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Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (Thunderbolt)

6 Tips For Being Fashionable On A Budget

<p>Macs have always had a reputation for greatness in the computer scene&period; Their superb operating systems and super virus-resistant structure make for a very attractive reputation&period; The Apple MacBook Air 13-inch &lpar;Thunderbolt&rpar; is Apple’s next in line&period; This laptop is a super thin machine that packs a punch&comma; albeit a punch that doesn’t quite have the same force as some of its competitors&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>At &dollar;1&comma;299&comma; the Air is a bit pricey for what you’re getting&comma; but something that that price tag includes that other laptops’ prices do not is a guarantee of operational excellence&period; It all starts with the Air’s sleek looks&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Only minor changes in icons indicate that this is not the previous version of itself&period; The sleek white laptop descends in thickness from 0&period;68 inch in the back to just 0&period;11 inch in the front&period; It makes for a modern&comma; unrivalled look&period; Another aesthetic difference is that the previous Air had been relieved of its backlit keyboard&comma; a move despised by many loyal MacBook users&period; This Air has brought it back&comma; making typing in the dark a pleasure once more&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Air’s overall weight is 2&period;9 pounds&period; The screen is a widescreen&comma; at 13&period;3 inches&period; The luxurious aluminum body wraps around the whole of the machine&comma; creating a truly attractive case&period; The screen it borders has some of the best sharpness and brightness on the market&comma; an obvious expectation given the 1&comma;400&&num;215&semi;900 resolution it boasts&period; Below the flat-keyed keyboard&comma; the large glass touch pad is sensitive to a wdier variety of finger motions that correspond to the new operating system&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Air comes packed with the Mac OS X Lion operating system&comma; an unbeatable interface that allows users a whole new range of possibilities&period; But the real kicker in the new Air 13-inch is the Thunderbolt port&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Air has also upgraded to a 1&period;7GHz Intel Core i5-2557 processor&comma; which allows for Thunderbolt to be utilized&period; Intel’s data transfer is known as Light Peak&comma; and it works through the new mini-DisplayPort that comes on the Air 13-inch&period; When the DisplayPort is connected to a Thunderbolt-able device&comma; the data transfer rate increases drastically between them&period; USB 2&period;0 rates are standard&comma; FireWire is quick&comma; and USB 3&period;0 is quite fast&period; The Thunderbolt transfer speed is doubled that of the USB 3&period;0&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The MacBook Air is traditionally light on the input offerings&period; Users will find two USB ports&comma; an audio jack and an SD card slot for memory cards and the like&period; There’s no Ethernet connection&comma; so users looking for the quickest of the quick will want to opt for another machine&period; Though&comma; you do have built-in Wi-Fi&comma; of course&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>SSD hard drives make up the storage units of the Air&period; Spin drives can hold quite a lot more&comma; but the 128 gigabytes and optional upgrade to 256GB is sufficient for many users’ needs&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>4GB memory&comma; average 3D capability&comma; good graphic support and a 7-hour battery life complete the package&period; This is overall a good buy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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