The MacBook Air has been an iconic laptop design since Steve Jobs slid it out of a manila envelope in 2008. This year’s model, which Apple just announced at WWDC and is also the first Apple laptop to come with an M2 chip, abandons the famous wedge shape but also improves almost everything else about the Air.

The first thing you notice? Colors! The new design is 11mm thick and weighs 2.7 pounds, and while it is now a more traditional slab-shaped design, it comes in a very handsome dark blue called “midnight” and a light gold called “starlight” in addition to the familiar silver and space gray.

The display is now larger at 13.6-inches and gets closer to the edge of the lid because the 1080p camera has been hidden in a notch. On this smaller unit the notch seems a little bigger than the MacBook Pros, but over time it seems likely to fade out of notice like every other display notch. The display is also able to hit 500 nits of brightness and supports the P3 wide color gamut for a billion colors, both nice improvements. We played with the camera a little bit and it looked great in Apple’s brightly-lit hands-on area, but we’ll have to test the company’s claims of 2x low light improvement over the old Air when we get a review unit.

Ports-wise, it’s not a lot, but the notable addition is MagSafe charging, which allows both Thunderbolt ports to stay available while charging. The audio jack supports high-impedence headphones, which is nice.

Of course the biggest change to the Air is inside the case, with the new M2 chip that Apple says offers 1.4x the performance of the M1 model, depending on the task, assuming you pick the one with an 8-core CPU and a 10-core GPU. That’s a $100 upsell over the standard M2 which has only 8 GPU cores; the laptop also comes with only 8GB of unified memory by default, with the 16GB and 24GB configurations respectively costing $200 and $400 more. During the keynote, Apple said the M2 MacBook Air offered 38 percent faster “video editing performance” and 20 percent faster “image filters and effects performance” but didn’t specify which apps it used for that benchmark.

Apple’s also quoting “18 hours” of battery life, but that number is for video playback with all the radios off — I’d assume the M2 gets the same stellar all-day battery life as the M1 Air, but 18 hours is definitely not realistic.

Developing…

Predicted gross volume.