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    Apple MacBook Review for 2.0GHz White Color Version (pics, specs)

    Discussion in 'Notebook News and Reviews' started by Dazzla, Jun 5, 2006.

  1. Dazzla

    Dazzla Notebook Enthusiast NBR Reviewer

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    by Darryl Ponting, England

    Key Specs:

    • 2.0GHz Intel Core Duo
    • 100GB 5400 RPM Hard Drive
    • 2GB 667MHz DDR2 RAM (upgraded from stock amount)
    • Intel GMA950
    • 13.3" Glossy Widescreen (1280 x 800)

    First impressions

    One thing I noticed about the Apple MacBook which wasn't entirely apparent from all the photos I'd seen swarming the net was the contrast between the glossy white and the matte grey of the inside. Everything I'd seen so far suggested a difference far more subtle if at all! In reality the difference is pretty large and I'm not too sure if I'm keen on it yet. I was extremely close to going for the Blackbook but common sense prevailed, the £100 or so difference meant an extra 1GB of RAM which was far more useful. Besides, I've seen the way my Navy Nintendo DS Lite and my Logitech Midnight Black MX1000 mousepick up fingerprints, and I despise dust and dirt!

    The texture is very nice, smooth to the touch but not glossy, a lot of people have mentioned the lip at the bottom of the macbook where just below the trackpad meets the glossy surface. There's been suggestions that it's quite sharp and it can cut into your wrist when typing. The way my hands rested when typing meant my wrist never got near the edge and even when it does it's not sharp enough to cut it, it's a non-issue for me.

    Build quality

    The MacBook is an extremely sturdy laptop, I compared it with a Dell at work and an Acer at home. The Dell (although it is around 2 years old) creaked all over the place, it doesn't help that there's flaps and slots all over the place. With the Dell you could also press the back of the screen and see the results on the LCD, as many of you would've done at some point. With the Macbook there wasn't a hint of shimmering, I dare not press it harder! Another aspect of the Macbook I like is the port arrangement, the lines it leaves are so clean with 6 ports on the left hand side towards the back and that's it. You have the tiny IR sensor for Front Row on the front and the slot loading superdrive. By its very nature there's less room for creaking and less weak points. On the one hand you could argue that its lack of expansion slots are a downside, but personally I'd rather have it just the way it is, I've not seen a well implemented expansion card slot outside of Apple.

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    Heat issues? What heat issues....

    Yes everyone has heard the horror stories regarding the Macbook Pro and when the Macbook came out everyone feared the worst. I'm not going to comment on people ripping apart their Macbook and reapplying thermal paste, people yanking out bits of plastic they deem extra. I'm just going to let you know how my Macbook is. Under normal load it's not even warm to the touch, the whole of the surface where the keyboard lies is cool to the touch all over. Under normal load the fans don't even come on, the Macbook is absolutely silent. Under normal load I hear no whine, moos or anything of the kind. Perhaps I'm lucky, but more than likely I'm the norm, it's the few exceptions which are plastered all over the net portraying some sort of horror story. Under full load the fans come on but they're not intrusive, it's still quieter than my iMac, the rear left near the Escape key gets warm but not hot. Running CoreDuoTemp displays an idle temp of around 40-50 with it between 70 and 80 on full load, these numbers are well within the operating spec of a 100 degrees maximum (Core Duo spec sheet section 3.2).

    Expandability

    This is one of the first Apple laptops I can remember that has such ease of use with regards to replacing the hard drive. After taking the battery out you have 3 small (and I mean small, glasses screw small) screws to undo and an L shaped bracket comes out, one side revealing the 2 memory slots and the other revealing a slide out SATA 2.5" hard drive. I was tempted initially to stick with the standard hard drive and buy a 160GB Seagate perpendicular hard drive until I realized they don't offer it in SATA yet. The second option was a 100GB 7200 RPM drive but ultimately it was still cheaper to upgrade to 100GB from Apple and I couldn't be bothered to buy an enclosure for the redundant hard drive Apple supplied (I couldn't not use it!).

