

There's only so long the wow-factor can last and, two years down the line, the awe surrounding the MacBook Air has definitely diminished, especially when you consider the wealth of new design ideas hitting the Ultrabook market.īut, and it's a big but - the MacBook Air design and build is still one that the new Ultrabook brigade strive for. But, as this is the third time that Apple has wheeled out exactly the same chassis, we are slightly underwhelmed. That's not to say that we don't love the Air's beautiful design – it's impossible not to. While we welcome the new hardware inside the MacBook Air, we can't help but feel that the 2012 models are more evolution than revolution. The shops are now packed with svelte laptops, with the likes of the Asus ZenBook UX31, the HP Envy 14 Spectre, the Dell XPS 13 and the Acer Aspire S3 wowing buyers with their impressive spec sheets and their skinny chassis.īut has the new MacBook Air still got enough about it to lead the pack? To find out we took the smaller ii-inch Air model for a spin. Apple seemingly kicked off a slimline laptop revolution with the MacBook Air, and if you haven't heard the word Ultrabook by now, you soon will have. Packing the latest Intel Core processing power, alongside nippy DDR3L RAM, SSD flash storage and ultrafast connectivity, the new MacBook Air 2012 - available as 11- and 13-inch versions - has not only the looks but the power to once again dominate the ultraportable notebook market.īut this time around, it does face stiff competition at least.

The slimline beauty was made even thinner in 2010, and the 2012 version – which is on review here – is the latest iteration of that design. Back in 2008, Apple made laptops cool again by unleashing the super-skinny MacBook Air.
