Tuesday 3 September 2013

Slimesst macbook

Apple MacBook Air 13

Apple-MacBook-Air
Yeah, this one could be little more expensive and out of your budget but definitely worth its price. This new MacBook from Apple has broken almost all records in Laptop industry with its Retina 13 notebook. It is known for its HD Retina display screen, good battery backup, loaded with apps for Mac, 8GB DDR3 RAM, 128GB hard drive and for being ultra thin. In case you are confused about which Laptop I am talking about then let me clear things here, I am talking about the new 13” laptop which was launched recently by Apple and not the one which was launched in 2008. This one is definitely lot better than its older version and its weight and size is extremely impressive
MacBook Air now lasts up to 9 hours between charges and the 13-inch model lasts up to an incredible 12 hours. So from your morning coffee till your evening commute, you can work unplugged. When it’s time to kick back and relax, you can get up to 8 hours of iTunes movie playback on the 11-inch model and up to 10 hours on the 13-inch model. And with up to 30 days of standby time .
 
Specification
On July 20, 2011, Apple released an updated model in the same form factor as the prior model. The new model was powered by the new Sandy Bridge 1.6 or 1.7 GHz dual-core Intel Core i5, or 1.8 GHz dual-core Intel Core i7 processors, that came with an Intel HD Graphics 3000 processor, and with a backlit keyboard, two USB 2.0 ports, FaceTime camera, a standard of 2 gigabytes of RAM though configurable up to 4GB, Thunderbolt which shares function with Mini DisplayPort and Bluetooth was upgraded to ] Maximum SSD flash memory storage options were increased up to 512 gigabytes. Both 11 and 13" models had an analog audio output/headphone minijack (that also supports an iPhone/iPod touch headset with microphone), but only the 13" model had an integrated SDXC-capable SD Card slot. These models use a less expensive "Eagle Ridge" Thunderbolt controller that provides two Thunderbolt channels (2 × 10 Gbit/s bidirectional), compared to the MacBook Pro which uses a "Light Ridge" controller that provides four Thunderbolt channels (4 × 10 Gbit/s bidirectional). A USB Ethernet adapter was immediately available upon release and a Thunderbolt-to-Firewire 800 adapter became available for the 11" model in mid-year 2012.

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