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Category: M4 Macbook Air

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  • I can recommend the M4 MacBook Air for its battery life alone

    Over the course of the past few months, I’ve tried a handful of Windows on Arm machines. The biggest takeaway is that if you buy a slim and light Windows laptop in 2025, you don’t need to hunt for a seat near a wall outlet. The battery life figures I’ve got from Qualcomm Snapdragon X-powered laptops have been pretty amazing. 

    For the first time, I feel Windows laptops have reached a point where they can reach the high benchmark set by the MacBook Air. My most recent tryst was with the Asus Zenbook A14, and the Dell XPS 13 before that. I loved the thin and lightweight form factors, and the progress Windows on Arm has made with the app compatibility situation. 

    Yet, despite all the progress, if I were to recommend a slim and light laptop, the MacBook Air M4 would be at the top of my list. There are a healthy few factors that go in its favor, but battery life, in itself, is the biggest driver. I’ve used every iteration of the MacBook Air since the M1 variant, and I think Apple finally struck power efficiency gold with the M4-driven model this year.

    Low uptake, high yield 

    It’s not a straightforward choice to buy a laptop with the “definitive” best battery life. There is no such universal benchmark, especially when you’re dealing with an entirely different OS, architecture, and hardware variables. A lot of other factors come into the mix, including the apps and workflow that a machine is supposed to handle. 

    This is where you make the safer bet, where a balance of performance and battery efficiency is the ideal choice. At that metric, the MacBook Air remains unbeatable. Before we dig into the benchmarks, I’ll show the collective side of why silicon efficiency matters. Take a look at the figures below.

    Two Chrome windows were eating up more energy reserves than a fairly powerful photo editing app, in addition to hogging up nearly four times more memory load and a bigger share of CPU resources, too. And yet, the heavy lifting is deputed to the M4 silicon’s efficiency cores. Only when things get taxing that the performance cores go full throttle. 

    Another aspect is that the cores try to enter a zero activity phase as soon as they detect the system entering an idle state. I noticed that the four performance cores enter this state far more frequently than the efficiency cores. The latter cluster usually remains active if there is ongoing background activity.

    The gains are not instantly noticeable, but compared to the M3 silicon (four performance and four efficiency cores), the M4 relies more often on its six efficiency cores. The net effect is lower power draw from the battery, and as a result, higher per-charge mileage. 

    This trend is more discernible if you have enabled low-power mode, either manually or have triggered it automatically for on-battery usage. In this mode, the performance cores on the M4 drop to the zero activity state more frequently than the M3. I observed a similar behaviour across the efficiency core cluster, as well. 

    The pattern of higher efficiency is also visible across demanding tasks. I encoded a film on Handbrake at the 1080p30 Fast preset. The M4 performed roughly 16% better than the M3 MacBook Air, while using approximately 13% less power. These are approximate figures calculated with assistance from third-party tools, but the M4’s frugal power uptake is evident, nonetheless.

    Realistic workflows fare even better

    My typical workflow includes the famous resource hog that is Google Chrome, divided across three to four windows, and totalling 30-40 tabs on average. Then there are apps (and browser instances) that handle the rest of my workflow, such as Obsidian, Slack, Microsoft Teams, Apple Music, Gemini, Sheets, Grammarly, and iPhone Mirroring. 

    On the more demanding side of my workflow, there are Photoshop, LumaFusion, and PyTorch. These are the tasks at which the four performance cores on the M4 silicon kick into full throttle, while the rest are distributed across the cluster of six efficiency cores. 

    When the laptop is running in balanced mode, I have barely ever run into performance bottlenecks. But what surprised me is that even when running the laptop in low-power mode, my workflow didn’t feel any more sluggish. That’s not something I  can say for a healthy bunch of ultra-portable Windows laptops I’ve tested in the past few months. 

    The Dell XPS 13, powered by Qualcomm’s top-of-the-line Snapdragon X Elite chip, is a fairly performant machine. It even outpaced the Apple M3 at multi-core tasks. But it stuttered more often, froze, and brought Chrome to a standstill far more frequently than I’ve ever encountered with the MacBook Air. 

    It was able to handle my short-burst, high-demand scenarios like short video editing, but for a full day of work, it was not nearly as smooth as the MacBook Air. That laggardness seeps into the battery life figures, as well. 

    Another weakness is that Windows laptops are dramatically more aggressive with performance throttling as soon as they enter low-power mode. Apple’s performance cores, even the older ones on the M3, are more powerful compared to Qualcomm’s and Intel’s flagship laptop chips. 

    In our battery life tests, the 13-inch MacBook Air delivered a 20% higher score than a Snapdragon X Elite-powered laptop, and it also lasted 40% better than a slim HP laptop with an Intel chip at simulated web browsing. On Cinebench R24, the Apple laptop fared nearly twice as well compared to Windows laptops in its segment. 