    Trackpad and its features

    The trackpad is fortunate in that it's inherited many of the nice features of its (far bigger) 17" brother (and in a hacked up pre 10.4.7 kind of way its 15" brother too). Within OS X I'm never found wanting a second mouse button, I've taken a quick video to hopefuly demonstrate how the right clicking works on the trackpad as well as the scrolling. There's 2 ways to right click:

    1. You can tap 2 fingers on the trackpad itself
    2. You can have 2 fingers on the trackpad whilst pressing the single trackpad button

    I personally find myself just tapping with 2 fingers to right click because I'm a tapper, as a result of this I prefer this trackpad implementation to the traditional 2 button trackpad. I used to find myself tapping the trackpad for a regular click then moving down to the right click when needed. This way I can get my clicking and secondary clicking all out of the trackpad.

    Video : Trackpad in action <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->680KB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    Here's the option to enable the two fingered tapping:

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    Scrolling is another area that I feel the Macbook (and Pros) excel, I've read people call it clunky and unwieldy but I love how simple it is. In a similar fashion to right clicking you just place 2 fingers on the trackpad and move in any direction, it's not strictly left/right and strictly up/down you can scroll diagonally throughout 360 degrees. Again I've included a video to demonstrate.

    Video : Trackpad scrolling <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->800KB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    When it comes to performance with scrolling (and window resizing) OS X started at the lowest it could possibly get, with each new ($129.99) update it's brought massive performance boosts in this area but with my iMac I still felt it had a step to go before being slick and snappy. The Macbook makes this final jump with scrolling and window resizing being stupidly fast, everything I've thrown at it has been instant (apart from PowerPC apps via Rosetta).

    Video : Window resizing <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->2.2MB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    Video : Safari launch speed <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->364KB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    That keyboard...

    There are two kinds of people out there, those who like laptop style keyboards and those who don't. If you fall into the latter category then I don't think you'll like the Macbook keyboard at all. If on the other hand you do then I think you'll love it. I fall into the camp that loves laptop style keyboards, I love the reduced amount of travel compared to regular keyboards, I love how quiet they are compared to regular keyboards and I love Macbook keyboard. If I have one gripe it's that the enter key is a little too small, initially I found myself missing it and hitting the ] or the key sat next to it. I've got used to it now but it's worth mentioning.

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    Aperture and the Pro apps

    One of the reasons I bought this laptop was to take it with me on holiday in July, I wanted to be able to run Aperture on it when I was away to organize and touch up my photos. This has been a sticking point and a huge topic of discussion for many people because there's a huge demand for a small form factor Pro laptop. The Macbook isn't it, not only because of the lack of dedicated GPU but because of size. At over 5 lbs and with the dimensions it is, it's not the 12" Powerbook replacement many were after. Regardless, I bought it for that because that's what I need right now. If I had the option of a &lt;4 lbs 12.1" Apple Macbook Pro then I would've snapped it up in an instant. Still, they didn't so this is what we have, how's the performance on the "Pro" apps?

    In Final Cut Studio the performance so far has been prettygood, here's the link to the Creative Mac benchmarks and they're pretty favorable. In Final Cut Pro rendering it was alongside the Dual 2.0GHz G5, in Motion it was faster in 3 out of the 4 tests and in Compressor it was faster in 3 out of the 4 tests. Now as time moves on and Final Cut Studio evolves there's no telling how much of it they'll shift onto the GPU, in which case the Macbook starts hitting its weak point. But for the time being the very fact that a £899 laptop beats out a £1399 (excluding screen) Dual 2.0GHz G5 is pretty darn good.

    I found no similar benchmarks for Aperture so I fired it up. The first thing I hit was the resolution warning, a dialog pops up when you try and run Aperture saying it doesn't meet the resolution requirements (1280 x 854). With Aperture 1.1.1 you have the option of either just running Aperture or quitting. Having previously used the program on a 1680 x 1050 20" iMac it did feel a little cramped at first, where on the iMac you can edit photos within the window you don't really have that luxury on the Macbook, full screen is really the only way. Browsing through the library and doing the basic tasks like white balance etc are pretty quick, but when you get into anything more than that you do notice that it's doing some pretty intensive work. Watch the video and you'll see how using the crop and straighten tool isn't quite as instant as you'd expect. I'd say it was on par with my iMac with the basics and slightly slower for the rest so you know with a dedicated GPU it's simply going to be faster.

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    The Macbook certainly isn't a work horse for Aperture, it's not intended to be but for those hankering after the smallest laptop Apple offers I'd say it just about passes for a mobile Aperture workstation. There's certainly room in Apple's lineup for a proper small form factor Pro laptop regardless of what they (publicly) say, I imagine somewhere along the line when Merom kicks in and Apple learn all their lessons from their first generation of Intel laptops we'll see that hole filled in their lineup.

    Video : Aperture in action 1 <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->880KB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    Video : Aperture in action 2 <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->3MB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    Magsafe

    Unlike others I'm not one who's proclaiming this as a stroke of genius, I guess that's because I've been fortunate to never have tripped on a power lead. It's certainly a nicely engineered feature and I appreciate having it but I've never been unlucky enough to require it. For those who don't know, Magsafe is a magnetic power lead. The idea is if someone trips on the lead it'll unplug itself sparing your laptop the fall. If you pull on it parallel to the laptop then the lead might as well be permanently bonded to the laptop, it's almost irremovable, but pull it at any sort of angle and it'll come straight out. Great in theory but I wonder if it'll work as nicely in practice, I'd rather not test to find out, you'll have to make do with my nicely controlled videos of it in action :)

    Video : Magsafe disconnect <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->372KB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    Video : Magsafe connect <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->224KB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    Boot Camp VS Parallels... FIGHT!

    I've got tosay that Boot Camp is a stroke of genius on Apples behalf, they've added a safety net which has been holding many people back from switching, just one extra thing made possible by the switch to Intel. As with many people there are certain Windows applications that simply aren't replaceable by anything OS X has to offer, in the past we've had to make do by either buying a cheap Windows box or using Virtual PC (or equivalent). We now have the luxury of Virtualization and running Windows natively. For me the one app I can't make do without is Visio (in combination with Harnware so Omnigraffle or something similar isn't an option), before I went down the road of setting up my laptop just the way I was going to have it it was experiment time.

    The first application on my laptop was Parallels Desktop RC2, I assigned the machine 512 MB RAM, enabled Virtualization and let it fly by installing Windows XP. The first thing that struck me was the speed, I'd been used to Virtual PC and it's 90 minute Windows install (at the minimum!) but this flew through it as fast as it would being native, once at the desktop my expectations were brought down with a bump, the GUI felt a little sluggish which is just what I'd feared. One thing I didn't realize was that Parallels has its own set of OS tools which you install in the virtual machine just like its competitors. After doing this there was a great, great difference in responsiveness. I proceeded to install Office 2003 because this was the test to see if I could get away with just Parallels or if I'd actually have to dual boot to get what I wanted. Word and Excel were good, I wouldn't say fast and I wouldn't say native speed because I've since used it on Boot Camp and it's simply not as fast. Could you happily use it on a day to day basis? Damn right. Is it stupidly faster than all other Virtual PC solutions on the Mac before? Again, damn right. When it came to Visio though and opening some sample files I use there was a tiny bit of lag in moving around the drawing. It probably wouldn't bother me but I like working at 100 MPH, making mistakes and fixing them rather then plodding along. As a result I wasn't happy enough using it knowing I could get blazing performance via Boot Camp. For 90% of the things people need Windows for I'd say it was perfect and at the moment it's a $39.99 pre order with the final product costing $79.99 now, that's a bargain in my eyes but something to consider if you don't already own Windows.

    Parallels Desktop

    Boot Camp was a bit of a shot out of the dark from Apple, for weeks the multi OS boot competition had been gathering steam and no sooner had it been solved and the prize money stumped up had Apple released their (far more elegant) solution. Boot Camp does a very slick job of holding your hand to partition your hard drive and install Windows. The setup will give you a graphical representation of the HD split by a slider you can grab, you simply resize to your liking. Personally I fancied more of a play! I actually wanted 3 partitions, something Boot Camp can't offer. I wanted XP, OS X and a third partition to store all my media; this third partition would be visible by both with shared music, movie, pictures and desktop folders. I followed this tutorial to create my 3 partitions and it worked without a hitch. I decided on the media partition being HFS+ and using Macdrive on Windows rather than FAT32. Believe it or not one of the reasons for this was FAT32 volumes always appear in uppercase in OS X and I couldn't stand that.

    So, does Vista work?

    <!--coloro:#FF0000--><!--/coloro-->If you're following any of the steps I mention below, don't blame me if you hose your OS X install or your Macbook catches fire...<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Taking it one step further than running the upgrade advisor on XP via Boot Camp (which interestingly gives good results, the Macbook is Aero Glass capable for those who want to know) I decided to give Vista Beta 2 a try. The install wasn't as flawless as the XP install, I did a fresh install as opposed to an upgrade and there were a few hoops to jump through. First step was to boot from the Vista Beta 2 CD and delete the 200MB EFI partition then proceed to install Vista on the partition created by Boot Camp. After you restart midway through installation there is an error message related to Winload.exe, you have to boot from the CD again but this time choose recovery options, the installer will detect a repairable partition and offer to repair it. Repair, restart, continue installation like normal. Once you get to the desktop you have the issue of quite a lot of unrecognized hardware, I decided to give the driver CD that Boot Camp creates a try. The installation of the drivers actually completes but there's still quite a lot of unrecognized hardware, Vista reports that one of the Intel GPU components isn't installed correctly and although I could run at the native 1280 x 800 resolution it was choking on the performance advisor getting only a 2 which is less than when the advisor is run on Windows. As a result (I imagine) there was no Glass, sound was also broken. Performance generally felt ok but as a test it wasn't really successful, I'd lost patience and I wanted to get my OS X/XP setup finalized to I could get to the setup I wanted.

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    XP on Boot Camp, OS X and my shared partition

    Performance of XP on Boot Camp is as you'd expect it, blazing fast, it is a dual core 2.0 GHz chip with 2GB of 667 MHz memory after all. After installing Macdrive and picking up my third HFS+ partition I simply used TweakUI to relocate my My Music, My Movies, My Pictures and Desktop folder to the HFS+ partition. I'd made the 60GB partition my Home folder with Netinfo Utility in OS X so the 2 operating systems shared the media folders. This in my eyes is exactly the type of setup I imagined and wanted and I'm more than happy with how it's worked out. The only 2 applications (excluding TweakUI) I installed were Office 2003 and Office 2007, performance on both was instant as you'd expect. One thing I'm yet to try is anything taxing on the GPU e.g. games. I don't think I ever will, my DS Lite and 360 have that area covered but from the benchmarks I've seen around the place I wouldn't get my hopes up.

    The drivers CD which Boot Camp created includes drivers for everything apart from the IR sensor and in a way the iSight (gets installed but it doesn't work). Bluetooth, wireless and video all work as expected. One of the best features of the laptop which is so perfect in OS X is all of a sudden crippled in XP, the trackpad. You don't get any scrolling, no advanced right click tapping, nothing. Straight away I'd suggest you install AppleMouse, a utility that I set to run at startup which gives you the ability to use ctrl + click to right click. Another thing which is worth mentioning is there is no delete key on the Macbook, there's a backspace but no delete. This means no ctrl + alt + del, although for the task manager there's other ways around it for users who need to ctrl + alt + del to logon there's not. Fortunately there are quite a few utilities to remap the keyboard. I personally used a small utility called remapkey.exe which is part of the Windows Server 2003 resource kit. I changed the right hand Apple button to the del key, normally it's the Windows key but there's already one on the left hand side so it was spare.

