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farmermac

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jul 23, 2009
779
11
Iowa
I was a bit worried myself that a 1.4 might choke on everyday use, but decided to just try it anyways. After all, it is a third mac and it wont be doing much work besides the basic itunes/web browsing.

First things first, forget about benchmarks for the CPU. Sure, it'll rank lower then an i5 or i7, but it's all relative. In my case, this computer is replacing a 12" Powerbook 1.5 ghz PPC G4. That computer was a dog CPU wise, and couldnt play any web based videos.

So the ultimate CPU test in my book is via handbrake encoding. At the moment I am encoding a HD show at a solid 28 fps. The range varies from low 20s to mid 30s FPS. The Powerbook struggled to maintain 1fps, often around 0.5 fps to 0.8 fps. In everyday use, I havent noticed a slowdown going to any website, or accomplishing any task (copying large multi gigabyte files through my N network, while web browsing and encoding). The CPU throttles down from encoding as required and lets you just do whatever you want.

So don't be afraid of the base model. Mine is the really basic - 2 gb ram, 1.4 ghz, 64 gb SSD. Hasnt bogged down once!
 

Ronnoco

macrumors 68030
Oct 16, 2007
2,568
522
United States of America
I am quite surprised at just how powerful my Ultimate 11 is...at 1.6GHz with the 128SSD and 4GB RAM this little guy blew me away with just how fast it can do some things that take longer with my i5 MBP...:eek:
I know much of it is related to the SSD vs. the 5400rpm 320GB HD in my MBP, but it was truly astonishing watching how fast I was able to add the Beatles Boxed Set that I ripped in full Apple Lossless to my iTunes library on my 11" MPA...it added each full CD in literally the blink of an eye...:eek:
It was also very fast converting avi video files to mp4 in handbrake...
I was truly stunned....
 

jace88

macrumors 6502
Jan 3, 2011
324
125
Sydney, Australia
I'm a huge advocate of this laptop because whilst it's not fast in hardcore benchmarks, it feels snappy in day to day use when surfing the web and launching applications. At the end of the day you are always making a trade-off somewhere in a computer purchase whether it's price, performance, battery life, weight/portability, etc... so whilst the laptop may be great for some, it doesn't suit everyone.
 

MartenJF

macrumors newbie
Jan 11, 2011
1
0
Win7 in Paralells?

@jace88: how is the performance of this when running Office 2010 on Win7 in Parallels?

I'm considering getting the lowest end Air to have as a travelcomputer. I will only use if for surfing, email, watching movies and office work. Do you think the 64GB and 2 GB of ram is too little (I normally use an external hd for files).

I'm a huge advocate of this laptop because whilst it's not fast in hardcore benchmarks, it feels snappy in day to day use when surfing the web and launching applications. At the end of the day you are always making a trade-off somewhere in a computer purchase whether it's price, performance, battery life, weight/portability, etc... so whilst the laptop may be great for some, it doesn't suit everyone.
 

nick9191

macrumors 68040
Feb 17, 2008
3,407
313
Britain
I also cannot speak highly enough of this machine.

It's the fastest laptop I've ever owned, and my last laptop was a 2.2ghz Core 2 MacBook. So perhaps it will lose to it's predecessor in handbrake, but as far as everything else I've used it for, it wins hands down. No graphical lag compared to that god awful X3100, boots up in 10 seconds.

I'm currently running the App Store, Safari, iTunes, Spotify, MAMP, Pages, TextWrangler, and Windows Server 2008 in a VM (I have the 4GB RAM version), absolutely no slowdowns. I know for a fact my MacBook would be choking right now (also 4GB RAM).
 

jace88

macrumors 6502
Jan 3, 2011
324
125
Sydney, Australia
@MartenJF - Word/Excel 2010 runs fine in Parallels but keep in mind (I'd say 90-95% compared to Boot Camp) that whilst it'll fit all your objectives, the battery life of the MBA (and any Macbook) dives dramatically when running Parallels or any virtualisation software. Better off using Boot Camp or native Office 2011 for Mac.
 

omegaphil6

macrumors 6502
Jul 19, 2002
332
0
Fort Myers Florida
i have the ultimate 11 and for day to day use it feels just as snappy as my i7 2.8 iMac. i was a bit weary of its ability before purchasing, wondering if i would get frustrated watching it choke on simply tasks but if it weren;t for the fact that i know its a 1.6Ghz C2D, i would assume its 2.4 or faster.

