Windows 7 Battery Life

We've proven time and time again that workloads with lots of idle time see better battery life under OS X than Windows. It's not surprising to see lower numbers for the Air under Windows, but for boot camp users this data is very useful.

I turned to our standard Internet Battery Life test from our PC notebook reviews to test the new MBAs:

Battery Life - Internet

The result is reasonable but nothing spectacular. For the most part the results track with battery capacity. At only 50Wh the 13-inch MBA has a hard time competing with the bigger notebooks with larger batteries. And at 35Wh the 11-inch MacBook Air doesn't stand a chance.

In absolute numbers both systems deliver over 4 hours of web browsing on a single charge, with the 13 lasting over 5.6 hours. The 13-inch Air lasts 40% longer than the 11 thanks to its larger battery.

Windows 7 Application Performance Final Words
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  • ifyouwanto - Tuesday, August 2, 2011 - link

    Hi Anandtech,

    In your review of the 2010 11" model you commented that the hinge felt a bit loose or weak. Wondering if it is any different on this years model?

    Thanks
  • slatanek - Saturday, September 10, 2011 - link

    i have a 13 inch Macbook air i5 2011 and its hinge is rock solid. it feels very assuring :-)
    cheers
  • Wskcondor - Thursday, October 13, 2011 - link

    I read this review and also the 2011 iMac review. I have a couple of questions someone with the hardware in front of them or with more knowledge may be able to answer...

    My idea is to travel with the 2011 Macbook Air, with the 1.8G i7 upgrade and 256G SSD.

    -I like the Thunderbolt display idea of a dock, because when I am "at home" I do a lot on the computer at the desk and I store a lot externally from the Air (movies, music, photos) and also still use an optical drive regularly. In effect, with a T-Bolt display, all of these things would be hanging off the display.

    Then I thought: why couldn't I buy a 2011 iMac and use it as a "display/dock station" when at home?

    1) Could I boot the 11" Air into TBolt target drive mode and then BOOT the iMac from the Air's drive, so all the "local changes" would be on the drive I take away on travel with me? The processor would be an i7 also in the iMac. BUT the configuration would be different, of course.
    -will this jack up settings in the Air's hard drive when I disconnect and reboot the Air from it's internal processor?
    -will this be too slow a configuration because the TBolt target drive mode has such slow throughput that the iMac will crawl along?
    -Can I even boot an iMac off the Air's TBolt target SSD drive?

    2) Can the iMac become a "Thunderbolt monitor" with drives, ports, etc if I boot the iMac into TBolt target mode? Or would it just be a blue screen with drives and ports, extending my Air's ports, but not acting as an external monitor?

    Questions.

    thanks to anyone who knows.

    Wskcondor

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