Manton Reece
User experience, Mac programming, feature animation, and other personal views.

MacBook Air and Europe trip

The MacBook Air is the first Apple product to come along in years that I don't want to buy. It looks great, the multi-touch trackpad is cool and unexpected, and I like Remote Disk. But it's just not significantly different than a MacBook to me, and I don't travel enough to make the thinness or weight really matter. To "upgrade" from a regular MacBook to an Air just seems wasteful.

The "new Apple" has been doing a great job of eliminating duplicates in their product line (only one tower, only one of each size of iPod). If the Air had an 11-inch or 12-inch screen it would be a much easier sell because it becomes clear why the product exists: buy this if you want something small.

For two months in 1999, my wife and I travelled through Europe with only a backpack each and a PowerBook 520c to share between us. That machine was very small (just a 9.5-inch screen), yet she did contract work for Apple on it and I coded and released new versions of Mac software, dialed up to the net via modem from hotel rooms and hostels in the days before wi-fi. It was much heavier than an Air but for traveling light it was still a great choice.

It feels like Apple missed an opportunity at Macworld yesterday. I'm not particularly disappointed, though, since I wasn't one of those hoping for a sub-notebook.

January 17, 2008 02:38 PM [link] - Tags: