
I’m a two-monitor guy and not being able to hook up the Air up to two screens is a step back. My biggest gripe is that the M1 MacBook Air can only drive one external display. Two USB ports are not enough for me, but a multi-port dongle solves the problem. There are also two Thunderbolt USB-C 4 ports (the laptop first with USB 4 speeds) on the left side - same as the previous Intel MacBook Air. Besides, it’s plain dumb reviewing devices by bezel thickness. The bezels could be slimmer and a matte nano-texture option would have been nice, but this is a $999 laptop, not a $3,000 one, so there’s little to complain about. Same wide color gamut and same True Tone support.
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Other than the fact that it only maxes out at 400 nits instead of 500 nits of brightness, it’s identical to the 13-inch MacBook Pro display. It’s also great that the Fn key now doubles as a button to insert emoji - it’s just like on the Magic Keyboard for iPad, and I’m glad to never have to press Cmd+Control+Space Bar ever again.Īpple’s also using the same display as before: a 13.3-inch Retina display with crisp 2,560 x 1,600 resolution. I’m still annoyed that the keyboard brightness buttons got cut, but the Search and DND buttons have come in handy. The function row has been tweaked buttons for Launchpad and adjusting the backlight for the keyboard have been replaced with Spotlight search, Dictation, and Do Not Disturb. The glass trackpad is also the best on any laptop - large, smooth, and responsive. The keyboard is terrific to type on now that all MacBooks now come with scissor-style switches instead of the flawed butterfly keyboards Apple kept pushing for years. The keyboard’s still got a fast and secure Touch ID sensor inside of the power button and no Touch Bar (thank god!). Like the unibody case, Apple’s changed very little about the keyboard and display. I bought the Space Gray version, but the M1 MacBook Air also comes in silver and gold. or at least, it endures for a very long time. That’s just how Apple products are: the design is timeless. The 2.98-pound aluminum wedge looks as modern as it did when Apple updated the chassis in 2018.

I agree that Apple could have used the chip transition to usher in a new look and feel (or maybe even have brought back the glowing Apple logo). I hear people complaining about how the M1 Macs have the same old design as the Intel Macs. The MacBook Air M1's keyboard and trackpad are best-in-class again.

In a few years, we’ll look back and wonder how we ever tolerated laptops with anything less than this kind of performance. They’re the new gold standard by which all laptops will be judged, and this is just the start. The M1 MacBook Air (and M1 MacBook Pro) are now the best laptops regardless of operating system. It pains me there’s still no touchscreen, there are only two USB-C ports, there’s no SD card slot, and I know I'm bound to run into some apps that don’t emulate well (or at all) with Rosetta 2 (macOS Big Sur’s x86 Intel app translator), but these are all trivial issues. What Apple has achieved with the M1 is nothing short of groundbreaking. It makes my 2019 13-inch MacBook Pro with Intel Core i5 and 16GB of RAM look like smoldering trash now.

I’ve been using the entry-level $999 MacBook Air with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage nonstop as my only computer for a week and it still doesn’t feel possible that a laptop this thin and this light is capable of all this power and battery life. But are these new Macs really better than Intel-powered ones?Īll of the hype about the 8-core M1 chip in the MacBook Air - up to 3.5x faster CPU and up to 5x faster GPU performance, and almost double the battery life compared to the previous-gen Intel MacBook Air - is real. The new chips and laptops begin Apple’s two-year transition away from Intel processors to in-house designed silicon that's based on ARM chips.
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There’s been a fair amount of hype and skepticism following the MacBook virtual event earlier this month when Apple announced a new MacBook Air, 13-inch MacBook Pro, and Mac Mini with its own M1 chip. Apple didn’t send me an M1 MacBook Air to review.
