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thespeakerbox

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jul 17, 2009
7
0
MBA - Lighter (only 1.5 lbs), no ethernet (gigabit may be an issue), worse screen.

MBP 13" - slower HDD (comparing to SSD), A tab bulkier, glossy screen , has glass touchpad

I'm stuck between the two. The air just seems more dated than the mbp.
 

zedsdead

macrumors 68040
Jun 20, 2007
3,404
1,147
The Macbook Air is currently not realiable as there are far too many widespread issues (Line, Hinge, Wi-Fi, etc...).

The Macbook Pro's have a far better battery, much better specs, and the ability to upgrade.

As far as the SSD goes, you can customize the 13" Macbook Pro with one for about the same price, or even go for the 256 SSD and double your space. I highly recommend it for the speed improvements.

The glass trackpad is a huge improvement over every other trackpad (not to mention the button on the Macbook Air has a tendency to scratch the bezel around the iSight camera, yet another issue).
 

puma1552

Suspended
Nov 20, 2008
5,559
1,947
Allow my buyer's remorse to kick in and tell you don't under any circumstance waste your time with a base MBA if you go the MBA route.

4200 RPM iPod Classic hard disk==FAIL (figuratively)
 

coolbreeze

macrumors 68000
Jan 20, 2003
1,809
1,554
UT
The Macbook Air is currently not realiable as there are far too many widespread issues (Line, Hinge, Wi-Fi, etc...).

My rev.C has none of these 'widespread' issues. Maybe I'm the luckiest guy alive, but my machine is perfect. Yes, there is an unknown regarding the long term test for the hinge, but as I understand it was redesigned in the rev.C model.

Whatever the case, I love my Air. Hooked to my 24" ACD, it does everything my 17" uMBP did.
 

entatlrg

macrumors 68040
Mar 2, 2009
3,385
6
Waterloo & Georgian Bay, Canada
I've had my MacBook Air 8 months now, lot's of banging around and carrying all over the place ... I just got back from a week in the Muskoka's where my Air was used at the cottage, on the deck, in the boat .... it's been banged, bumped, and used, (not abused) and it's works GREAT !!!

I have a newer 15" MBP as well, the latest model with 256ssd hard drive ... I'm typing this on my Air sitting on my couch .... my 15" MacBook Pro is sitting on my desk powered off and closed... haven't used it for quite a few days. Reason being, the MBA is so much more convenient, easy and fun to use whether on a desk or away ... it's thin, light and imo the best Mac to date to type on and use ....

So be careful reading around here, 'many' opinions are from people who've never owned an MBA or from those that own a first gen and/or a 4200 HD model, in which case I most likely would of been disappointed too.

The MBA as it is now I would bet a large sum if you give to 100 people who slam it and claim it's 'not powerful enough' or riddled with problems... I'd bet 80 of the 100 people wouldn't give it up ....

The MBA is an EXCELLENT machine ... use it for what it's for and you'll never have problems ... compare it to MBP's all day or expecting desktop performance is only fooling yourself.
 

NC MacGuy

macrumors 603
Feb 9, 2005
6,233
0
The good side of the grass.
MBA worse screen? Matter of opinion but I like it better than the MBP glassy gloss. It's also easier to get a decent color profile on.

Haven't used my USB-Enet adapter yet w. the MBA. Pretty much find a wireless signal anywhere if you really want one.

I've got a Rev. A HDD & a Rev. B SSD and the difference is night and day. The SSD makes the MBA for me. NVidia graphics doesn't hurt much either.;)

Get what you think you'll like. If you go into a purchase second guessing it'll take a lot to keep you happy after that box is open and you get your first scratch.
 

muronero

macrumors newbie
Aug 4, 2009
10
0
i did face the same choice.... i chose the mba ssd.... and i definitely have no regrets... It's snappy, ultralight, i like the display ( i do hate the bloody glass too) and (personal taste) is better looking than the mbp.... it is a real joy to use.... so far the best apple notebook i've ever used.

M.
 

dorkygeek

macrumors newbie
Oct 30, 2006
3
0
no contest

MacBook Pro.

Having impulse-purchased the original MBA, I was initially delighted with its sleekness and feel. I became progressively frustrated with the lack of ports and performance. Ended up recently eBaying it and bought the 13" MBP. It absolutely the most impressive/practical/sexy Mac I have ever owned. Skip the buyer regret and get the 13" MBP.
 

madmaxmedia

macrumors 68030
Dec 17, 2003
2,932
42
Los Angeles, CA
Coming from a 15" MBP, I find the 13" MBP is very portable. I can see the allure of the MBA, but I think the 13 MBP hits the sweet spot in terms of performance, price, and portability. Those who are really on-the-go and place a higher priority on portability may of course prefer the MBA, for me all 3 factors are probably equally important.

The improvements from the old 13 unibody MB were key for me- extra battery life and Firewire. I don't really care about the trackpad either way, the SD slot is nice but only a small perk for me.
 

