Home > Buy Now > Laptops > New Version PC
 


H M H SPACEFLIGHTTECH CO.,LIMITED
 
icon Products

line

icon Company Profile
icon Selling Leads

line

 
Contact us
H M H SPACEFLIGHTTECH CO.,LIMITED
[China]
Address:
Unit 5G block 1 therthland shuibei 2th road teli industrial luohu district shenzhen china Shenzhen Guangdong 818020 China
Phone:
86-755-25502051
Contact name:
humphers , sales manager
Inquire now










H M H SPACEFLIGHTTECH CO.,LIMITED



 
Products

New Version PC

Inquire now

New Version PC

Click to enlarge image

 Model Number APPLE MACBOOK AIR MB003ZP

Apple Macbook Air Specification

Macbook Air (MB003ZP/A)
Processor 1.6GHz Intel Core2Duo processor.
with 4MB on-chip shared L2 cache running at full processor speed
800MHz frontside bus
Memory 2GB of 667MHz DDR2 SDRAM onboard
Hard disk drive 80GB 4200-rpm Parallel ATA hard disk drive
Display 13.3-inch (diagonal) glossy widescreen TFT LED backlit display with support for millions of colors, 1280 by 800 native resolution
Graphics Intel GMA X3100 graphics processor with 144MB of DDR2 SDRAM shared with main memory
Video Built-in iSight camera; micro-DVI output port with support for DVI, VGA, S-video, and composite video
(only micro-DVI to VGA adapter and micro-DVI to DVI adapter included. Other adapters sold separately
Wireless Built-in AirPort Extreme Wi-Fi (based on IEEE 802.11n draft specification); built-in Bluetooth 2.0+EDR (Enhanced Data Rate) module
USB One USB 2.0 port (up to 480 Mbps)
Audio Built-in mono speakers, built-in omnidirectional microphone, combined analog audio output/headphone out (minijack)
Input Full-size keyboard
Backlit keyboard with ambient light sensor for automatic adjustment of keyboard illumination and screen brightness
Solid-state trackpad with multi-touch gesture support for precise cursor control; supports two-finger scrolling, pinch, rotate, swipe, tap, double-tap, and drag capabilities
Weight with Battery 1.36 kg (3.0 pounds)
Footprint 32.5 cm by 22.7 cm (12.8 inches by 8.94 inches)
Thickness 0.4 - 1.94 cm (0.16 - 0.76 inch)
Battery 37-watt-hour lithium-polymer battery providing up to 5 hours of Wireless productivity (battery life)
Hardware accessories Apple 45W MagSafe Power Adapter, Lithium-polymer battery, micro-DVI to VGA adapter, micro-DVI to DVI adapter, Install/restore DVDs, Printed documentation, Cleaning/polishing cloth are included with your Macbook Air.
Limited warranty and service Your Mac pro comes with 90 days of free telephone support and a one-year limited warranty from Apple India. Purchase the Apple Nenterprise info pls contact su by MSN worldwideLaptoppccgene-spaceflightwirelesstelecommunicationalltd  or add my ICQ no:487 590 942 to extend your service and support to three full years. Only the AppleCare Protection Plan provides you with direct telephone support from Apple technical experts and the assurance that repairs will be handled by Apple-certified technicians using genuine Apple parts. For more information,
Software Included Mac OS X v10.5 Leopard (includes Time Machine, Quick Look, Spaces, Spotlight, Dashboard, Mail, iChat AV, Safari, Address Book, QuickTime, iCal, DVD Player, Xcode Developer Tools), iLife '08 (includes iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie HD, iDVD, iWeb, GarageBand)
Price in Indian Rupees
inclusive of taxes and shipping

Apple Macbook Air

1.6GHz Intel Core2Duo processor

Rs. 90,990 / Rs. 94,490 (VAT / CST)

(MRP Rs. 96,100)

Apple MacBook Air
Ralf Jurrien : January 23th 2008 - 17:55 CET
           
Apple MacBook Air : Apple unveiled MacBook Air, the world’s thinnest laptop. Apple MacBook Air measures an unprecedented 0.16-inches at its thinnest point, while its maximum height of 0.76-inches is less than the thinnest point on competing notebooks. Apple MacBook Air has a stunning 13.3-inch LED-backlit widescreen display, a full-size and backlit keyboard, a built-in iSight video camera for video conferencing, and a spacious trackpad with multi-touch gesture support so users can pinch, rotate and swipe. MacBook Air is powered by a 1.6 GHz or 1.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor with 4MB L2 cache, and includes as standard features 2GB of memory, an 80GB 1.8-inch hard drive, and the latest 802.11n Wi-Fi technology and Bluetooth 2.1.

