11-inch and 13-inch MacBook Air Review

On November 3, 2010, in Industry News, by Susie Ochs

Apple’s redesigned beauties will turn heads and drop jaws When Apple revealed the newly redesigned MacBook Air at a press event in Cupertino, Steve skipped the theatrics of pulling one out of a manila envelope or any other “gee whiz, that’s th…

Griffin Technology 4030-ROAD RoadTrip FM Transmitter & Auto Charger and Cradle for iPod

On September 3, 2010, in Ipod Accessories, by Iphone Unlocking

Convenient one-piece transmitter and charger module uses any frequency from 87.7 to 107.9 Compatible with all docking iPods, including the iPod nano and the new iPod with video Backlit screen shows which frequency RoadTrip is currently broadcasting Transmitter can be removed and used with a Mac or PC computer Plugs into any auto power outlet [...]

Griffin Technology 4030-ROAD RoadTrip FM Transmitter & Auto Charger and Cradle for iPod

On July 28, 2010, in Ipod Accessories, by Iphone Unlocking

Griffin RoadTrip – Digital player car holder / FM transmitter / charger Marketing Description Imagine having a high powered FM Transmitter, an iPod auto charger AND a convenient iPod cradle. Meet RoadTrip, the only iPod and iPod mini car accessory youll ever need. RoadTrip makes enjoying an iPod or iPod mini in the car convenient [...]

Griffin RoadTrip FM Transmitter and Car Charger for iPod (Black)

On January 10, 2010, in Ipod Accessories, by Iphone Unlocking

Imagine having a high powered FM Transmitter, an iPod auto charger AND a convenient iPod cradle. Meet RoadTrip, the only iPod and iPod mini car accessory you’ll ever need.RoadTrip makes enjoying an iPod or iPod mini in the car convenient and easy. The RoadTrip plugs into any auto power outlet or lighter adapter and provides [...]

Unibody MacBook

On November 21, 2009, in Industry News, by Susie Ochs


There’s only one MacBook in town, but Apple’s lowest-cost notebook doesn’t feel entry level.

 

The only MacBook left standing isn’t some neglected also-ran. With this redesign, Apple gave its most modest notebook nearly all the power and the style of the 13-inch MacBook Pro. For $999 ($200 less than the base 13-inch Pro), the white MacBook has nearly the same specs, minus the FireWire port, SD card slot, IR sensor, and backlit keyboard–and the MacBook has a bigger hard drive: 250GB to the base Pro’s 160GB.

The most glaring difference between this MacBook and the 13-inch MacBook Pro is the MacBook’s plastic body, which now comes only in white. Still, Apple took a page from the MacBook Pro and MacBook Air lines and built this MacBook as a unibody, with a single piece of durable polycarbonate, curved corners, and a huge glass multitouch trackpad. The bottom is covered with a gray nonslip pad–no battery compartment, because the battery is built in.


The body is constructed from a single piece of white polycarbonate plastic. No more black MacBooks–at least for now.

Yep, no user-replaceable batteries in any of Apple’s laptops anymore. The new lithium-polymer battery can last between 3.5 and 7 hours on a charge–we got a full day’s worth of usage with Energy Saver on, and a hardy 4 hours, 5 minutes during our DVD-rundown test. Apple says the battery will last 1,000 charge cycles before its capacity dips to 80 percent of the original, which could take up to 5 years. Replacement is $129, the same price as a spare battery back when you could replace it yourself. You can still access the hard drive and RAM slots to upgrade those.

The LED backlit screen (1280×800) looks gorgeous, goes to full brightness right away, and isn’t covered by glass like the MacBook Pros’ screens. We like it–there’s far less glare, even though the screen is still glossy. The MacBook has a Mini DisplayPort connection, but Apple doesn’t include the adapters for hooking it to DVI or VGA monitors ($29 each). Front Row fans will be disappointed that the MacBook doesn’t have an IR sensor, so you can’t use it with the Apple Remote. The FireWire port is gone too. You get two USB ports and that’s it. The MacBook lacks the 13-inch Pro’s SD card slot, but that barely matters because you can just use a USB card reader.
 
As far as system hardware, the MacBook has identical components to the 2.26GHz 13-inch MacBook Pro but a bigger hard drive. Relative to that Pro, it performed 23 percent better in our Photoshop CS4 Actions test, 29 percent better when importing a 2GB DV clip into iMovie, and squeaked out 4 more frames per second when playing Call of Duty 4. Our other tests had closer results, but the MacBook’s larger hard drive still helped it outperform the 2.26GHz 13-inch Pro across our benchmark suite.

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