13-inch MacBook joins Pro family, Air gets updated
Apple's entire laptop line gets revamped.
(Credit: CNET)Not to be left out, the MacBook's been updated too, and it's no longer just a MacBook. Following in the wake of the 15-inch MacBook Pro updates, the 13-inchers will also be called MacBook Pros (because as Phil Schiller noted onstage, "At what point isn't this just a MacBook Pro?") The mid-range unibody aluminum laptops launched last October now have upgraded color screens, SD card slots, FireWire 800 ports, and backlit keyboards across the board. Prices start at $1,199, $100 less than before for the low-end aluminum MacBook, for an upgraded 2.26 GHz Core 2 Duo with 2 GB DDR3 RAM, GeForce 9400M graphics, and a 160 GB HDD. $1,499 gets you a 2.53 GHz Core 2 Duo, 4 GB of DDR3, and a 250 GB hard drive. RAM can now be expanded up to 8 GB, and hard drives can be upgraded up to 500 GB.
They will also have non-removable 7-hour batteries. This makes the entire Apple laptop line a family of sealed-in batteries, except for the lowest-end white MacBook, whose specs were bumped last week.
Also updated, to some applause, was the MacBook Air, upgrading the processor speed to 2.14 GHz and lowering the price range, now $1,499 to $1,799. That's required in light of CULV Windows laptops that are emerging at very competitive price points. It's available in two configurations: $1,199 for a 1.86 GHz Core 2 Duo, 2 GB DDR3 RAM, GeForce 9400M graphics, and 120 GB HDD, or $1,799 with a 2.13 GHz Core 2 Duo and 128 GB SSD. For the SSD model, the cost is $700 less than before.
Scott Stein, a New York Jets fan and CNET senior associate editor, has written about tech, entertainment, video games, and viral culture for outlets including Laptop, Wired, Maxim, Esquire Online, Asylum, and Men's Journal. He also appears on the Digital City podcast. In his spare time, you might see him performing improv in New York City (when he's not being a dad). 
plus the battery supposedly lasts longer too
but C'mon Apple only 2 hrs more ?
By eliminating the extra space that is taken up by the battery casing, the casing inside the laptop that holds the battery, the electrical connections that allow you to remove the battery, and not confining the battery shape to a removable rectangle shape, they can get more battery cells in the same space with less weight. So you have a choice: 2-3 hour battery life with a removable battery or 7-8 hours with a nonremovable.
Apple will totally switch a bad battery out for you on the spot for a price competitive with buying a new one if you need it.
Also, battery technology has advanced - and it advanced further with these new batteries - so that we aren't and won't see the failure rate we used to. It's a feasible solution now in a way it wasn't a few years ago.
So it's a matter of preference. I fly alot and would much rather have the long battery life. It would be nice to be able to switch it out when it dies, but really, how many people do you know that actually carry a second charged battery with them and swap it out in the middle of computing - even though they are only getting 2 hours or so battery life? This is part of Apple's smart market research: people don't carry second batteries, they complain about insufficient battery life, batteries have a much lower failure rate than before, and it's just as easy to come into the store to have the battery swapped as it is to come into the store to buy a replacement.
Complain if you want, but I'll be on my international flight watching three - four movies in a row. You'll watch one.
I like and sometimes need the extra battery life, I congratulate Apple for getting 7hr out of 1 battery, but that isn't really enough yet. Still sticking with the removable battery please and thank you.
and some people prefer the removable batteries !
I think Apple makes some decent products. Nothing I would become a fanboy about. But, I have to wonder why Apple feels the need to improve a product in one sense like improved battery life. But then make it hard for the user to replace? Does that not go against Apple's simple minded approach?
I thought they were suppose to make things simpler for the user? On my laptop I get 4 hours per battery. If I was to use 2 batteries I could easily get eight hours. If Apple allowed a battery replacement a MacBook could possible get over 13 hours? I don't know but Dell offers a laptop with a similar battery life claim as the MacBook Pro and has a user accessable battery. So I am not sure about Apple's claim.
Or maybe Apple just needs a lot more battery for its laptops?
Dell claims to have a 24hr battery life notebook
I can't believe I'm saying this, but thats actually a great deal!
Still won't be replacing the good old X200 though, need USB ports and removable battery
- by DanielJPN June 8, 2009 8:15 PM PDT
- okay, so i just bought a 15 inch macbook pro last week and it has yet to arrive, what are the odds i can get it replaced without paying more.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
-
- by ticobrohay69 June 8, 2009 9:32 PM PDT
- Call them. It'll only take a few minutes. Apple will be able to answer that question better than any of us.
- Like this
-
(17 Comments)