MacBook Air thinnest notebook
Apple MacBook Air has a vibrant 13.3-inch LED-backlit glossy widescreen display that is energy efficient, and its spacious trackpad offers multi-touch gesture support for pinch, rotate and swipe, making it more intuitive than ever to browse and rotate photos or zoom into web pages in Safari. MacBook Air features a full-size keyboard design in a sleek and durable aluminum enclosure. The backlit keyboard makes it ideal for dimly lit environments such as airplanes, studios or conference halls, and a built-in ambient light sensor automatically adjusts the brightness of the keys as well as the display brightness for optimal visibility.

Steve Jobs about the MacBook Air
“We’ve built the world’s thinnest notebook without sacrificing a full-size keyboard or a full-size 13-inch display,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “When you first see Apple MacBook Air, it’s hard to believe it’s a high-performance notebook with a full-size keyboard and display. But it is.”

AirPort Extreme 802.11n Wi-Fi networking
Apple MacBook Air delivers up to five hours of battery life for wireless productivity and includes AirPort Extreme 802.11n Wi-Fi networking, which delivers up to five times the performance and twice the range of 802.11g. Apple’s Migration Assistant software now enables users to quickly transfer files, applications and preferences from your old Mac to MacBook Air right over your wireless network.

MacBook Air SuperDrive
MacBook Air users can buy the companion MacBook Air SuperDrive, a compact external drive designed for MacBook Air, for just $99. The 802.11n Wi-Fi networking MacBook Air SuperDrive is powered by MacBook Air’s USB port, eliminating the need to carry a separate power adapter. Many MacBook Air users will not find a need for an optical drive now that they can wirelessly rent movies from the iTunes Store, wirelessly backup files with Time Capsule and access the optical drives on remote PCs or Macs to wirelessly install software applications on MacBook Air.

Apple MacBook Air Specifications
MacBook Air is powered by Intel Core 2 Duo processors running at 1.6 GHz or 1.8 GHz, and includes as standard 2GB of memory and an 80GB 1.8-inch hard drive. An optional 64GB solid state drive contains no moving parts for added durability. Every MacBook Air includes a micro-DVI port so users can connect to Apple’s gorgeous 20-inch or 23-inch Cinema Displays to extend their desktop or connect to projectors and other displays via DVI, VGA, Composite and S-video adapters. MacBook Air includes USB 2.0 for plugging in peripherals or charging an iPod or iPhone, a headphone jack and Apple’s acclaimed MagSafe Power Adapter designed especially for mobile users.

MacBook Air notebook - Software
Every MacBook Air comes with iLife ‘08, the most significant update ever to Apple’s award-winning suite of digital lifestyle applications, featuring a major new version of iPhoto and a completely reinvented iMovie, both seamlessly integrated with the new .Mac Web Gallery for online photo and video sharing. The new Apple MacBook Air also comes with Leopard, the sixth major release of the world’s most advanced operating system. Leopard introduces Time Machine, an effortless way to automatically back up everything on a Mac; a redesigned Finder that lets users quickly browse and share files between multiple Macs; Quick Look, a new way to instantly see files without opening an application; Spaces, an intuitive new feature used to create groups of applications and instantly switch between them; a brand new desktop with Stacks, a new way to easily access files from the Dock; and major enhancements to Mail and iChat. .Mac members can use the new Back to My Mac feature to browse and access files on their home computer from a MacBook Air over the Internet while out on the road.