    Peerless, in a lot of ways

    In a nutshell, what you get aboard the MacBook Air M4 is not just the promise of a faster laptop, but also one that performs consistently better even in low-power mode. It’s just surprising that despite packing a smaller-sized battery and no active fan to cool things inside, the MacBook Air still manages to run faster and last longer.

    Another crucial consideration is that the entry-level Apple laptop offers a more pixel-dense, but less efficient IPS LCD screen. And yet, it manages to fare better than the rivals that serve a less power-hungry and lower-res full-HD panel. 

    Of course, the M4 silicon is fundamentally more efficient and powerful than its predecessor. But it’s really the system optimization that compounds and adds up to all those benefits, especially when pitted against a Windows laptop.

    Simply put, all that performance upper-hand comes with lower energy intake in tow, and that means the M4 MacBook Air lasts longer in day-to-day workflows than other Windows-based machines in its league. At the end of the day, all you need is a reliable mobile workstation that won’t give you charging socket anxiety.

    In that role, I can’t recommend a better machine than the M4-fueled MacBook Air, so far. 

  • I love the Dell XPS 13, but I’ll pick the MacBook Air any day

    I am a huge fan of slim and light laptops. That preference is borne more out of my professional lifestyle than a necessity for absolute silicon firebreathers. I believe a laptop should be, well, light on your lap, or hands, unless you need all that firepower in a mobile form factor.

    That’s the reason gaming laptops exist, or those thick workstations such as the HP ZBook with an Nvidia RTX A500 series graphics card. For the rest, a thin laptop can do the job just fine, with its quirky set of compromises. Finding the right slim laptop, however, is the tricky part.

    I recently spent a few months with a rather “experimental” kind of slim laptop from Dell. The XPS 13 configuration I picked runs Windows on Arm, and serves an equally unconventional processor – the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite. It was fast, sleek, and filled the 12-inch MacBook’s ache for me.

    Unfortunately, it isn’t the most practical laptop out there. I realized that even more so, after adopting the M4 MacBook Air as my daily workhorse. At the end of the day, I came to the conclusion that Apple’s machine is the more practical, slim and light laptop, without any serious compromises.

    Beauty runs deeper than the looks

    One of the most arresting aspects of the Dell XPS 13 is its standout looks. The metallic chassis is sharp, sturdy, and has an understated coat of paint on top of it. Lift up the lid, and you will be greeted by a beautiful screen with one of the slimmest bezels you will come across on a laptop, a gapless keyboard, and a seamless glass touchpad with force touch feedback.

    Think of it as borrowing Apple’s tech stack, but executing it more tastefully. That also happens to be the biggest undoing of the Dell laptop. Ever since Dell adopted the futuristic design, users have cultivated a love-hate relationship with the keyboard-trackpad combo.

    The infinity trackpad takes a bit of time getting used to, but if you look at the Dell community forum, there are a healthy bunch of users complaining about technical issues. From malfunctioning haptic feedback to one of the edges losing its touch sensitivity, the reports are diverse. 

    Then there’s the gapless keycap situation. Once again, the user community is undecided on whether it’s the software that often breaks the keyboard, or if it’s the engineering to blame. Ideally, users should not be burdened with flashing the BIOS of their laptop to try and fix keyboard woes.

    The typing experience is also divisive. I grew used to it within a day, but a healthy few of my industry peers have reported that the XPS 13’s beautiful keyboard deck is easy on the eyes, but not so much from a functional lens.

    For me, the XPS 13’s zero lattice keyboard and the capacitive function row keys at the top did the job just fine, but it’s hard to look past the valid concerns. The MacBooks I’ve used so far, haven’t given me any such headache in years.

    The new MacBook Air arguably has the best combination of a touchpad and keyboard on any laptop out there. On the M4-powered refresh, you get a fantastic build, beautiful design, solid keyboard, sharp display, and no lingering weak spots.

    I’d rather side with reliability, especially when I’m spending north of a thousand dollars on a laptop.

    You deserve performance, not potential

    I dived into my XPS 13 experience hoping for a smooth experience, especially after seeing all those comparison charts depicting the Snapdragon X Elite racing ahead of Intel and AMD silicon. It scored above the M3 MacBook Air at multi-core performance, but can’t quite level up at single-core and GPU-heavy workloads.

    Running the 3DMark Wildlife Extreme test, for example, shows the Snapdragon silicon lagging behind by a healthy 36% after repeated runs. For me, benchmarks don’t really do justice to a laptop’s true potential, unless it has been tested on a realistic workflow. That’s where the Dell XPS 13 lost the race.

