no 13in MBA :( FPS
  • khimera2000 - Wednesday, October 27, 2010 - link

    it is possible to do SC2. the memory bump would do you well if your considering running starcraft on the Air (RAM is shared with gpu and cpu) since you loose 256 megs of your 2 gigs to the video card and SC2 has a min spec of 2 gigs with a recommended of 4.

    it has performed respecabaly on the old air on low settings, so you should be able to bump up a couple of settings possibly getting up to medium with this new revision.

    but if your looking for 30FPS through i would go for low. with lots of units on the map in some games your system might lock up at the wrong time.

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