If you werenāt convinced that the most dramatic upgrade you can do to a Mac is install a solid state drive in its belly, check this video out.
15 seconds. Just 15 seconds. Thatās how long it takes a 3.4GHz Sandy Bridge iMac armed with a Sandy Bridge processor and an SSD drive to launch all of its apps simultaneously.
Kaspersky believes Apple needs to invest more into Mac OS X security as more and more malware infections appear.
Wondering just where in the hell those Sandy Bridge MacBook Airs with Thunderbolt are? Sitting in a warehouse, just waiting for OS X Lion to go gold, according to the most recent report.
Hereās a bit of sweet timing. Just as the PC Era collapses and everyone moves to the cloud, what is Apple selling? Why, the MacBook Air, a light mobile device that seems perfect for the iCloud generation. Oh, yeah, itās also a āquasi-tablet.ā No wonder analysts predict Apple will make billions off the device.
Are you looking for an external battery for your MacBook Air cobbled together from the cutting edge of Kruschev-era Soviet electronics? Want less functionality in that battery than one of Sanhoās excellent HyperMac offerings while also doing your small part to slaughter Mother Earth? Most importantly, want a gadget that can accomplish all of these heady things at a price far, far greater than the more eco-friendly competition? Weāve got you covered.
Apple has ordered 400,000 next-generation MacBook Airs to be built this month for a July launch, and each and every one of them will ship with low-watt versions of Intelās cutting edge Sandy Bridge processors.
A refresh to the MacBook Air lineup appears to be imminent this week as retail sources worldwide report that supplies and shipments of Appleās ultraportable notebook are beginning to diminish.
Speculation that Apple is to introduce ARM processors to the next revision of its MacBook Airs continues, as one source claims the company is internally testing the ultraportable notebooks with its A5 processor⦠but will we really see an A5 powered MacBook Air? I donāt think so.
Youāll find a notebook to suit everyone within Appleās family of notebooks: the entry-level MacBook is perfect for students and casual computer users, the MacBook Air is a blessing to the travelling businessman, and thereās a MacBook Pro fitting for just about everyone. And Iām not the only one who thinks so ā Consumer Reports just dealt Appleās awesome MacBooks a whole lot of love.
Appleās latest lineup of MacBook Airs are incredible, and since their launch theyāve been lavished with attention from just about everyone ā from the tech worldās greatest reviewers to the hooded youths that gather around them in the Apple Store. But a recent refresh to the MacBook Pro family is beginning to steal their limelight ā boasting features like Sandy Bridge processors and Thunderbolt ports ā and the Airs want it back with their share of new components. They may only have to wait a little while longer, however, as one report suggests a refresh within the coming months.
Appleās domination of NAND flash is so complete that even when the industry figures out a way to greatly improve their efficiency, theyāve got to sit around and wait for Cupertino to approve it.
Despite Apple being their number one customer, Samsungās done a healthy trade in ripping-off Cupertinoās gadgets and selling their own, often patent infringing doppelgangers⦠and with their new Series 9 ultraportable, Samsung now has the MacBook Air square in their sights.
Expect as much as twice as much storage to be stuffed into 2012ās MacBook Airs. Industry market research firm Gartner says that the price of solid state drives will drop below a buck per gigabyte by the second half of 2012.
When I first got my Macbook Air, I fell in love with its diminutive profile, speedy boot times and incredible portability, but after living with it for a few months, one thing became glaringly apparent ā 128GB was simply not enough room. Having convinced myself it would be at the time or purchase ā I have recently found myself umbilically attached to a 500GB USB hard drive for music and photos.
Now, 6 months in, I was faced with two choices ā stick the current MBA on eBay and stump up the extra cash for a larger capacity Air ā or invest in a 3rd party storage solution. The first option is just stupid, so an upgrade was on the cards.
Will Apple, as rumored, shift the MacBook line over to an ARM processor this year, starting with the MacBook Air? If you answered yes to that question, one analyst has some compelling reasons why you might just be huffing fumes.
