It's Ultra thin. Ultra portable. And ultra unlike anything else.
And it's a freaking $2000 difference between a 1.6GHz and a 1.8GHz.
Specs:
- Light weight - 1.36kg
- Size (W x H x D) - 0.4 to 1.94 x 32.5 x 22.7 cm
- Processor - 1.6/1.8GHz Core 2 Duo 4MB shared L2 cache
- Display - 13.3-inch (viewable) glossy widescreen LED 1280 x 800 pixels
- Memory - 2GB (onboard)
- Hard drive - 80GB Parallel ATA, 4200 rpm / 64GB solid-state drive
- Optical drive - option: External MacBook Air USB SuperDrive (8x DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW)
- Graphics - Intel GMA X3100 graphics processor with 144MB of DDR2 SDRAM shared with main memory4
The keyboard is illuminated and full size. It comes with a 13.3-inch widescreen LED backlit displays that delivers 1280-by-800 resolution which produces vibrant images and rich colors. The LED technology also conserves battery life.
You can zoom, rotate, and scroll with a flick or a pinch of the multi-touch trackpad. This gesture-based input, so successful on iPhone and iPod touch, has been adapted for the MacBook Air.
There's a next generation wireless feature with blazing-fast 802.11n2 and Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR wireless technologies built in, MacBook Air takes full advantage of the increasingly wireless world.
The designs and features of these hardwares are getting so sophisticated and they look good just by owning any of them.
I desire owning a MacBook Air myself, but I'm afraid that the thickness, or rather lack of it, will mean I've to take extra care in preventing my toy Pomeranian from walking over it, and breaking it in the process.
Much consideration has to be made for something so delicate.

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