GadgetGeek407

macrumors 6502a
Mar 26, 2009
994
61
florida
I had the unibody 13 inch base model side by side with by rev C last night....the black is blacker on the air the colors are duller on the unibody....same brightness everything its weird...i went on netflix the red seemed more pure on the air but the whites look way better on unibody macbook

here is something super weird wen i turn on the webcam in my room under regular lighting, on the air it looks dark as hell n i need to turn my lamp on n sit facing it just to look regular in terms of lighting...

Ironically i decided to turn both cams on side by side n the cam on the umb was a WORLD of a difference in the same regular lighting without the lamp i appeared regular as i should....why is that?
 

zedsdead

macrumors 68040
Jun 20, 2007
3,404
1,147
I had the unibody 13 inch base model side by side with by rev C last night....the black is blacker on the air the colors are duller on the unibody....same brightness everything its weird...i went on netflix the red seemed more pure on the air but the whites look way better on unibody macbook

here is something super weird wen i turn on the webcam in my room under regular lighting, on the air it looks dark as hell n i need to turn my lamp on n sit facing it just to look regular in terms of lighting...

Ironically i decided to turn both cams on side by side n the cam on the umb was a WORLD of a difference in the same regular lighting without the lamp i appeared regular as i should....why is that?

The whites are duller on the Air because of the line issue.
 

mrgossett

macrumors 6502
Mar 18, 2008
432
31
I can't compare the Air to the MacBook Pro 13" as I have never used the MBP. I just received my Apple refurb MBA 1.86 SSD last week, and I am totally happy with it, coming from my 13" Blackbook (which is still a nice machine). I do NOT have the screen line issue, and the display is beautiful. The SSD makes the MBA really fast and responsive. My startup time is less than 15 seconds. I can see someone preferring a MBP if it's their only Mac because of the extra drive space, SuperDrive, and ports. But if you already have another Mac as I do (Mac Pro), the MBA is the perfect companion.
 

NC MacGuy

macrumors 603
Feb 9, 2005
6,233
0
The good side of the grass.
still curious about the camera difference

The iSight in the Air is not nearly as good a camera as in the MBP or even MB for that matter. I'm not sure of M pixels or specs but it was discussed & dissected when it was first discovered. I looked on Apples site and get references to the Air having a .3M pixel vs. the MB & MBP's having a 1.3 M pixel cameras.
 

dhc921

macrumors newbie
Aug 18, 2009
26
7
MBA - Lighter (only 1.5 lbs), no ethernet (gigabit may be an issue), worse screen.

MBP 13" - slower HDD (comparing to SSD), A tab bulkier, glossy screen , has glass touchpad

I'm stuck between the two. The air just seems more dated than the mbp.

I had the new MBP 13" for 2 weeks before I returned it and got the AIR rev. C.
MBP 13" is a very nice laptop, just a bit heavy for me. I am a sales professional and need the light weight to travel between meetings. MBA fits this application very well. I love MBA and it's my primary computer now.

Get the air only for the weight, otherwise, MBP is a better choice for much cheaper.
 

jimboutilier

macrumors 6502a
Nov 10, 2008
647
42
Denver
If you can live within the MBA's limitations - YES!

The MBA is an incredibly thin, light, portable, well built machine that is a pleasure to use all day long. Its the kind of machine that brings a smile to your face whenever you pick it up or use it on the go. The MBA is by far the most enjoyable laptop I've ever used and I've had plenty of high end ultra portable and thin and light laptops. So if you can live within its limitations - GO FOR IT!

As to limitations
a) It has a modest but capable CPU and Graphics so make sure its powerful enough for the things you do.
b) It has few ports and no built in optical drive so factor in a USB hub, set of graphics and Ethernet dongles, and possibly an external optical drive if you can't live with what's build in. These things can significantly impact the machine's portability and enjoyment if you frequently need them.
c) 2gb Ram is enough for most pure MAC applications but is hard to live with if you deal with virtual machines or high end multimedia processing.
d) 128gb of storage is rough if you include much of a movie and music selection in addition to all of your applications and work products.

A 13" MB/MBP has numbers that only seem a bit thicker and heavier but they are a whole different user experience, and do not feel near as portable. I've transitioned to a 13" MB for now because it can be my only machine (4gb RAM and 320gb HD), but its not the pleasure to use that the MBA was. Its a fine machine but it just doesn't give you that smile using it.

If the next MBA includes a processor in the 2.3ghz range, 4gb ram, and at least a 256gb SSD with decent write speeds I know I'll be heading back in that direction.

Good luck in your search!
 

ayeying

macrumors 601
Dec 5, 2007
4,547
13
Yay Area, CA
If the next MBA includes a processor in the 2.3ghz range, 4gb ram, and at least a 256gb SSD with decent write speeds I know I'll be heading back in that direction.

Good luck in your search!

My SSD gives me a maximum of 82 MB/s write speed... is that "decent"?... I mean, coming from 2x RAID-0 7200RPM drives in a Mac Pro only giving me 40 MB/s for some reason..
 

orpheus1120

macrumors 65816
Jan 23, 2008
1,420
53
Malaysia
See my sig for my macs.

Still I would love a MBA. Not that I can't afford it, but I fear I'll neglect all my other macs once I get it.

I had carried a MBA around before, and thus I know the weight difference between a 13" mbp and a MBA. 1.5lbs is alot.

