Ich love my 8GB M1 Air as well. It's really a powerful little thing. Before I got the Air I had a rMBP 15" from 2014 which I loved too but showed its age. I will still consider buying the new one, when it is available.
I guess I'm not familiar with vinyl wrap if it is something you trim yourself to fit the MacBook?I vinyl wrapped mine.
4 reasons:
1. If you get a protective case the lid cover makes it heavy for the screen hinge and it wobbles/makes the screen hinge *feel* loose
2. my plastic case cracked
3. I got a smokin' deal on my rose gold M1 and don't really like the flashy color. (beggars can't be choosers)
4. vinyl wrap and a razor blade are a lot cheaper than pre-cut skins. plus you have a lot more designs to choose from.
yezzirI guess I'm not familiar with vinyl wrap if it is something you trim yourself to fit the MacBook?
any references or sources?Don't wrap your laptops, particularly the MacBooks with no active cooling. The case is part of the heatsink and thermal design and adding a wrap will increase the thermal resistance from the chassis to ambient. Ultimately they will run hotter, cause more thermal expansion and contraction internally and last less time.
Remember this: Every time someone wraps a MacBook an electrical engineer kills a puppy
I compare this to hard cases such as the one linked below that is sold on the Apple website. Those state that they provide ventilation, so the question is how is that accomplished. And I think the answer is that the case doesn't cover the rear of the base of the MacBook, alongside of the hinge, which is the only opening I can see - and for that reason it shouldn't interfere with the ventilation (if that is a ventilation opening, and I don't know if it is or not).Don't wrap your laptops, particularly the MacBooks with no active cooling. The case is part of the heatsink and thermal design and adding a wrap will increase the thermal resistance from the chassis to ambient. Ultimately they will run hotter, cause more thermal expansion and contraction internally and last less time.
Remember this: Every time someone wraps a MacBook an electrical engineer kills a puppy
What about a veterinarian? They can certify the death of the puppy.any references or sources?
(credible established sources please. preferably within Electrical engineering and the higher education fields if possible)
My iMac has white bezels. In product photos you see the screen black and it stands out. When you're actually using it, your eyes are adjusted to the brightness of the display, and the bezels appear gray. It's seriously not an issue unless you're fixating on it. Here's what it looks like in real usage:M1 air is the best laptop ever. Silent, light, fast, affordable.
I bought four of them.
Too bad the refresh will have white bezels, no thanks. In for zero.
I liked my 2020 i5 Air... until my wife got an M1 Air and I got a chance to play around with it. It was night and day. I ended up trading mine in soon after. Even if the M1 wasn't any faster than the i5 (and it really is much more responsive), the double/triple battery life would clinch it.I feel the same way about my 2020 Intel MBA.
I traded my 2020 i5 Air for an M1 Air and it was night and day. Even if the M1 wasn't any faster than the i5 (and it really is much more responsive), the double/triple battery life would clinch it.
Using CoconutBattery, I usually saw my i5 Air pulling ~12-15 watts in normal use, fans usually running at some level between low and roaring. Under the same workload, the M1 Air consistently pulls <5 watts under the same workload and screen brightness. It sometimes pulls under 3 watts if I keep the screen brightness at 50%. That gives me a real-world run time of 10 hours. Side benefit, the battery goes through way fewer charge/discharge cycles and will last a lot longer over time.
My iMac has white bezels. In product photos you see the screen black and it stands out. When you're actually using it, your eyes are adjusted to the brightness of the display, and the bezels appear gray. It's seriously not an issue unless you're fixating on it. Here's what it looks like in real usage:
depends on how far you sit from you monitor. I'm about 2 feet (24 inches) away from mine and its clear.
But I am contemplating getting a 28" 4k monitor for more screen real estate.
exactly.The Microsoft Surface Laptop 4 15" is a good model to follow. Light, thin but needs better speed and battery life, but the size and weight is ideal and I use it a lot for that reason.
exactly.
I honestly can't think of another (current) machine I'd switch to.
I completely agree that the 13" screen on the MB Air isn't ideal (I've only owned 15" laptops). And for productivity its definitely the biggest downside of the machine.