    The configuration I tested offered 16GB of RAM and plenty of storage. It was able to handle my workflow spread across Slack, Chrome, Trello, Microsoft Teams, Asana, and Gmail, while Spotify handled streaming duties. Initially, I didn’t run into lags or UI freezing woes.

    But things changed after a few updates. While trying to reboot after the first OS update, I ran into a Windows installation error, which spiraled into a bootloop problem. I tried a few troubleshooting steps shared on the Windows community, but none of them could solve the “unexpected system error” problem I was facing with Windows on Arm.

    Dell support tried to fix it on a phone call, but ultimately decided to recall the laptop to avoid any further damage. Another accompanying issue was the constant whirring of the fan and a weird noise at each restart, as if something was stuck within the fins.

    After the windows installation issues were resolved, merely a month into setting up the laptop as my daily driver, I started noticing some unexpected hiccups. When connected to an external display and spreading my workflow across Chrome, I began running into unexpected lags and jitters.

    App windows often became non-responsive, or the system simply couldn’t register keyboard and trackpad inputs. A machine with this kind of firepower shouldn’t run into such stutters, and certainly not when you are paying a minimum of $1,300 for a laptop.

    The latest-gen MacBook Air, on the other hand, has only lifted the game even further. Apple is now offering 16GB of RAM for the same $999 asking price, and coupled with the advanced M4 silicon inside, this machine sets a new standard for laptop performance.

    The M4 also enables mesh shading, Dynamic Caching, and hardware-accelerated ray-tracing. Moreover, Apple’s own OS-level optimizations ensure that the MacBook Air is better than ever at demanding tasks such as video editing and coding.

    The performance hiccups I faced with the entry-level M3 MacBook Air (with 8GB RAM) are gone on its M4 successor. I’d gladly take that upgrade, because it blends a higher performance with improved functional reliability. I can’t say the same for Dell’s sleek XPS 13, and I’m not sure who is to blame here.

    The OS situation

    I had high hopes with the second incarnation of Windows on Arm, led by Qualcomm and its promising Oryon cores atop the Snapdragon X Elite laptop. The silicon has done its job just fine, bringing Qualcomm roughly in the same performance league as the venerable M-series processors by Apple.

    Moreover, beating Intel in its first attempt at native benchmarks is no small feat. That’s where the problems begin. You don’t buy a laptop based on its synthetic benchmark performance alone, or its sheer future potential.

    You spend real money on a laptop based on what it can accomplish out of the box. Apple did a fantastic job of transitioning macOS from x86 to Arm. Windows, on the other hand, has struggled.

    A Microsoft community member told me that the biggest challenge right now is convincing developers to embrace Prism emulation and optimize their stack for Windows on Arm. Adobe, for example, has done a decent job at optimizing its suite of professional software for Windows on Arm.

    But there are a few caveats. Take Premiere Pro, for example. In my most recent run on a Copilot+ PC powered by Snapdragon silicon, I couldn’t run ProRes RAW files or enable AC3 audio playback. Plus, it runs in emulation mode, so a performance hit is expected compared to native Windows on Arm support.

    Adobe After Effects is not supported, while InDesign and Illustrator have just entered the beta phase. Adobe Express and Adobe Firefly still run in emulated format, and aren’t native to Windows on Arm, yet.

    Going deeper into the realm of specialty software, your experience will be a hit or miss with emulators and gaming clients. Likewise, corporate VPNs, CAD software, and virtual machines remain a weak spot.

    Due to non-optimization, many platforms can’t fully tap into the NPU aboard Qualcomm’s silicon. You might even run into limitations at something as basic as printing documents, due to hassles with Arm64-specific printer drivers.

    The M4 MacBook Air, on the other hand, serves you none of those hassles. macOS is a mature platform, with its own set of well-known limitations and perks. You aren’t making a leap of faith with this one. You aren’t uncertain about software-specific compatibility. It’s either there, or it simply isn’t.

    And that’s what matters. At the end of the day, if a $999 laptop doesn’t raise any red flags, while a laptop that costs far higher asks for your trust (and patience with well-known software-hardware woes), the choice is pretty obvious.

  • The M4 MacBook Air is displaying some odd behavior we don’t understand yet

    People are getting their hands on the new M4 MacBook Air this week, which means they’re posting lots of discoveries about its performance (and the blueness of the new Sky Blue color). While editing photos in Lightroom Classic, YouTuber Vadim Yuryev noticed that the CPU workload was being handled almost completely by the laptop’s six efficiency cores.

    Spotted by Wccftech, this behavior is interesting because the image editing software is so CPU-intensive that anyone would assume it needed the performance cores to run. This was certainly the case for the M3 MacBook Air, which Yuryev shows using all four performance and all four efficiency cores to get the work done.

