The Air just got a little refresher.
On Tuesday morning, Apple announced a new version
of its MacBook Air, its slim, lightweight, oft-imitated laptop computer. The
new MacBook Air looks the same as last year’s model, but Apple has upgraded the
computer’s processor, making it speedier at things like multitasking, and also
taken $100 off the starting price.
The design, weight, and screen sizes and quality
remain the same. What Apple has improved here are the guts of the computer,
improving its zip and likely its battery life, too. Last year’s MacBook Airs,
which launched in June, started with Intel dual-core 1.3 GHz processors;
this year’s MacBook Airs will come with newer Intel dual-core 1.4 GHz
processors.
That means better speed. The cheapest MacBook Air
configuration, for a laptop with an 11-inch display, costs $899, down from $999
a year ago. A new MacBook Air with a 13-inch display starts at $999, also down
$100 from a year ago.
Though Apple’s super-skinny laptop was one of a
kind when it debuted in 2008, similarly lightweight, slim models from Windows
manufacturers like Samsung and Asus have been challenging the Air as of late.
Many of these models are cheaper than the Air and offer similar processing
power and lightness. But none of those myriad Windows “ultrabooks,” as they are
called, has caught on like the Air has.
For the gear-heads, tech specs are available at Apple’s website. The new MacBook
Air is available now on Apple.com and in Apple Stores.
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