3

Here’s a first look at Apple’s redesigned M2 MacBook Air

 2 years ago
source link: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/06/heres-a-first-look-at-apples-redesigned-m2-macbook-air/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
neoserver,ios ssh client

WWDC 2022 —

Here’s a first look at Apple’s redesigned M2 MacBook Air

Plus, photos of the dual-port charger that comes with it.

Samuel Axon - 6/6/2022, 7:53 PM

A laptop on a table
Enlarge / Apple's new MacBook Air.
Samuel Axon

CUPERTINO, Calif.—Today, Apple unveiled the first major redesign in a long while to its most popular laptop, the MacBook Air. After a few minutes with the device, we can confirm that it feels quite different to hold compared to its predecessor.

The new laptop drops the tapered design of the previous model in favor of a flat, rectangular design reminiscent of the iPad Pro or last year's 24-inch iMac redesign. It adds the new and improved MagSafe (as seen recently in the 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro) and includes an unusual charger with a different shape and two USB-C ports.

We handled the device for a few minutes at Apple's Cupertino headquarters and found it to be noticeably lighter than other recent Apple laptops (as its name suggests). But because it borrows those iPad, iMac, and MacBook Pro elements, it also looks and feels familiar—right down to the MacBook Pro's screen notch and slightly taller display.

The device comes in a few metallic colors, but we spent our time with the one Apple dubbed "Starlight."

Advertisement
  • The screen on Apple's new MacBook Air.
  • With the lid closed, it's almost indistinguishable from the 14-inch MacBook Pro from above—apart from the unique color.
  • Also like the MacBook Pro, it has pronounced feet on the bottom.
  • The ports on the left side include MagSafe and two Thunderbolt.
  • On the right side, there's just a headphone jack.
  • Here's the keyboard, with a full function row and Touch ID.

Remember when the 24-inch iMac came with a charging cable and brick that had an Ethernet port built into it? The trend of multi-functional chargers continues here with a tiny charging brick that includes two USB-C ports—one for the MacBook Air, and one for whatever other device you want to charge, like an iPhone or AirPods.

  • This is Apple's new charger for the MacBook Air. From this angle, it doesn't look too different...
  • Here's the bottom, with the Apple branding and a collapsed plug.
  • The plug extends, of course.
  • There seem to be holding indentations on the sides.
  • The MagSafe cord is very similar to the one you get with a new MacBook Pro. The color matches whatever MacBook Air you order.
  • For scale, here are the brick and cable next to the laptop.

Apple plans to ship the MacBook Air next month, so we'll go into much more detail—including M2 testing—when we review it. But our first impressions are solid: It's a thinner, lighter, slightly more colorful cousin to the MacBook Pro. That's probably exactly what MacBook Air users want—the extra performance over the M1 is just gravy for most of the intended audience.

Promoted Comments

  • Batmanuel wrote:
    I do NOT WANT a camera notch on my screens. EVER for any reason. I want a full screen. It makes even less sense on a laptop - and no the MacOS UI menu bar doesn't make it moot. I don't want a notch in the middle of the top of my screen on any application, use case, or device, especially for video play back.
    Unless you are watching the Snyder Cut, you're going to have black letterboxing on pretty much everything you watch full screen on the Air's 16:10 display.
    To be clear: the notched MacBooks have a 16:10 display area below the notch, and the additional vertical space is used entirely for the menu bar. If you take an app full screen, it runs in 16:10 below the notch so no content is ever affected.

About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK