The Macbook Air packs a 1.6GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor with 4MB on-chip shared L2 cache running at full processor speed, though a 1.8GHz upgrade will be available too. All Airs come with 2GB of DDR 2 memory as standard. The 1.6GHz model comes with a 4200rpm 80GB hard disk drive, but the faster Air has a 64GB solid-state drive.
The port array runs to a MagSafe link on the right side, and a USB 2.0 port, mini-DVI connector and a headphone socket on the left, all three under a flap. Want an optical drive? That’s an extra $99 for an external unit, though the Air can make use of drives fitted into other Macs. The Air ships with adaptor cables with full DVI and VGA ports on the end.
With 802.11n Wi-Fi on for browsing the web, you get five hours of battery life, Jobs claimed. Bluetooth 2.1+EDR is part of the package too. However, the battery is sealed and is not user replaceable.
The a new MBA battery will cost $129. And the installation is free, but you’ll still have to hand over your machine to Apple until they can get the new battery installed.
And how much will this lovely laptop set you back? From £1199 in the UK and $1799 in the US, where it’s due to ship in two weeks’ time. The forecast ship time for the UK is two to three weeks. The 1.8GHz, 64GB SSD model will cost £2028/$3098.
Besides the faster Quad Pumped Bus (which works now at 667MHz and yields a bandwidth of 5.3GB/s), the i945PM/GM chipsets support faster DDR2 SO-DIMMs. The earlier mobile chipsets could only work with dual-channel DDR2-533 SDRAM, but the new ones support dual-channel DDR2-667 SDRAM. It means the memory subsystem bandwidth has increased to 10.7GB/s, which should have a positive effect on the performance of mobile computers.