    We don’t know why this behavior has changed, how purposeful it is, or if it’s specific to Lightroom Classic — but the benefits could be significant. Keeping the efficiency cores busy and limiting the activity on the performance cores could improve battery life and keep temperatures down.

    That said, we don’t know from Yuryev’s post how well the software is running while in this state — we can assume he’s pointing it out because it’s running fine but we don’t know for sure.

    It’s also not entirely impossible that this is a bug of some kind — the performance cores are there to be used, after all, or else they’d be pointless. So the sheer amount of activity on the efficiency cores while the performance cores sit almost unused does seem quite odd.

    With outlets like Wccftech and tech influencers everywhere experimenting with this new model, we’ll likely find out soon whether this was a fluke or an intended feature of the new MacBook Air.

  • The MacBook Air proves you don’t need AI to create a world class laptop

    Our review of the M4 MacBook Air has just dropped, and it’s fair to say it’s one of the best laptops money can buy. For the first time ever, we gave it full marks and a five-star score, with our reviewer dubbing it “as close to perfect” as any laptop they’d seen. There’s no question that it raises the bar for thin and light laptops.

    You name it, the MacBook Air has it: impressive performance that belies its lightweight design, build quality that will stand the test of time, a quiet and fanless operation that ensures you can work in peace, a comfortable keyboard and expansive trackpad, and so much more.

    Yet there’s one thing that is conspicuous by its absence from Apple’s latest laptop: an outstanding artificial intelligence (AI) system.

    Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 rear view showing lid and logo.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    Sure, the MacBook Air doesn’t lack AI entirely: there’s Apple Intelligence, after all. But this is widely viewed as a poor choice among AI platforms and a long way behind its rivals. It’s not exactly what anyone would describe as ‘first class.’

    To me, that makes the M4 MacBook Air feel like an interesting antidote to the current AI frenzy. Right now, every laptop maker is trying to promote AI as a reason to buy their devices, Apple included. Read Apple’s MacBook Air press release and you’ll see the company tout Apple Intelligence’s “incredible capabilities … that make Mac even more helpful and powerful.”

    Yet you just have to spend a few minutes with Apple Intelligence to know that alternatives like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Copilot are far more capable and powerful. Apple was caught flat-footed by the AI explosion, and it still hasn’t caught up. But does that matter? The MacBook Air suggests it does not.

    Defying the AI bubble

    Apple's Craig Federighi discussing Apple Intelligence at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2024.
    Apple

    As our review shows, the MacBook Air has obliterated the competition despite its AI system, not because of it. If anything, it proves that the best laptops in the world don’t need AI to create incredible experiences for their users.

    In my opinion, that comes down to Apple absolutely nailing the basics. The M4 MacBook Air offers performance, longevity and build quality, all for a fair price. Its M4 chip is not only a step up over the previous M3, but it extends Apple’s lead across the entire industry. You won’t find a better trackpad or speakers on a laptop in this class, while the design exudes the kind of quality that’s almost unknown in a device this slim.

    That is what makes a great laptop, not artificial intelligence.

    I don’t think a revelation like this is going to slow down the proliferation of AI-enabled laptops any time soon. AI is an industry that is currently experiencing a massive boom (some might say a bubble) and there is money to be made. Company leaders clearly don’t feel like they can afford to miss out.

    But as the MacBook Air aptly demonstrates, AI is clearly not necessary to make a superb laptop. If anything, that’s the lesson we should take from Apple’s M4 MacBook Air.

    Do you need AI?

    Apple MacBook Air 13 M4 top down view showing keyboard and touchpad.
    Mark Coppock / Digital Trends

    If you’re a user looking to get a new laptop, the example of the M4 MacBook Air emphasizes that you should continue prioritizing those machines that get the core principles right. Instead of flashy AI, you’ll get the best experience from a laptop that solves the kinds of problems you actually face in your everyday computing life.

    When considering a laptop, you’ll need to ask a few questions. Does it meet your needs? Is it affordable? Will it last well into the future? For most people, those questions will be far more important than whether it can run Apple Intelligence or ChatGPT. Nine times out of ten, AI will only be a minor part of this equation, if it figures at all.

    In other words, it’s my opinion that the M4 MacBook Air proves that you shouldn’t get swept up by the AI hype. Buy the laptop that meets your needs instead.

    And perhaps it’s also a reminder to Apple: continue focusing on what users love and don’t let your vision be clouded by AI. The company is on the right track as it is. It shouldn’t sacrifice its ability to make great laptops on the altar of AI.

    There’s no way that Apple will suddenly stop working on AI. But if it can ensure it doesn’t divert its efforts away from the features its users care about the most — those features that have made the M4 MacBook Air so superb — everyone will be better off.