OCZ has just announced its Agility 3 and Solid 3 series of 2.5-inch solid-state drives aimed at users dying to get their hands on a super-speedy SSD, but with a tight budget to contend with.
An analyst believes that as soon as this year, Apple will rip the Intel right out of the MacBook Air and transfuse an ARM-based chip in its place, maybe even some successor to the iPad 2ās A5 SoC. But thatās just stupid. Isnāt it?
Microsoftās latest attempt at persuading customers to buy a Windows PC rather than a Mac is an advertising campaign that compares the price of Apple machines with computers from Asus, Dell, HP, Sony, and others; and then asks buyers to ādo the mathā and look at the money they could save ā which they could then spend on a trip to Hawaii.
For example, compare Appleās MacBook Air with a selection of Windows netbooks and straight away youāll notice the difference in price ā with the MacBook Air listed at $1,049 compared to netbooks for as little as $299. Weāll ignore the fact that Microsoft has classed the MacBook Air as a netbook and move on to specifications.
Other World Computing has just announced its latest Mercury Aura Pro Express solid-state drive designed for the latest generation of MacBook Airs. Boasting a whopping 480GB of storage, the upgrade offers nearly 4x more capacity than currently available from factory available SSDs, and is an incredible 68% faster.
As youād expect from an SSD, however, especially one designed for the latest MacBook Air, these babies come at one heck of a price. The 480GB upgrade will set you back a staggering $1,579.99, but youāre not going to find this kind of storage for Appleās ultra portable notebook anywhere else.
Crucial has just launched its new M4 lineup of 2.5-inch solid-state drives, which are the successors to the RealSSD C300 range, and boast faster read and write speeds. The M4 uses 25nm technology NAND flash created by its parent company Micron, and is available in 64GB, 128GB, 256GB and 512GB models.
Crucial claim the new M4 SSDs reach read speeds of up to 415MBps ā a 17% increase over its predecessor ā while write speeds are up 20% with speeds of up to 260MBps.
As with all SSDs, however, this technology doesnāt come cheap. The 64GB M4 will cost you $130, which rises to $250 for the 128GB, $500 for the 256GB and $1000 for the 512GB. All can be purchased directly from Crucial and include a three-year warranty.
While the M4s are pretty pricey, solid-state drives are a great way of improving the speed of your Mac. Traditional hard drives are famous for being the bottleneck in modern-day Macs, and since the release of the incredibly nippy second-generation MacBook Air, many users have realized the difference an SSD can make and have adopted the new technology. Recent tests have proven that MacBook Pros equipped with SSD drives are significantly faster than those with traditional HDDs.
The 17-inch MacBook Pro reached the end of the line back in 2012. In some ways, itās easy to see why Apple made the decision that it did. Compared to the overwhelming popularity of its 15-inch younger brother, the 17-inch model apparently registered disappointing sales. It certainly didnāt help that it was virtually impossible to open up -- let alone comfortably use -- a 17ā MacBook Pro on a train or airplane.
But there is definitely a group of power users who use their MacBooks for tasks like video editing who would welcome the return of the extra two inches of screen real estate. Especially as Apple has focused more and more on the possibility of, for instance, shooting video using your iPhone and then editing it from the back of your car, a return to the āultimate mobile studioā would be more than welcome. Particularly if it meant weād finally see a 17-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display.
The next revision of Appleās MacBook Pro lineup will boast a brand new case design for the first time since the aluminum unibody models were introduced in 2008. The current lineup of MacBook Pros ā which was recently refreshed earlier this year to introduce a Thunderbolt port, Intelās Sandy Bridge processors, and new GPUs ā will be the last revision before an all-new design.
A source for MacRumors has provided āreliable confirmationā that a redesign is currently in the works, however, there are currently no details on what the new MacBook Pro will look like:
Unfortunately, we have no specifics on what the next MacBook Pro might look like, though many have previously speculated that Apple will take cues from the MacBook Air line.