    Video : Boot Camp in action <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->4.4MB

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    Download : RemapKey utility <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->176KB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Performance

    Always handy in a review, there are many many reviews already out there with every type of benchmark imaginable so I'm only including the ones I felt relevant to me. First up is video encoding. I do loads of MPEG2 encoding and MPEG4 encoding so first up is encoding some h.264.

    h.264 Encoding Test Setup:

    Handbrake 0.7.1 (Universal)
    Lost In Translation DVD (gotta test it out on something decent)
    Chapter 5 (03:55)
    Video - 1000 kbps variable bitrate
    Sound - 128 kbps
    h.264, x264 main profile
    720*384

    Here are the results:

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    This was a huge boost to me as this is one of the most frequent activities I perform. The dual core really comes into its own when video encoding is concerned.

    High Definition Video Playback:

    Before purchasing the Macbook I'd read good things in regards to HD playback, the GMA950 was actually pretty competent when it comes to playback of 720p and even 1080p material. To test this out I tried the following from Apples HD gallery:

    BBC Motion Gallery: Africa (720p)
    Warren Miller's Higher Ground (1080p)

    The 720p video played in a window and full screen without dropping a single frame, impressive I'm sure you'll agree. Even better than that was the performance of the 1080p clip, playing this on my iMac brought it to a crawl with the clip averaging around 11-15 FPS. On the Macbook this wasn't the case, obviously it can't be played 1:1 in a window so I tried it in a window filling the screen and full screen, both times it averaged around 20-24 FPS but only by looking at the movie info could I tell, it was a very smooth experience.

    General GUI performance:

    I've already commented on the fantastic window resizing performance earlier on in the review so I thought I'd just include a little video clip of Expose in action, the GPU flies through it without a hint of stutter.

    Video : Expose in action <!--coloro:#003300--><!--/coloro-->1.1MB<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

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    Photoshop Test:

    I've tested it in every way I can imagine by using a standard test borrowed from the MacNN forums. The test is as follows:

    1 - Download the test image from here
    2 - Save it to the computer and then open it up in Photoshop
    3 - From there please apply a 'radial blur' with the settings at:

    Amount = 100
    Blur Method = Spin
    Quality = Best

    To get the time you can either use a stopwatch or use the timing facility in Photoshop.

    I will be including the following figures from myself:

    Photoshop CS2 via Windows XP in Parallels Desktop RC2
    Photoshop CS2 via Windows XP in Boot Camp
    Photoshop CS2 Natively on the 2.1GHz G5 iMac
    Photoshop CS2 via Rosetta on the Macbook
    Photoshop CS2 via Rosetta on the Macbook (after it's cached the instruction set)

    I'll also include other figures as a reference point, here's the results:

    [​IMG]
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    The figures don't really tell the whole story, for example it was faster under Parallels then under Rosetta but the responsiveness was greater in OS X than in the virtual machine. Boot Camp is a different story but I wouldn't go as far as restarting the Macbook to run Photoshop CS2, Rosetta is perfectly fine. The reason I included 2 Rosetta benchmarks in the test was because I've read that OS X caches the PowerPC instructions, if you're doing the same PowerPC stuff over and over again (e.g. this filter) it speeds up greatly, load times are also reduced with Photoshop CS2 going from around 6-7 bounces to 3 bounces on the second launch.

    Speaker, Wifi and battery life

    I thought I'd briefly touch on this, the speakers on the Macbook aren't actually visible initially, they're hidden within the hinge on the far left and far right. The sound quality is adequate but nothing more, sound via headphones and external speakers though is a different matter with the quality being exactly as good as you'd expect. The WiFi range on the Macbook is extremely good, sat in my garden around 50-60 ft away from the Linksys router I got 3 out of 4 bars, even picking up neighbours WiFi from around 80 ft away.

