Ask HN: New MacBook Air or Windows laptop?
I have a 2008 MacBook Unibody and have upgraded to SSD and bumped up the memory and is doing decently well but after 5 years of usage and the lure of the lightness of MacBook Air and the lightning fast SSD speed I heard on the new beast from Apple I'm on the edge of shelling out some $$$$ but wasn't sure if it's worth it now.
My contention points were, - current MacBook Unibody is running decently fine even though I crave for more speed - had a Windows laptop at home that just got toast with a coffee spill
Don't know if I should be shelling out $$$ on a Windows laptop for now and wait for another MacBook Air update later or just give the current MacBook to the family and move on with the new MacBook Air. I know the later would add one more $ sign to the bottomline.
For those of you who ask what I do with it, I do develop web and mobile apps (2 of them on the AppStore, free apps BTW) with it. So it's putting to good use but not sure if I have to take the Windows route or the MacBook Air route, even though I personally prefer the MacBook Air route but would be nice to have a Windows machine at home too, rite?
12 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 35.7 ms ] threadI usually recommend Windows because of price-convenience ratio, (meaning that most people don't need the premium offerings of a mac and will be perfectly satisfied with a $400 windows machine). But if your use case forces mac AND you're used to it AND you have the money to spend -- then by all means go for mac.
In terms of specs Mac is only slightly more expensive, so if you need/want those specs once again it makes sense to stick with mac.
I've found that when it comes down to build quality, responsiveness, portability and sheer joy to use, the Air has always trumped any Windows offering to me.
I went from the 2008 unibody to an Air as well (though I'm on a Retina MbP now) and the difference was stunning. You'll see a huge boost in speed, much better usability and the battery life is fantastic.
Just go try it out in the store, I think you'll be sold pretty quickly :)
- You develop for iOS
- If you ever miss Windows, just run a Bootcamp partition
It would drive me nuts having it in the wrong order.
1) it's more comfortable.
2) Now, the place of the FN key doesn't matter anymore! :)
Nowadays, given most everything is cross platform, and Windows7 runs great on a VM, if you can afford the kit, it's best to get a Mac, and then bootcamp/VM if you need to run Windows apps.
If you don't have customers who need you to run Windows apps (mostly enterprise .NET stuff or boroque VPN clients), I suggest you get the Mac - you seem to prefer it.
Arguably the best looking Windows option today, with a resolution of 3,200 x 1,800. Rumor has it that pricing on the Plus model will start at over $1600+