How the MacBook Air could change everything (again)

“Last week, while the rest of his peers were knee-deep in selfie drones, wearables, and smart washers, Mark Gurman of 9to5Mac published a scoop that trumped anything to come out of the Las Vegas Convention Center,” Michael Simon writes for Macworld.

“Apple intended to release a 12-inch MacBook Air sometime in 2015. Ho-hum, right? Maybe not. It’s not just that he reported about an unreleased Apple product that no one had an inkling of (though that surely helped),” Simon writes. “Gurman’s report garnered so much attention because it described a laptop so intriguing it was practically unbelievable: a MacBook Air so thin and light that it had only two ports, and neither of them were dedicated to supplying power.”

“In the renderings it seems like a fantastical concept, something we would ooh and aah over on Dribbble but ultimately disregard due to practicality and realism. But Gurman supplies enough solid information to make the report believable (and his solid track record doesn’t hurt),” Simon writes. “And when you break it down, it’s not all that crazy.”

Read more in the full article here.

Related articles:
Peak laptop: Whittling down the MacBook to an iPad – January 9, 2015
Here’s how Apple could eliminate almost every port on its next MacBook Air – January 8, 2015
Apple’s patented universal connector ready for prime time? – January 7, 2015
The new 12-Inch MacBook Air rumors don’t make sense – January 7, 2015
Why Apple’s new 12-inch MacBook Air can abandon almost all ports – January 6, 2015
Apple’s next major Mac revealed: Meet the radically new 12-inch MacBook Air – January 6, 2015

3 Comments

  1. After a good, well deserved, respite those damned annoying redirecting ads are back.

    I got redirected once to the App Store and once via a pop-up saying I had qualified for a daily completion from Tesco and to press OK to goto the page. I had no option to cancel this.

    MDN I thought you had learned after the last lot of complaints from your readers. Please stop it.

    Note to advertisers, I always close whatever I am forcibly redirected to so you are wasting you time

    1. I got redirects to a App site about five times on my iPhone while trying to read MDN. I thought it was my phone or Safari. If it was MDN then I will just stop visiting. Any site that intentionally permits those is not worth visiting.

Reader Feedback

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.