    Apple claim up to 6 hours for the Macbook but I've gotta say that must be with the screen on minimum, everything throttled and no work being done. Browsing the net, listening to iTunes and playing around with Aperture gave me 3:15, turn WiFi off and I get an estimated time of over 4:30. I'm glad we've arrived at the stage where 3-4 hours of battery life is merely average, I remember my VAIO about 7-8 years ago having around 90 minutes of battery life. Here's to the next 7-8 years and 12-15 hours of battery life!

    Conclusion

    The Macbook angered a lot of people, but I think it just happened to anger the most vocal of Apple fans. I feel this laptop is going to be huge and one of Apples biggest sellers, it doesn't "Complete the family" like Apple says, there's still room for a small form factor Pro laptop and the Macbook isn't it. For the rest of us though I think it's fantastic value for money. I have a few gripes about the laptop with the first being the most obvious: the GPU. Yes the majority of users aren't going to notice but it stinks of cheap for the sake of it by Apple. I imagine their margins could've allowed for a X1300, heck even something as low as a X300 would've sufficed, it's still better then what we have now. From what I've read the GMA950 is an extra $4 over the regular 945 chipset, with prices like that it's not hard to understand why Apple went down this route. All being said I'm happy, very happy with the Macbook. I've previously owned a 12" Powerbook and I feel this improves on it in every way which mattered to me, I also think it looks a lot better!

    That being said, when Apple announce their 12.1" widescreen, 0.8" thin, 2.0GHz Merom, X1400 GPU with 160GB perpendicular HD I'll be first in line whatever the cost, ready to dump all my impressions on you lot!




    And here's a few more pics to finish it up...

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    Last edited by a moderator: May 12, 2015
  2. cycloneguy2618

    cycloneguy2618 Notebook Deity

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    Great review! I'm glad yours doesn't run as hot as the others. Maybe Apple improved them, because the most recent MacBooks are running under fairly normal temperatures.
     
  3. MysticGolem

    MysticGolem Asus MVP + NBR Reviewer NBR Reviewer

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    WOW!!!! what an amazing review, very thorough. nice pictures.

    Thank you so much for this review, almost makes me wanna buy this :D lol

    Thanks,

    MysticGolem
     
  4. cycloneguy2618

    cycloneguy2618 Notebook Deity

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    I know, I was going to wait on Rev B. But I think I might have to pull the trigger next week lol.
     
  5. nickspohn

    nickspohn Notebook Virtuoso NBR Reviewer

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    Very nice review. Its detailed, you have videos, great pictures - awesome job!
     
  6. Reize

    Reize Notebook Virtuoso

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    Excellent job, the amount of work you put into it really shows.
     
  7. michaelb

    michaelb Newbie

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    Good review, thanks for your work.

    But I do have one problem with Macbook. I don't know what Macbook Apple sells in UK, but here in US(new york) every macbook I checked were all quite hot while running idle, and at that temperature, put it on the top your lap will need some courage. In fact, a 7 year old Dell Inspiron 3500 runs cooler than this Macbook.Too bad I was thinking to buy one before it came out.

    Anyway, my advice to anyone who would like to buy one and will use it on your laps a lot, make sure to check it before you buy it. Heat may not be the issue to some people, for me it is definitely break the deal.
     
  8. queshy

    queshy Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    What an insightful review! Fantastic videos and photos! All it did was make me want one lol... Great job. Bootcamp is neat!
     
  9. Andrew Baxter

    Andrew Baxter -

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    I do sort of wonder about the widely varying comments on MacBook heat issues from "it overheats and crashes" (I had this on my first MacBook, the second one I'm now on just gets very warm but no crashing). It's quite possible that different lots have been manufactured differently or in later lots some issues have been fixed -- I believe the MacBook arrived to England later than the U.S. so this could strengthen the theory.

    Anyhoo, this is by far the most insightful and thorough review I've seen to date and the hours spent on writing it and creating the video and picture content really shows. A great tutorial on using the MacBook as well. It's great to have a Mac guru give some insight and provide excellent feedback on the software usability and running programs a graphic designer would use. That section on BootCamp versus Parallels is great too.

