You have to really enjoy how someone can suddenly say that you'll never really have the true Mac experience without owning a machine with an SSD. I guess my MacPro is useless piece of sh*t because it doesn't have an SSD in it. Oh crap! My Mini is a useless POS media center without an SSD as well!
Damnit, all these years I've never experienced a true Mac. A mac is not a mac without SSD. Interesting.
I'm off to the Marketplace to sell my PCs. I sure hope to have a Mac one day.
For such an arrogant attitude you really miss the just of anything/everything I stated completely. Quite honestly, I shouldn't have to explain just how far off your argument is, but I will to show you that your emotion is getting the best of you.
I have worked on plenty of Mac Pros, and they're truly a wonderful Mac "experience." If you read my statement, instead of just replying in furor, you would understand and think before replying so hastily. Quite honestly, your disdain remarks do not warrant a reply, but I will for all of the others who may miss my mark and understand your haste as fact!
The MacBook Air is challenged from a component standpoint. It has minimal space for cooling. This requires it to have a low voltage CPU which is slower than most other Macs from the last three years since the Intel transition. In addition, the CPU and GPU have been throttled down to limit heat output, but this also limits the MacBook Air's capabilities. The drive is also limited in size to meet the super thin space requirements afforded by the MacBook Air. Apple has done an amazing job of making this super thin Mac that weighs three pounds make up for its restricted components by utilizing an SSD to optimize performance of the entire system.
What Apple has done is shear genius IF one is able to capitalize on the SSD option. The 1.8" 4200 rpm HDD is severely limited even compared to a standard 2.5" 7200 rpm HDD. To further maximize the reward of the compact "Air" system, Apple has used the technological advancements of the primary constraint (bottleneck) to make the MacBook Air feel like a MacBook Pro or when connected to a 24" LED ACD a Mac Pro!
With only the 1.8" 4200 rpm HDD, the MacBook Air is even slower than one would imagine as its component base is slower than ALL other Macs from the last three years. So Apple uses the biggest advancement in technology (SSD) to overcome the primary constraint (4200 rpm HDD) and to give the end user the result of a complete Mac experience that one would expect given use of a MacBook Pro with 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Penryn CPU, 4 GB RAM, and a 2.5" 7200 rpm HDD.
That most certainly doesn't imply or exclaim that one needs an SSD in a MacBook Pro or Mac Pro to have a rewarding Mac experience. What that simply states is that a MacBook Air while limited in ALL other components, feels like a MacBook Pro or Mac Pro when an SSD is installed in the MacBook Air.
You simply aren't reading the words I have typed out for you. What I am stating is that the MacBook Air with a completely slower component set than a superior Mac can makeup for the Mac experience with a simple SSD upgrade. The SSD, paired with the Nvidia 9400m, is the genius in the MacBook Air that rewards its user with an incredible Mac experience. With a 1.8" 5 mm tall 4200 rpm HDD, the MacBook Air has a complete set of inferior components not awarding the user what he or she would expect given their Mac experience had previously consisted of a MacBook Pro with 2.4 GHz CPU, 4 GB RAM, and 2.5" 7200 rpm HDD!
Read again if you still want to misrepresent my statement. It is well refined and perfectly clear. It does not state anything of the sort that all/any other Mac would require an SSD to reward the user with a typical Mac experience. It simply means that the SSD in the MacBook Air makes up for its other component shortcomings so greatly that it's a completely different negative experience when the 1.8" 4200 rpm HDD is substituted in the place of the SSD.
The SSD in the MacBook Air makes the Mac experience!
To put it one last way to get the point across to you, I am NOT using the SSD as a requirement for a Mac-like experience. It is actually quite contrary. The baseline Mac I am using in my argument as a positive or normal Mac experience is a MacBook Pro with 2.4 GHz CPU, 4 GB RAM, and 2.5" 7200 rpm HDD!