The Incredibly Shrinking Box
The new MacBook Air gets the same matching tote treatment as the iPhone, and actually ships in a thinner box than the iPhone, about as deep as a board game.
The Air's packaging is considerably thinner than than the suitcase sized Powerbook box and incrementally thinner and smaller overall than the one used by existing MacBook Pro, which is slightly thicker than the iPhone's box.
The Thinking Inside the Box
Rather than folding open, the Air's box top lifts up much like the case used by the iPhone and iPod Touch. The plastic wrapped Air lays in a thin black plastic tray just like the Touch.
Underneath the tray is its MagSafe power adapter, a white envelope containing a VGA and a DVI breakout box (but no TV video output dongle), and a thin black carton containing an introductory booklet labeled "Everything Mac" and a folder titled "Everything else" holding two installer DVDs, Apple stickers, and regulatory docs.
Really Thin Air
The MacBook Air has a thinner outside edge than the impossibly thin aluminum Bluetooth Wireless Keyboard that appeared last year next to the new iMac. When closed, the entire Air is only slightly thicker than the thin part of the keyboard. The AA battery compartment of the Bluetooth Keyboard is about the same size as the back end of the Air.
Air and the MacBook Pro
The front edge of the Air looks as thin as the LCD lid of a MacBook Pro. Its thicker backend sits up nearly as high as the MacBook Pro, but part of that height comes from its rubber high heels that lift it off the ground and make it appear to be levitating.
The Air is compact enough to neatly fit inside the MacBook Pro.
The Air's body is about as wide as a 15" MacBook Pro's display, giving it a very similar outline to the standard MacBooks.
It has similar proportions overall, but a more subtle power button, a much larger trackpad surface, and a much thinner trackpad button that feels harder to target for fingers used to the Pro's trackpad.
Part of the reason the Air feels so thin is its rounded backside just like the iPods, which gives it a far more compact feel than the rounded box shape of of the MacBook Pro. The Air uses a new style of hinge, which exposes a tiny opening when the top is fully opened.
Fewer Ports
That rounded edge also has a side effect of limiting the number of ports on the Air. It only has a stereo headphone jack, a single USB port, and a micro-DVI jack for use with the included DVI and VGA dongles and the optional S-video and composite video output dongle. All three hide behind a flip down panel on the right edge. A MagSafe power connector on the other side accepts a standard adapter designed for other MacBook laptops, but is designed to use a smaller 45 watt adapter with an angled MagSafe connector that allows the unit to lie flat while plugged in. There's no ExpressCard expansion slot, no audio input, no FireWire, and no Ethernet connector. An option Ethernet adapter using USB is available. The Air also lacks a security cable connector.
The Air doesn't ship with an Apple Remote, but does have an IR receiver to use with one. It has the same sleep light indicator as other MacBooks, an iSight camera, and on either side of the camera eye, an ambient light sensor for adjusting the keyboard backlighting to the left, a microphone to the right, and an invisible until lit LED status light for the camera, which hides behind the display's aluminum shell much like the hidden LED on the Bluetooth Keyboard. Also invisible is its speaker, positioned under the keyboard, which while no match for headphones when playing music, sounds great for speech functions such as Voice Over and Leopard's Alex voice synthesis.
A Full Sized, Backlit Keyboard
The display and hinging mechanism are both more compact than the MacBook Pro, and its body thickness is has a fraction of the heft. It uses a keyboard similar to the MacBooks and identical to the aluminum iMac keyboards, except that it is also backlit, and therefore assigns F5 and F6 to backlit controls. The other F-keys are mapped to the same revised layout as those that appeared on the new iMac external keyboards, including Expos� and Dashboard assignments and media playback buttons. The Air also lacks an Apple logo on the command key, and replaces it with the word "command." How Apple Keyboards Lost a Logo and Windows PCs Gained One explains why.
In contrast to the iMac's white Bluetooth Keyboard, the Air sports black keys that automatically light up in dim conditions.
The keyboard size is very similar to the MacBook Pro, but has the same key spacing of the MacBooks and the new external keyboards.
No Removable Battery
The Air is considerably thinner than the MacBook Pro's removable battery, in large part because it is not designed to accommodate a removable battery pack.
We will be taking a closer look at the Air's features, performance, battery life, and unique software in an in-depth review.
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