Subtitles section Play video
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(bouncy electronic music)
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- We've been waiting for this to happen for years.
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And it's finally here.
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This normal looking MacBook Air
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has something completely new inside.
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An Apple M1 processor instead of an Intel processor.
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This transition is a huge deal,
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and Apple is making huge claims.
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- And this is the new entry-level MacBook Pro,
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which also has an M1 processor.
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We have a thousand questions going into this review.
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Will the M1 be faster?
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Will battery life be better?
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Well apps designed for Intel run okay
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on this ARM-based Apple chip?
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And is running iOS apps on the Mac weird or good?
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- Did Apple do everything that it needs to do
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to make this transition basically?
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And the stakes are high.
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The MacBook Air is Apple's most popular laptop,
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and this version looks identical to the last MacBook
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and it starts at the same price,
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$999 for the eight gig model.
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This review unit here is $1650 with 16 gigs of RAM
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and a terabyte of storage.
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But you know, one thing that you can't spec out,
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and Intel version of the MacBook Air.
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They're only selling the M1 version now.
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It's a big bet.
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- You can still get a 13 inch MacBook Pro
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with an Intel chip, but the entry-level 13 inch MacBook Pro
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with two ports has the exact same M1 ship
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as Dieter's MacBook Air.
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And it starts at the same $1299 as before.
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This one is $1,900, with 16 gigs of RAM
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and one terabyte of storage.
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Those prices aren't that different from before.
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And this is still the base model.
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The best way to think about it
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is as a MacBook Air with a fan so that the M1
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can run hotter for longer,
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since the Pro and the Air are so similar,
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and since the real news here is the M1,
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Dieter And I are just going to review them together
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for this video.
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And I'll just spoil it for you at the top.
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These computers are incredible.
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- They really are.
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All right.
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- (both) Here we go.
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- Okay, so before we get too far into it,
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we need to lay some groundwork.
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Apple is making its own Mac chips now
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using the same technology it uses for iPhone and iPad chips.
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That means these Macs pick up the things
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that Apple is good at on those computers.
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They're very fast, yet manage to have great battery life.
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It also means they can run iPhone and iPad apps,
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which is interesting, but there's a potential hiccup.
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These are ARM processors, which
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are a completely different instruction set
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than Intel processors.
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At the most basic level, apps designed for Intel
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can't run on ARM.
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You need special translation software,
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and a lot can go wrong there.
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- On windows, Microsoft solution is emulation,
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and it means that Intel apps are slow,
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and that they kill what would otherwise be
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pretty good battery life.
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On these Macs, Apple has a translation layer
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called Rosetta Two.
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All that under the hood stuff is important
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for understanding what happens when you push these machines
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but in just regular day-to-day use,
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I didn't have to worry about any of it
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because these computers are fast,
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no matter what kind of app that you use.
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This MacBook Air is the most impressive laptop
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that I have used in years.
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Now, we are going to show you some benchmarks
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but the bottom line is that I haven't had
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a single performance complaint.
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I could run as many apps as I want to
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and do things on this computer that would have brought
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my old MacBook Air to its knees.
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And it does all of that
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even though it's completely different on the inside.
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There's no fan on this MacBook Air,
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and Apple has done more than just swap a chip out.
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It's changed the way that RAM works,
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but it has one big pool of memory
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for both the CPU and the integrated graphics.
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There are tons of complicated technical changes
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on this logic board, and none of it is a problem.
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It's all just seamlessly good and fast,
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and even though I've tried, it never really even gets hot.
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This computer does things that could give
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bigger heavier pro laptops a run for their money.
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So we often run a benchmark on the game,
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"Shadow of the Tomb Raider."
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Now for ultra books running Tiger Lake,
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we always do it at the lowest graphical setting
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at 1920 by 1080 or 1200.
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And they struggle to get 30 frames per second.
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This MacBook Air got 38.
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It is very impressive for a laptop with integrated graphics.
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I wouldn't have even bothered trying on the old MacBook Air.
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- The story is pretty much the same on the MacBook Pro.
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In fact, in day-to-day performance and shorter benchmarks,
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their results were the same as the Air.
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But since the pro has a fan, it doesn't pull back
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on performance to maintain temperatures.
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So it can sustain heavier workloads over time.
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And that takes some work.
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to get this thing hot enough to kick on the fan,
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I had to run the multi-core Cinebench test
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on a loop for at least 10 minutes,
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and when the fan came on, performance never really dropped.
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The air got much slower as it got hotter
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and throttled the processor.
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This all sounds like we're sort of shocked.
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It's because we are.
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Dieter And I have been around for a while
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and we've seen processor transitions before.
