Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

MacBook Pro or MacBook Air?

Hey everyone, this is my first post.


I am thinking about purchasing a MacBook later on this year (around christmas time) and was wondering which one to get, as value for money. Generally, I will be using the MacBook for music, browsing the web, watching films and youtube. Sometimes I will proabibly do some movie editing.


I am one for downloading a fair bit.. so keep that in mind. Basically, I am kind of stuck on whether to get the 4 or 8 GB, and the Air or Pro.


I'm saving up pocket money, so by christmas i'll have around £900 - £1000, and my mum works in a college so I'm assuming she could recieve some kind of student discount? Apparently 15% off.


Many thanks, I hope some expirienced Mac users can give advice on what MacBook with what specs to buy.

MacBook, No more than £1500

Posted on Feb 2, 2014 4:11 AM

Reply
2 replies

Feb 2, 2014 5:09 AM in response to CkaJoe

Hey man, I have a MacBook Air, I bought approximately 1 month.

I'm so happy with this product, because I have 12 hr of battery, and this is amazing.



I done some editions on iMovie and not felt any problem on the rendering movie.

I am kind of stuck about portability, and MBAir is perfect on this way.

If you will use just surf on the web, music, it is fantastic.

I recommend for you the MBAir 13 4GB. 8GB memory is for people that use very editions programs like final cut pro and others.



In this moment i'm using approximately 2 hr my MBAir and the battery it is 99%.



Sorry about my bad english, I'm from Brazil.



Hugs

Feb 2, 2014 11:05 AM in response to CkaJoe

The NEW macbook Pro and Air are EXTREMELY close in form factor


The newest macbook Pro is essentially a larger macbook Air with Retina display and options for speed in increasing prices up to an independent graphics and quad core processor.


both Air and new Pro now have PCIe SSD and permanent RAM.


The Air is the lightweight portable form factor, fast to boot and shut down, but with longer battery life than any of the macbook pro in 13"


Now the new macbook Pro and macbook Air are extremely close in form factor and nature.


both have 802ac wifi

both have permanent RAM, no superdrive

both are slim profiles and SSD


The only real differences now between Air and Pro....are (in the most expensive Pros) faster processors and quadcore processors and top end model autonomous graphics and the Pro has HDMI output.....and of course the retina display



both are now "very good for travel"


Other than features the form factor of the Air and Pro are VERY close now,....so now its merely a matter of features and price more than anything.



You need an external HD regardless of what you get for backups etc. Drop into an Apple store and handle both and make your choice based on features, such as Retina or non-retina, .... both at a distance now look like the same computer.


The Pro weighs more, ....but nowhere near what it used to just few months ago on the older macbook Pros


The NEW macbook Pro is a different creature entirely than the older macbook Pro, .....the new Pro is thicker than the Air, but id frankly call the NEWEST Pro a "macbook Air with Retina display" , or


Maybe a “macbook Air PRO with Retina display”


Instead of Air VS Pro now,.....its really a smooth transition from Air to pro without comparing say, 2 different creatures, now its like contrasting a horse from a race horse.


Either one in 8gig of RAM (preferably)... the 4gig upgrade costs very little, the I7 you will notice only 15% faster on heavy applications over the I5, and NOTHING on most APPS.....I5 has longer battery life.



As you see below, the non-Retina 13" AIR is 82% of the Macbook with Retina display in resolution


there is no magical number of pixels per inch that automatically equates to Retina quality.

http://www.cultofmac.com/168509/why-you-might-be-disappointed-by-the-resolution- of-those-new-retina-display-macs-feature/

User uploaded file



A huge internal SSD isnt a game changer for anything, you need an external HD anyway


what you WONT READ on Apple.com etc. is that the larger SSD are MUCH FASTER due to SSD density


"The 512GB Samsung SSD found in our 13-inch model offers roughly a 400MB/s increase in write speeds over the 128GB SanDisk/Marvell SSD"

http://blog.macsales.com/19008-performance-testing-not-all-2013-macbook-air-ssds -are-the-same



Here is an excellent video comparison between the 11” I5 vs. I7 2013 Macbook Air.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDqJ-on03z4



http://www.anandtech.com/show/7113/2013-macbook-air-core-i5-4250u-vs-core-i7-465 0u/2


I5 vs. I7 performance 13” Macbook Air 2013


Boot performance

11.7 I5 ……11.4 I7

Cinebench

1.1 I5….1.41 I7

IMovie Import and Opt.

6.69 I5….5.35 I7

IMovie Export

10.33 I5…8.20 I7

Final Cut Pro X

21.47 I5…17.71 I7

Adobe Lightroom 3 Export

25.8 I5….31.8 I7

Adobe Photoshop CS5 Performance

27.3 I5…22.6 I7

User uploaded file



Macbook Pro processor and configuration options:

http://www.apple.com/macbook-pro/specs-retina/

User uploaded file

Macbook Pro ports:

User uploaded file



Macbook Air (13") ports:

User uploaded file

MacBook Pro or MacBook Air?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple ID.