Very very pleased.
 

BornAgainMac

macrumors 604
Feb 4, 2004
7,337
5,355
Florida Resident
Impressive results.

My Powermac G5 2.0 Ghz model (original G5) was able to do 10 fps with Handbrake and I had it loaded with 8 GB. My Powerbook was the same speed as yours and it performed about the same. The G5 was a screamer in comparison. The MBA base model is an impressive Mac for those that have not upgraded to Intel Macs yet.
 

BeyondtheTech

macrumors 68020
Jun 20, 2007
2,147
715
I too have the base model, and have thrown tons of software at it, and more than surprised with the results.

I've had MacBooks, iMacs, and mac mini's, upwards of 2.4GHz. This performs on par with all of them.

Money well spent. Really, the only thing I could ask for is more hard drive space (64GB is too tight for me, I'm resorting to USB thumb drives...).
 

mattpreston11

macrumors 6502a
Nov 9, 2007
731
0
Love my "base" 11'', Never been dissapointed with the performance. Only when playing football manager 2011 does it take a while to load. But not enough to stop me playing it, clocked up over 50 hours of playtime on it.

My missus has the 13inch air, and i wouldn't swap mine for hers.
 

dal20402

macrumors 6502
Apr 24, 2006
290
0
As someone who has had SSDs in my top two machines for awhile, it's fun to watch everyone go gaga over SSD responsiveness. :D

It's a much bigger difference than a faster CPU for 95% of users.
 

fyrefly

macrumors 6502a
Jun 27, 2004
624
67
First things first, forget about benchmarks for the CPU. Sure, it'll rank lower then an i5 or i7, but it's all relative. In my case, this computer is replacing a 12" Powerbook 1.5 ghz PPC G4. That computer was a dog CPU wise, and couldnt play any web based videos.

So don't be afraid of the base model. Mine is the really basic - 2 gb ram, 1.4 ghz, 64 gb SSD. Hasnt bogged down once!

Compared to a single PPC G4, the Dual-Core 5th Gen Intel Processor would of course be a screamer. But don't forget that going from a 12" PBG4 to a 1st Gen MBP in 2006 would garner you the same results.

I'm not disputing the 1.4Ghz is a capable little processor (My 2008-era Air is a 1.6Ghz, and it's still great, other than the 2GB RAM ceiling and slow-ish SSD).

The MBA base model is an impressive Mac for those that have not upgraded to Intel Macs yet.

Exactly.

And for those that have more recent Macs, the SSD will pick up the slack, making the 2010 MBA "feel" faster than the other macs, though it's only 'cause the other macs are using platter-based HDDs for the most part.

As someone who has had SSDs in my top two machines for awhile, it's fun to watch everyone go gaga over SSD responsiveness. :D

It's a much bigger difference than a faster CPU for 95% of users.

+1.

I can't get over how many people are like "My 1.4Ghz MBA is FASTER than my 2.8Ghz MBP!"

That's obviously not true. But the speedy SSD in the new MBA's makes it *feel* like it's true. Owners of previous MBAs, and other Macs with SSDs have long-since known that an SSD is a super-speed boost to the end-user.

Boot up, program launches, shut downs, all things that users do all the time are sped up. While things like encoding, or CPU-intensive stuff is slower on the new MBAs than MBPs, lots of end-users never tax their CPU, so it won't matter to them and make it *seem* like the MBA is faster.
 

firewood

macrumors G3
Jul 29, 2003
8,141
1,384
Silicon Valley
I can't get over how many people are like "My 1.4Ghz MBA is FASTER than my 2.8Ghz MBP!"

That's obviously not true.

It obviously is true... for anyone who's typical usage is more disk latency bound than CPU bound.

The benchmark number that anyone should use is the one that best matches their intended use. Very few people invert large matrices (or whatever those tasks are that dominate the SPEC numbers these days).

I build iOS apps. XCode builds apps faster on my 1.6 GHz MBA than it does on my 2.4 GHz MBP. That's my "time is money" benchmark.
 

2IS

macrumors 68030
Jan 9, 2011
2,938
433
Yeah if it's faster for YOUR tasks then it's just that faster. Keep in mind when people say "my MBA is faster than my MBP" they're looking at it form their perspective AND the laptop as a whole unit. Just like the car with the most HP isn't necessarily the one that will win the race, the computer with the faster processor isn't always the faster computer ;)
 

mattpreston11

macrumors 6502a
Nov 9, 2007
731
0
Why is that? Can you elaborate? (thanks)

I think its all about personal preference and the uses you have for it.