So far the rev. Cs that I saw are honestly quite perfect. Most have very very faint or no lines at all. Without being overly anal, I would say I can live with all of them. The only drawback is the SATA-LIF connector for the SSD because I would really want to install an X-25m in it.
 

jimboutilier

macrumors 6502a
Nov 10, 2008
647
42
Denver
My SSD gives me a maximum of 82 MB/s write speed... is that "decent"?... I mean, coming from 2x RAID-0 7200RPM drives in a Mac Pro only giving me 40 MB/s for some reason..

A lot of things factor in to HD performance (including raw specs of the various drives, controllers, along with how well they are matched in the system along with CPU power, bus speed, memory speed etc).

While performance in the 80mb/sec range is far better than you'd get out of any 1.8" HDD option on a MBA, I would call it modest in comparison to what a decent SATA III 7200RPM notebook drive is capable of in a MB/MBP.

Current SSDs that Apple is using read faster but write slower than a typical notebook HDD. Thats a good trade off for most usage patterns. I'll call it decent when both read and write speeds meet or exceed a good notebook HDD.
 

uberamd

macrumors 68030
May 26, 2009
2,785
2
Minnesota
I love my Macbook Air. Works great, and has enough power to handle most everything. No display lines, no wifi issues, no hinge issues, it just works.
 

MacModMachine

macrumors 68020
Apr 3, 2009
2,476
392
Canada
A lot of things factor in to HD performance (including raw specs of the various drives, controllers, along with how well they are matched in the system along with CPU power, bus speed, memory speed etc).

While performance in the 80mb/sec range is far better than you'd get out of any 1.8" HDD option on a MBA, I would call it modest in comparison to what a decent SATA III 7200RPM notebook drive is capable of in a MB/MBP.

Current SSDs that Apple is using read faster but write slower than a typical notebook HDD. Thats a good trade off for most usage patterns. I'll call it decent when both read and write speeds meet or exceed a good notebook HDD.

ummm....a high end 7200 rpm notebook drive cannot do 80mb sec....unless you have some new improved drive.

even if it could...the random reads and write are non exsistent in the 7200 rpm...the ssd blows them out of the water,

the screen on the air is far better then the 13" pro's i have seen.

i have just ordered my runcore IV 128gb ssd for my air. gonna be a sweet upgrade :D
 

ayeying

macrumors 601
Dec 5, 2007
4,547
13
Yay Area, CA
A lot of things factor in to HD performance (including raw specs of the various drives, controllers, along with how well they are matched in the system along with CPU power, bus speed, memory speed etc).

While performance in the 80mb/sec range is far better than you'd get out of any 1.8" HDD option on a MBA, I would call it modest in comparison to what a decent SATA III 7200RPM notebook drive is capable of in a MB/MBP.

Current SSDs that Apple is using read faster but write slower than a typical notebook HDD. Thats a good trade off for most usage patterns. I'll call it decent when both read and write speeds meet or exceed a good notebook HDD.

Uh.. I just compared a 8-Core Mac Pro to a MacBook Air... 2x 7200RPM, 3.5" Maxtor 1TB drives in RAID-0, for some reason, has a slower maximum write speed than my 128GB Samsung SSD in the MacBook Air.

There is no SATAIII drives for a notebook yet, only SATAII. SATAII @ 7200RPM probably give you about 40ish MB/s max speed, no where close to an SSD, regardless on how crappy the SSD is.

SSDs will be faster than any 7200RPM drives, except on a few items. Write and Read are not the two things that any 7200RPM drives can beat a decent SSD.
 

jimboutilier

macrumors 6502a
Nov 10, 2008
647
42
Denver
Uh.. I just compared a 8-Core Mac Pro to a MacBook Air... 2x 7200RPM, 3.5" Maxtor 1TB drives in RAID-0, for some reason, has a slower maximum write speed than my 128GB Samsung SSD in the MacBook Air.

There is no SATAIII drives for a notebook yet, only SATAII. SATAII @ 7200RPM probably give you about 40ish MB/s max speed, no where close to an SSD, regardless on how crappy the SSD is.

SSDs will be faster than any 7200RPM drives, except on a few items. Write and Read are not the two things that any 7200RPM drives can beat a decent SSD.

I'm afraid I would be profoundly disappointed if I had a MP on RAID0 with a 40mb/s write speed. Software RAID perhaps?

Sorry, I misspoke - I meant Sata300 (as opposed to Sata150). I don't consider my Hitachi 7K320 in my 13"MB particularly fast (as I've seen Xbench results much better than I get with other drives) but I get over 60mb/s write speeds with this drive on my machine.

And I agree that SSD's are rapidly overtaking HDDs in performance. However the RevA MBA had an SSD what was slower read and write than mainstream notebook HDD's (although it was faster than the horrid little 1.8" ipod drive in it). The SSD's in the MBA RevB had faster reads but slower writes than mainstream notebook drives. And now I guess the RevC SSD's in current use can outperform some mainstream notebook drives in both reads and writes.

Thats good news for me as I'd love to get back to a MBA form factor. Come on 4gb RAM and 256gb SSD!
 
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