【視聴数 721583】
【チャンネル名 Jimmy Tries World】
【タグ m1 macbook air review,macbook air,m1 macbook air 2020,m1 macbook,m1 macbook pro,m1 macbook review,m1 processor,m1 macbook pro review,m1 macbook air vs pro,m1 apple macbook,m1 apple macbook air,m1 mac,apple m1,apple m1 chip,m1,m1 mac performance,m1 vs intel,intel vs m1,2021 macbook pro,2021 Macbook air,2020 M1 macbook air review,apple m1 macbook,apple m1 macbook air,apple m1 macbook pro,apple m1 macbook air review,macbook air 2020】
“This Laptop is like a Teenager, who’s also not able to drink.”
😳😳😳
I feel like now I need to make sure my next computers are of legal age now…
42th comment!!! 7 hours.
I got the M1 Air and upgraded from a 2013 windows 8 HP laptop
I’m looking to sell a MacBook Pro May 2020 I just don’t know how
Good timing
lol rimowa…typically asian☺
i’ve heard of the of final cut pro issue but I haven’t heard of any others. Thanks for letting us know. I bought a 16gb ram m1 mba and really hope its extremely reliable (more so needed in fall since I currently dont have critical things going on). I expect that they will slowly bring out more and more fixes but I wouldnt be too surprised if these versions are always buggier than future ones.
Thank you I was deciding between a MateBook 14 and this
Hey weren’t you in mkbhd’s comments section?
Another review where “long-term” = 2 months. Ye, right…..
Amazing video keep it upp!
Still use my Dell 2012 XPS 13 never have any issues
Rebecca is poop 😂
You still play maplestory?
Every year mac books have issues with trackpad and keyboard that is going to be fixed after two years.
Ordered this with 256 gb drive, canceled the order because i want MOAR (but it’s over my credit card limit)
OK, that does it. I’m getting one.
I’m pretty impressed with the M1s – I’m someone who intended to ride out the transition with a fully loaded 16″ MacBook Pro and a fully loaded 2020 iMac 5K. What I’m not impressed with is YouTubers who cheaped out and bought base-model M1s and expect them to compete with their old fully loaded machines, then complain about problems like audio dropouts which are probably caused by there being insufficient memory to load the audio.
Wow … you paid what? 3, 4, 5 thousand for your previous laptops – and equipped them with ample resources for the workflows you put them through.
Yet for your M1 MacBook Air, you get it with 8 GB and expect that somehow the large files you’re dealing with should magically work within an 8 GB constraint without issues. The folks these ultrabooks are targeted at don’t normally do video or audio editing, and you would never have _thought_ of attempting such tasks on their predecessors – even with a RAM and SSD expansion.
How about popping for 16 GB RAM and maybe 512 GB SSD. $400 – which would bring the machine up to $1400 if you can’t figure out where to get a discount (hint: AppleInsider normally has them discounted through Adorama). Better yet, go whole hog and get the 8 GPU cores which would bring the retail price up to $1449 (or $1349 if you take the AppleInsider deal https://appleinsider.com/articles/21/01/04/deals-m1-macbook-air-promo-code-knocks-up-to-150-off-every-model).
What on God’s Green Earth made you think that 8 GB was enough for your workflow? And why didn’t technically adept _you_ think that this might be part of the problem?
Most people are looking at these first Apple Silicon Macs wrong – these aren’t Apple’s powerhouse machines: they’re simply the annual spec bump of the lowest end Apple computers with DCI-P3 displays, Wifi 6, and the new Apple Silicon M1 SoC.
They have the same limitations as the machines they replace – 16 GB RAM and two Thunderbolt ports.
These are the machines you give to a student or teacher or a lawyer or an accountant or a work-at-home information worker – folks who need a decently performing machine with decent build quality who don’t want to lug around a huge powerhouse machine (or pay for one for that matter). They’re still marketed at the same market segment, though they now have a vastly expanded compute power envelope.
The real powerhouses will probably come later with the M1x (or whatever). Apple has yet to decide on an external memory interconnect and multichannel PCIe scheme, if they decide to move in that direction.
Other CPU and GPU vendors and OEM computer makers take notice – your businesses are now on limited life support. These new Apple Silicon models can compete speed-wise up through the mid-high tier of computer purchases, and if as I expect Apple sells a ton of these many will be to your bread and butter customers.
In fact, I suspect that Apple – once they recover their R&D costs – will be pushing the prices of these machines lower while still maintaining their margins – while competing computer makers will still have to pay Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, and nVidea for their expensive processors, whereas Apple’s cost goes down the more they manufacture. Competing computer makers may soon be squeezed by Apple Silicon price/performance on one side and high component prices on the other. Expect them to be demanding lower processor prices from the above manufacturers so they can more readily compete, and processor manufacturers may have to comply because if OEM computer manufacturers go under or stop making competing models, the processor makers will see a diminishing customer base.
I believe the biggest costs for a chip fab are startup costs – no matter what processor vendors would like you to believe. Design and fab startup are _expensive_ – but once you start getting decent yields, the additional costs are silicon wafers and QA. The more of these units Apple can move, the lower the per unit cost and the better the profits.
So … who should buy these M1 Macs?
If you’re in the target demographic – the student, teacher, lawyer, accountant, or work-at-home information worker – this is the Mac for you.
If you’re a heavy computer user like a creative and don’t simply want a light and cheap computer with some additional video and sound editing capability for use on the go – I’d wait for the M1x (or whatever) later this year. You’ll probably kick yourself when the machines targeted at _you_ finally appear.
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