Iām sure previous speculation wonāt be far off either. Appleās latest MacBook Air has proven to be a huge success and at its unveiling back in October 2010, Steve Jobs hailed the device the āfuture of notebooks.ā
My guess is that the next MacBook Pro will be at least thinner and lighter, with SSD storage and better battery life. If weāre really lucky weāll get one of those Retina displays everyoneās talking about.
Samsung could be about to sell its dwindling hard disk drive business as flash memory becomes increasingly popular, according to a person āfamiliar with the matter.āĀ Thanks to the success of devices such as the iPod, iPad and MacBook Air, Apple has boosted the adoption of flash memory devices and encouraged consumers to ditch standard hard drives for speedier storage.
Samsung has set a target price of $1.5 billion for its hard drive business, but the Korean company is reportedly keen to sell it for under $1 billion if the right customer comes along. The Wall Street Journal report notes that Seagate Technologies could be a candidate for the business, though neither company has commented on the rumor.
Apple is considered to be the largest consumer of flash memory in the world, and predominantly responsible for the shift away from conventional hard drives to solid state drives. Itās believed the companyās iPad is entirely responsible for the complete reorganization at Acer āĀ whose netbooks sales were hit hard by the popular tablet.
Apple is undoubtedly responsible for my personal adoption of SSD drives; after purchasing an 11-inchĀ MacBook Air my other Macs felt incredibly slow in comparison. It seems once you go flash, thereās no going back.
AnandTech is reporting that Apple has appeared to have made some changes to the MacBook Air released in October 2010. The Macbook Air refresh last fall included some welcome surprises for Apple fans ā a new 11.6ā³ form factor, an external case redesign, faster graphics, and larger SSD drives. All of this came at a lower price. The most interesting part of the refresh was the new SSD drives. Apple didnāt use regular 2.5ā³ or 1.8ā³ SSDs and instead introduced a whole new type of SSD form factor called mSATA SSDs a.k.a. blade SSDs.
Since its refresh in October 2010, the popularity of Appleās MacBook Air has been rapidly increasing according to new research by J.P. Morgan analyst Mark Moskowitz. Sales of the device have seen a 333% year-over-year rise, with a projected annual revenue of a whopping $2.2 billion.
āWe believe that the growth rate of the MacBook Air stands to moderate, but we expect the product to exhibit increasing contribution to the overall Mac business,ā Moskowitz wrote. ā(The fourth quarter of calendar 2010) was the first quarter in which the MacBook Air accounted for greater than 10% of total Apple Mac units. More importantly, the MacBook Air accounted for 15% of total notebook sales during the quarter, versus 5% in the prior year.ā
The latest refresh to the MacBook Air line introduced an ultraportable 11.6-inch model ā a perfect alternative to users looking for the portability of a netbook but with the stability of a Mac. When the device first launched back in January of 2008, a 13-inch machine was the only option, with a starting price of $1,799. Now there are two machines to choose from, both of which come equipped with SSD hard drives as standard, starting at just $999.
Itās believed that the lower starting price and a choice of two notebooks are the main reasons behind the growth in popularity of the MacBook Air.
The release of Mac OS X 10.6.7 isnāt even two weeks old and Apple has issued a supplemental update that patches the latest OS release. The patch fixes problems encountered by late 2010 13-inch MacBook Air users who upon launching iTunes experienced crashes that left their computers completely frozen and unresponsive.
I even experienced it myself before the problem mysteriously disappeared after forcing the machine to restart by powering it off and then on again. Since then I havenāt had a problem, but for some the problem persists. Luckily Apple has a fix.
According to Apple:
This update addresses an issue that makes the system unresponsive when using iTunes. It is recommended for all 13ā³ MacBook Air (Late 2010) users running Mac OS X v10.6.7.
You can grab this update via Software Update on your Mac or download it directly via this support page.