I did consider the 13inch model when I got mine, for the extra money you do get a fair bit extra (extra battery life, faster cpu, Bigger res, Sd slot, bigger trackpad?).

At the end of the day though, The 11.6'' is just a perfect size, I take it so many places with me and because it's so light and doesn't dominate the space in my bag, it doesn't matter if i don't use it, I just take it just incase.

As mentioned though, its all about personal preference. If i didn't have a big desktop iMac I probably would have opted for the 13inch, or maybe splashed out on an external monitor/dock setup.

Hope my ramble has been moderately helpful.
 

jace88

macrumors 6502
Jan 3, 2011
324
125
Sydney, Australia
As someone who has had SSDs in my top two machines for awhile, it's fun to watch everyone go gaga over SSD responsiveness. :D

It's a much bigger difference than a faster CPU for 95% of users.

Disagree- my Dell Mini9 had a 16gb SSD and it was damn slow. Useless POS. Should've just gotten the hard drive model!

At least my MBA is awesome :)
 

jcd77

macrumors newbie
Jan 12, 2011
2
0
pure joy...

Just moved to Mac and started with MBA 11.6 with 2gb and base processor, started with 64gb but swapped for 128gb at Apple store no issue. What a thing! looks amazing, sending grannies great HD videos of grandson with Imovie, found aperture for 44 quid on Uk app store (Vs $250 in OZ!) works a dream for managing my big library. And streaming music and video around the house is soooooo easy! with Apple TV.

So amazing bit of kit, needs 128gb, just waiting for the new MBP's to arrive later in the year for heavy duty photo and video work.

The one thing that is making the apple experience so easy is the multi touch pad, now when I go back to work pc find my self frustrated buy how one dimensional it is!

Now a convert and happy
 

jace88

macrumors 6502
Jan 3, 2011
324
125
Sydney, Australia
I'm loving this glass touchpad. Makes me wonder how I lived without it. Nice and big. Lots of features/gestures. I wish more programs supported it though (e.g. Chrome should support pinch to zoom).
 

newdeal

macrumors 68030
Oct 21, 2009
2,532
1,861
...

cpu speed seems to not matter as much as people think. When installing the 10.6.6 combo update I had a race between my i3 3.06ghz imac with 8gb of ram and my macbook pro 2.4ghz with 4gb ram...no differance in time to complete at all
 

MacModMachine

macrumors 68020
Apr 3, 2009
2,476
393
Canada
It obviously is true... for anyone who's typical usage is more disk latency bound than CPU bound.

The benchmark number that anyone should use is the one that best matches their intended use. Very few people invert large matrices (or whatever those tasks are that dominate the SPEC numbers these days).

I build iOS apps. XCode builds apps faster on my 1.6 GHz MBA than it does on my 2.4 GHz MBP. That's my "time is money" benchmark.

your wrong,

2.4ghz mbp is much faster then 1.4 both being dual core,

the saying "my 1.4ghz air is faster then my 2.4ghz mbp" is nothing to do with cpu and is false.

if the macbook pro had a equal ssd it would be faster.
 

ZenErik

macrumors 6502
Dec 22, 2007
340
2
Massachusetts
1.4 GHz is a bit slow but more than enough for every day use. The SSD is what is making the difference. Pop one into any MBP, and the MBP will be the snappier machine.
 

2IS

macrumors 68030
Jan 9, 2011
2,938
433
your wrong,

2.4ghz mbp is much faster then 1.4 both being dual core,

the saying "my 1.4ghz air is faster then my 2.4ghz mbp" is nothing to do with cpu and is false.

if the macbook pro had a equal ssd it would be faster.

No one said the MBA CPU is faster than the MBP CPU. If they did, you'd be right and that would be false.
 

Cerano

macrumors 6502
Oct 28, 2010
268
1
your wrong,

2.4ghz mbp is much faster then 1.4 both being dual core,

the saying "my 1.4ghz air is faster then my 2.4ghz mbp" is nothing to do with cpu and is false.

if the macbook pro had a equal ssd it would be faster.

you're not quite correct

it depends on first, the firmware optimisation of the SSD and OSX, next the random read/write speed of the SSD and lastly its capability to maintain its speed without trim.

Also, other factors like FSB speed and L2 cache size come into play here so a 2.4ghz old old C2D may not be much faster
 
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