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They're usually a little rough.
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And even when they go well,
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there are exceptions and caveats.
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This one doesn't seem to have it.
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For example, at the verge, our video team works with
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Adobe creative cloud, and those apps are fast
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on these machines.
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We can jam through Premiere and Photoshop with no problems.
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We run a 4K export test on every machine,
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and both of these computers beat older Mac laptops
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and Intel Ultrabooks, hands down.
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And again, these are Apple's entry-level machines
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with first-generation M1 chips in them.
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- And here is what is wild about all of that.
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That tomb Raider game and those Adobe apps
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haven't been coded to work with this ARM-based M1 chip yet.
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They are translated through Rosetta Two.
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See, what happens with these apps
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that expect an Intel processor is
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that when you launch them,
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Rosetta just translates them into ARM code,
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and then they just run.
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Unlike windows emulation for ARM,
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they're not significantly slower, or buggier.
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Even Geek Bench scores are really impressive.
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To get this kind of performance out of apps
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that weren't even designed for this chip is buckwild.
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Now look, if you're a professional
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who needs to do real hardcore things through your laptop,
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I am not going to promise you that this is better
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than an Intel chip with a separate, serious GPU.
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But if you're just looking at getting a basic laptop
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like the MacBook Air, Apple did it.
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It's good.
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I never worried about whether an app was running
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through Rosetta or Native or what.
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There's really no caveats.
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- Okay, there's one caveat.
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I'm sorry.
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Can you guess what it is?
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It's Chrome!
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Of course, it's Chrome.
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And other apps that use the underlying Chrome engine,
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like Slack.
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These apps seem fast enough,
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but they were battery hogs before,
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and they seem like even bigger battery hogs now.
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So let's talk about battery life.
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Apple is making some huge claims here.
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20 hours of video playback on the MacBook Pro
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and 18 on the Air.
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But video playback is easy.
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The real claim is that you get between 50%
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and even a 100% better battery life
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than the previous Intel based models.
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We didn't get all the way there.
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You get the feeling that Apple doesn't test with Chrome,
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but we came close.
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The MacBook Pro has a bigger battery,
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and I had no problems getting 10 hours of use out of it.
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I had to absolutely attack it
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to drain the battery in eight hours.
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I was literally playing 4K YouTube videos in Chrome,
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in the background, while doing other work
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to make the battery drain faster.
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Dieter's MacBook Air also lasted eight,
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and even 10 hours on a normal workday
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of web, Slack, and a couple hours of Zoom and whatever else.
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And once more apps are running natively as universal apps,
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instead of through Rosetta,
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it's reasonable to expect even better numbers.
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- You know what, we should actually get into the differences
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between the MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro,
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in case people are trying to pick between them.
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- Yeah, here are the main differences.
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The pro has that fan for extended workloads.
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It has a slightly better screen, a bigger battery,
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better mics, and ladder speakers and the touch bar.
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Which is not really a plus,
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because the touch bar is horrible.
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- Yeah.
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On the MacBook Air, they swapped a new buttons
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on the function row.
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So there's spotlight search, which is actually good now,
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and you can search the web,
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you get a do not disturb button
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and you get a dictation button.
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That dictation button is a big win for accessibility.
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And also dictation is better than I remember.
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I might actually start using it now.
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- I don't know why Apple doesn't do to the touch bar
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what it did to the butterfly keyboard.
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Admit it was a mistake and move on,
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but you know whatever, actually there's another mistake.
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The webcam it's awful.
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- It's god awful.
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It's still 720p, and Apple has this new image
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signal processor in the M1 chip
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that's supposed to make it better,
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but instead it just makes it
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a more processed version of bad.
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- I'm not kidding.
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We were going to give these laptops
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a 10 out of 10 review score until we saw the webcams.
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On the Pro especially, which costs more,
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it's unacceptable when we're all working from home.
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- Okay, but how do you actually pick between
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these two laptops?
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- My take is unless you can immediately think
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of something you do that requires like 10 minutes
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of sustained processing, you should buy an Air.
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The premise otherwise is just too similar.
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It only has two thunderbolt ports and woof.
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Touch bar.
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Although it does have slightly better battery life.
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- Yeah, I am jealous of that battery life,
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but otherwise I don't think the Pro
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really quite justifies it's $300 price premium.
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I think of the MacBook Pro in the way
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I think of the iPhone 12 Pro,
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it's a nicer version of the default.
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And as impressive as this new first M1 chip is,
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we are waiting to see what Apple can do
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with actual professional max.
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- Dieter, I see what you're trying to do here.
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You're trying to avoid talking about
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how bad iOS apps are on these Macs.