    Love the video demonstrating the touchpad. I kinda wish Apple had borrowed from other mfrs book where they use the side / bottom areas of a touchpad for scrolling and illustrate those areas on the touchpad, I have trouble with the two finger approach and unless you read or someone tells you about it you won't figure it out as there's no usability design forcing function (anyone new to a touchpad won't stare at it and think, "oh, what'll happen if I use two fingers not one, or how about three and not two", with an important input device on a computer things should be as obvious and simple as how a handle on a door guides you to correctly operating and opening said door). When presented with a touchpad on any computer I always use a mouse instead though, I can use a pointing stick implementation like second nature (maybe because I've always used a ThinkPad) but no matter how good a touchpad is I end up getting frustrated with my inefficiency in using it.

    Oh, this will sell well, it might not be perfect as Dazzla says but so many people have been holding out for this form factor Mac with an Intel processor that I'm pretty sure when Apple next reports its financials they'll mention something about fast sales of notebooks :)
     
  10. biiscit

    biiscit Notebook Consultant

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    Amazing. You persuaded me to order one.
     
  11. soulreaver99

    soulreaver99 Notebook Geek NBR Reviewer

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    Awesome review! Loved how you attempted to install vista. It's nice reading someone else's perspective on the MacBook.
     
  12. jsis

    jsis Notebook Evangelist

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    You're such an Apple whore.

    Outstanding review! ;)
     
  13. Dustin Sklavos

    Dustin Sklavos Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    I almost never say this, but I think you really wrote an outstanding review. It was extremely thorough and comprehensive, and really got into a lot of the major things I'd be interested in a Mac for. More than that, you assuaged a lot of fears of us Windows users running XP on the Mac by providing multiple means of running our programs and shoring up weaknesses of the hardware itself (keyboard and touchpad) in Windows.

    This was really well done, thank you very much.
     
  14. firestarter

    firestarter Notebook Evangelist

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    "A blockbuster!" - NewYork Times

    Seriously though, a really nice review. I am also thinking of waiting for the Conroe to come in an Apple laptop. I was curious about the keyboard as another MacBook reviewer said he did not like the "flimsy" feel of the keyboard, by which i was very disappointed since i love the Apple KB apart from the thinkpad.
     
  15. cyberderf

    cyberderf Notebook Consultant

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    Great review. Apart pushing some mac addicts to finally buy one, i'm sure it will convert a couple of PC hardcore fans. Your videos of mac os in action and the smart Apple power cords are particularry convincing!

    Long life to Mac os and Apple brilliant design!
     
  16. BobbleHead

    BobbleHead Notebook Enthusiast

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    Every single macbook I tried were hotter than hell. I'll pass (for now). Not sure why your macbook was so much cooler than what other people have been reporting.
     
  17. Dazzla

    Dazzla Notebook Enthusiast NBR Reviewer

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    Hi guys, thanks for the feedback :)

    Apologies in advance in case the videos go down, I've exceeded my months .Mac allowance in just 2 days! I've rehosted them elsewhere and am just waiting for the URLs to be changed.
     
  18. jetstar

    jetstar Notebook Deity

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    Good review! Nicely written. Looks like a great notebook you got there!
     
  19. sonicdivx

    sonicdivx Notebook Consultant

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    Nice review. Glad to hear you MacBook runs cool. Agree this is really the laptop to get from Apple not the MacBook Pro.
     
  20. subaru

    subaru Newbie

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    Could you make a video with parallel RC2 to show if the UI is smoother now? Thanks for the review, I really like the vids. Especially the fast loading of safari.
     
  21. doniel

    doniel Notebook Enthusiast

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    Great review. it's amazing that ur macbook runs much cooler than most of others', including mine. :) I just got my macbook yesterday and am still playing around with it. The left-hand side of my keyboard and the bottom DOES get hot. My left hand can always feel the heat coming out of the keyboard while typing. I found it reasonable cuz the Macbook only has ONE vent for ventilation at the bottom of the LCD and it almost got BLOCKED all the time by the LCD hinge!!! What a stupid design! Well, probably it's just that Apple didn't want to deviate from IBOOK's classical design too much.
     
