Hands-On With the MacBook Air 15-Inch – CNET

After getting some hands-on time with the new 15-inch MacBook Air, introduced at WWDC 2023, I can safely say that it feels like… a slightly bigger 13-inch MacBook Air. And to me, that’s a good thing.

I always thought a 15-inch Air was a good idea, even back when I first wrote about the concept about a decade ago. A MacBook Pro is an expensive investment, at least $2,000 today, but sometimes you just want a bigger screen, not necessarily the faster processors, extra ports or other MacBook Pro features.

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MacBook Air 15-inch M2 MacBook Air 15-inch M2

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Apple promises 18 hours of battery life and, again, based on what I know of current MacBook specs and performance, that doesn’t sound unreasonable. With the same overall design and same chip, what you gain with the larger 15-inch body is… a larger battery. If you opened up the chassis of your current MacBook Air, you’d find it’s basically a huge battery inside, with some computer components crammed in alongside it. Bigger body, bigger battery, more battery life.

The 15-inch Air is fanless, because it’s using the same M2 chip as the fanless 13-inch model, and the bigger chassis gives it even more room for passive airflow and cooling, so that doesn’t surprise me.

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The screen is already high-res enough that moving up to 15 inches doesn’t affect sharpness. There’s a very tiny bump to the screen resolution over the 13-inch, going from 2,560×1,664 to 2,880×1,864 pixels. And carrying the system in my hand, it felt light enough that I could cart it around in my shoulder bag, although for an everyday commute I’d still probably stick with the 13-inch Air. Both come in the same starlight, midnight, space gray and silver color options. 

One of the things I liked most about the 15-inch Air is something I predicted in my WWDC preview from a few weeks ago. Since it’s the same basic design, same chip, and mostly the same features and capabilities as the 13-inch Air, there was no reason to give it a big price bump. And indeed, the 15-inch Air starts at $1,299 (£1,399, AU$2,199), which strikes me as reasonable. Especially when the 13-inch M2 Air was, until today, $1,199 — it just got a price chop on its one-year anniversary to $1,099. So the bigger screen is now a $200 add-on, which isn’t nothing, but also isn’t as bad as it could be.

This is based on my very brief hands-on time with the device at WWDC, and I look forward to getting a deeper look at the 15-inch MacBook Air in the near future.

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