Engadget reports that it does 720p "great": http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/20/macbook-air-all-substance-no-flash/
absolutely. my ultimate test for 1080P playback is to play a 1080P movie trailer via quicktime. the 320M GPU is an extremely capable GPU and should handle pretty much any video you throw at it.
That not an even comparison. 1080p YouTube is way heavier than 1080p h.264.
absolutely. my ultimate test for 1080P playback is to play a 1080P movie trailer via quicktime. the 320M GPU is an extremely capable GPU and should handle pretty much any video you throw at it.
That not an even comparison. 1080p YouTube is way heavier than 1080p h.264.
Should be fine too. Core 2 Duo isn't exactly a slow processor. I was playing 1080P youtube videos with an Asus 1215N, which has a dual core atom CPU.
Did you test it on the actual machine? Or just based on past experiences?
Thanks for the info. But I need to know how it is on this very machine. I know for sure (I tried it at an Apple Store) the older MacBook Air can't handle YouTube 1080p HD full screen.
Did you test it on the actual machine? Or just based on past experiences?
Thanks for making it more clear. I need to know YouTube 1080p HD, or any flash-based 1080p HD movie, NOT HTML5.
Yes, I used to own a 2010 13" MBP and an Asus 1215N (Atom CPU). Both played 1080P youtube just fine, which shows that GPU is more important in video playback.
Apple is known for throttling the Air. If the thernal issues have not been addressed, expect it to choke out soon after playback.
Id wait for further testing.
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_1 like Mac OS X; en-us) AppleWebKit/532.9 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0.5 Mobile/8B117 Safari/6531.22.7)
Maybe I don't understand the techie comments but I would say no - the screen res is 1440x768 so it can't display 1080p. Just view the 720 version
you're right. if there's a specific 1080P youtube clip you want to try, might want to ask this guy:
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/1034727/
I did actually.. No response as of yet (I have asked the same on his YouTube video as well). Guess gonna have to go to an Apple Store to figure this out.
It doesn't say whether it's a flash-based 1080p HD clips (i.e. YouTube) or an actual movie file. I believe Intel Atom has been able to play 1080p movie file fine since 2 years ago. Flash is another different story.
Why on earth would you want to watch 1080p on an 11" screen? You guys are nuts. Save your lap the third degree burn and watch movies in 720p.
Why on earth would you want to watch 1080p on an 11" screen? You guys are nuts. Save your lap the third degree burn and watch movies in 720p.
It's a good benchmark. Besides, what if he wants to hook it up to his 55" HDTV?