  22. ToeKnee

    ToeKnee Notebook Enthusiast

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    See this technical note Apple recently posted:
    "MacBook may run warm because rear vent is blocked"
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=303848
     
  23. Dazzla

    Dazzla Notebook Enthusiast NBR Reviewer

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    Hi guys, I'm going to try and work on getting a Parallels VS Boot Camp article up together this weekend if time permits (extremely busy with real life work), I'll touch on the following with as much media as youtube will allow :D I'll try and touch on the following, let me know if there's anything in particular you want me to cover and I'll try and get it in :)

    Gaming on both (e.g. is 2D gaming possible on Parallels?)
    GUI responsiveness between the two with a video comparison
    Boot up times comparison
    Benchmark comparison (e.g. PC mark)
    Detailed breakdown of what's broken in Windows XP in each solution
    Setup how-to's for both (if people want that)
    Virtue desktops setup how to with Parallels (the cube switching animation)
    Alternative OS performance on Parallels (Ubuntu 6.06)
     
  24. circa86

    circa86 Notebook Virtuoso NBR Reviewer

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    that is a awesome desk!!! and awesome review, if you don't mind me asking where did you get that desk?
     
  25. Dazzla

    Dazzla Notebook Enthusiast NBR Reviewer

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    It was from Argos in the UK, £99.99.
     
  26. circa86

    circa86 Notebook Virtuoso NBR Reviewer

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    I can't seem to find it ^_^ what is the company that makes it? Sorry but I just absolutely want that desk.
     
  27. _Mazza_

    _Mazza_ Notebook Enthusiast

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    It's a UK store www.argos.co.uk doubt they'll deliver to the US though :) I might get one tho
     
  28. circa86

    circa86 Notebook Virtuoso NBR Reviewer

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    yeah I found that site, but I couldn't find that desk on there. I was just hoping that maybe the company that makes that desk makes it available in the US.
     
  29. Andrew Baxter

    Andrew Baxter -

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    I think a quick overview of explaining what a "Virtual Machine" is versus running natively would be great, I think some people are a bit confused as to what the high-level difference is between those two things and why there'd be a technical advantage.

    The setup overview would definitely be great, sort of a dummy guide and say which is easier to set up for a newbie maybe.
     
  30. mzlin

    mzlin Notebook Geek

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    From the WSJ:


    Perhaps the most surprising thing about the MacBook is its price. Despite Apple's reputation for charging more, the MacBook is actually less expensive than its closest major Windows competitor. That would be the Sony Vaio VGN-SZ240, which also has a 13.3-inch screen with the same resolution, includes a built-in camera, and is available with the same processor and the same memory and hard-disk capacity as the MacBook.

    When configured to match the major specs of the base model of the MacBook, the Sony costs $1,629, over 60% more than the MacBook's $1,099 base price. But the MacBook is much heavier than the Sony. It weighs 5.2 pounds, 37% more than the Sony's 3.8 pounds.

    In my tests, the MacBook proved to be very snappy. Internet performance over my Wi-Fi network was excellent. Microsoft Office ran very well, as did the Firefox Web browser, Adobe Reader and everything else I tested.

    On my tough battery test, where I turn off all power-saving features and keep the hard disk spinning and the screen at maximum brightness, the MacBook lasted three hours and 47 minutes. That suggests you could get nearly five hours with power-saving on and a more normal usage pattern. A high-end model of the much costlier Sony, which I tested in April, lasted only three hours and two minutes.

    And like all Macs, the MacBook is vastly superior to Windows machines in terms of bundled software and security. Apple's operating system is better designed, more stable and more modern than Windows XP. Its built-in iLife suite of multimedia software can't be matched on Windows. And it has -- so far -- been attacked by only two viruses, compared with the more than 100,000 viruses and spyware programs that plague Windows. Those qualities are worth hundreds of dollars, in my view.