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Review on 13.3" Laptop Apple MacBook Air 13 Mid 2017 1440x900, Intel Core i5 5350U 1.8 GHz, RAM 8 GB, LPDDR3, SSD 128 GB, Intel HD Graphics 6000, macOS, MQD32, silver by Micha Spodymek ᠌

Revainrating 5 out of 5

Great value for money, one of the best offers.

The review will be unusual, aimed more at web application developers, so it will be replete with technical terms and obscure words. I’ll immediately write my verdict for a wider audience: in terms of the combination of characteristics, this laptop is definitely worth taking. It cost me up to a rise in price and a share of 59,000. Key requirements: 1) High autonomy, light weight. 2) Availability of everything necessary for developing software for Mac OS (PHPStorm, Vagrant, Nginx, MySQL, node. Js, etc. ). 3) The presence of native Windows software without the need to run it through emulation (Microsoft Office, SketchUp Make, Katalon Studio). 4) Support for all the most popular browsers on the market (Safari, Chrome, FF). 5) The ability to fully simulate iOS and Android smartphones for mobile development and testing in mobile browsers. My daily work environment looks like this: Skype, Viber, Telegram, Evernote desktop applications included; 1-2 running projects on PHPStorm; 2-3 active virtual machines. The bulk of the work goes to Chrome, where 20-40 tabs are open. Multiple Excel/Word documents can be opened. In this mode, the battery lasts with a margin from 8 am to noon. At lunch, the MacBook is put on charge, and it lasts for the second half of the day, until 8 pm. Under such a load, performance does not drop, however, at the time of caching or assembling projects, the device heats up quite noticeably, and the cooler for forced cooling is turned on. The killer feature in the form of a full-fledged simulation of the entire line of Apple mobile devices in XCode does not work that quickly - there is a lack of hardware power, and in general the machine is hard to cope with, but you can work. For the comfortable development of web applications, I have enough Air capabilities, one might say, back to back. I can't say that I'm disappointed with this, but I deliberately didn't take the Pro due to a significant number of hardware problems, in particular, with the keyboard.

Pros
  • Light weight. Sufficient performance for my tasks. Quality build. Convenient OS - got used to it in three days, and now it's uncomfortable to interact with Windows. Excellent touchpad, clear and useful gestures that become a habit after a few days of work. If you do not focus on Apple, then an all-metal ultrabook on Windows with similar hardware will cost, excluding licensed Windows, in the region of 45 - 50 thousand. For licensed Windows, you will also have to pay a certain amount. Ultimately, the price of an ultrabook on Windows will be almost equal to the cost of a Macbook Air.
Cons
  • TN-Film matrix. If you haven't seen Retina screens, you won't even notice this problem. In general, it is comfortable to work, the eyes do not get tired. Strange as it may sound - an aluminum case. Recently, I found a serious dent on the lower right side, although I handle the device carefully. I have no idea where to put her.