BUT on the other hand, I've actually become really comfortable with the 13" screen. Which I never thought I'd actually switch to and be productive/happy with it. It took me a few weeks to get adjusted to it, but it is my "daily driver" and only machine I use so YMMV.
My iMac has white bezels. In product photos you see the screen black and it stands out. When you're actually using it, your eyes are adjusted to the brightness of the display, and the bezels appear gray. It's seriously not an issue unless you're fixating on it. Here's what it looks like in real usage:
View attachment 1942405
Good point and iMacs had white bezels for years. Just like iBooks as well.
All of the Macs that I've owned have had metallic or metallic-looking finishes.
PowerMac G5, M1 mini, 2021 MacBook Pro, 2014 MacBook Pro, 2015 MacBook Pro and 2007 MacBook Pro 17 (metal color but made of plastic), 2009 iMac, 2014 iMac. Same thing with my iPhones and iPads. The only Apple products that I had that weren't metal or metal looking are iPod Nanos (early generations), and the Apple remote controls. So I'm just used to metallic finishes or appearance.
All of my monitors (Dell) have black bezels, so that's just what I am used to. I don't like the 24 because of the size. I don't really know whether or not I'd like white bezels but I'm sure that there are skins to convert them to black if they do that on the 27.
An iPhone is just a very small computer, with a bunch of sensors and hardware the MacBook doesn't have. And it's all miniaturized and put into a tough, waterproof case with an OLED touch screen on top of it and a multi-lens camera system. If not for heat dissipation, I'd wager a high-spec iPhone could be modified to run Mac OS and drive a monitor pretty well.That plus it costs less than many iphones...which is a real head-scratcher to me.
That black polycarbonite MacBook was nice, though. One of my favorite Mac laptops, for its time.Good point, a skin could be an option. Having used iMacs from the early generations onwards over the G4 lamp and the white G5 models and intel models I got used to the bezel colour rather quickly. I found black glossy displays and display borders way more irritating but that’s probably just my personal preference.
Yep. Same. I have actually never liked laptops, not even Apple ones. I love macOS, but the last MacBook I owned before the M1 Air was thick, heavy, loud, slow, etc. It ALWAYS seemed to me like macOS was held back by Intel and the thermal design to accommodate their chips. The MacBook and MacBook Air of the time had the sleeker, more modern designs but were even more painfully slow than my MacBook Pro was. And I couldn't use the Pro "anywhere" because it was too hot most of the time to put on my legs while in use. When I was regularly podcasting was actually when I switched to full time iPad usage rather than Mac and learned the whole workflow in iOS instead. I was just tired of gating out fan noise and interference and it was affecting the quality of almost all my audio.
Those problems are literally all gone now. My M1 Air gets a little hot when I play Civ VI on it, but otherwise doesn't break a sweat. It also lasts forever on a charge and is lighter and thinner than my iPad Pro w Magic Keyboard.
It's honestly the only laptop I've ever owned that I've LOVED using. I've liked a couple of them, but I've never been to the point with a notebook where I get joy from using it over my phone or iPad. M1 made the MacBook Air feel like an iPad married to a Mac without the touchscreen (which I largely don't care about or need).
Of course, I will kick it to the curb once the M2 model comes out, which I'm sure I will also love.
My MB Pro M1 13, never got warm, other when I ran Cynebench.OMG, I had a Ryzen 4000 series with a D-GPU laptop and that thing was noisy to say the least. battery life sucked, maybe 2.5-4 hours at best! ?
Typing on my M1 air right now and its cool to the touch
Barely gets warm when connected to a 24" 1080p monitor at 240hz.
This thing is truly amazing.
I have AppleCare+ (annual plan) on my Air, I plan on continuing it as long as I own the machine. (for peace of mind)My MB Pro M1 13, never got warm, other when I ran Cynebench.
It's connected to a 27inch 4K screen. I have actually never heard the fan spin.
And I have a 8GB 512 version. Soooooo happy with it, gonna keep it for years! For what I do, it fits my needs perfect. And (knock on wood) has not failed me once yet.