Apple MacBook Air Price & Availability
The new Apple MacBook Air embodies Apple’s continuing environmental progress with its aluminum enclosure, a material highly desired by recyclers; Apple’s first mercury-free LCD display with arsenic-free glass; and brominated flame retardant-free material for the majority of circuit boards as well as PVC-free internal cables. In addition, Apple MacBook Air consumes the least amount of power of any Mac, and its retail box, made primarily from 100 percent post-consumer recycled material, is 56 percent smaller by volume than the previously smallest MacBook packaging. The new Apple MacBook Air will be shipping in two weeks through the Apple Store, Apple’s retail stores and Apple Authorized Resellers for a suggested retail price of $1,799 (US).
MacBook Air Specifications
• 13.3-inch LED-backlit glossy widescreen display with 1280x800 resolution;
• 1.6 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor with 4MB L2 cache;
• 800 MHz front-side bus;
• 2GB of 667 MHz DDR2 SDRAM;
• 80GB hard disk drive with Sudden Motion Sensor;
• Intel Graphics Media Accelerator X3100;
• Micro-DVI port (includes Micro-DVI to VGA and Micro-DVI to DVI Adapters);
• built-in iSight video camera;
• built-in AirPort Extreme 802.11n wireless networking and Bluetooth 2.1+EDR;
• one USB 2.0 port;
• one headphone port;
• 45 Watt MagSafe Power Adapter;
• multi-touch TrackPad with support for advanced multi-touch gestures including tap, scroll, pinch, rotate and swipe.

MacBook Air Options & Accessories
Build-to-order options and accessories include the ability to upgrade to a 1.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor; 64GB solid state drive, MacBook Air SuperDrive, Apple USB Ethernet Adapter, Apple USB Modem, Apple MagSafe Airline Adapter, Apple Remote and the AppleCare Protection Plan. Additional build-to-order options also include pre-installed copies of iWork ‘08, Logic Express 8, Final Cut Express 4 and Aperture 1.5.

Apple's first new laptop since the company switeched to Intel processorss, the 15.4-inch MacBook Pro features a Centrino Core Duo Processor and, in doing so, ushers in a new era of Apple computing. Replacing the 15-inch PowerBook in the company's lineup, the MacBook Pro delivers many familiar, beloved features (a scrolling track pad, the Sudden Motion Sensor, an excellent software package), along with a few new ones.

While the Intel partnership gives Apple the potential to match the performance capabilities of its Windows-based competition, the first MacBook Pro, like the iMac Core Duo, shows signs of the growing pains Apple faces in switching to the new platform. We expect the company to work out these kinks as it transitions the remainder of its laptops to Intel, but beware: If you use Photoshop or other apps that are not native to the Mac OS, you will see diminished performance, forced as they are to run through Apple's stopgap Rosetta translation utility (more on this below). On the plus side, Apple recently released another utility, called Boot Camp, which lets you run Microsoft Windows XP on the MacBook Pro (and other Macs with Intel processors). So, if you have a PC version of Photoshop or another nonnative application, you can now install and run it (with no performance impediments) on a MacBook Pro running Windows XP. If all of that sounds like too much trouble, the HP Pavilion dv1000t and the Acer TravelMate 8200 offer superior performance (compared to nonnative applications running on the Mac OS) and many of the same features for a lower or equal price.

Design
With the MacBook Pro, Apple's hasn't radically redesigned the PowerBook form factor -- it has just made a few refinements to it. As such, the sleek, aluminum MacBook Pro looks very similar to the 15-inch PowerBook G4 -- just a tad wider, to accommodate the slightly larger 15.4-inch (diagonal) display, and a few millimeters thinner. Striking a successful compromise between portability and usability, the MacBook Pro weighs 1.69 kg --an ounce less than the PowerBook and toward the upper end of the thin-and-light category. The MacBook's AC adapter, which is larger and 85 grams heavier than the PowerBook's, brings the total package to 2.54 kg. One awesome innovation: the MacBook's AC adapter connects magnetically to the laptop, so if you accidentally trip over the cord, it will simply detach instead of sending your MacBook flying or tearing out the laptop's innards.

Underneath the lid, the MacBook Pro extends the tradition of the PowerBook's minimalist design. The MacBook Pro has just a power button; a big, keyboard framed by stereo speakers; a very large touch pad with a single mouse button; and one new feature: a handy built-in iSight camera that sits above the display. Though the keys are a bit shallow, they're wide, and we found them comfortable to type on; we also love the keyboard's backlighting feature, which adjusts to changes in ambient light levels. The touch pad lets you scroll through long documents, Web pages, and spreadsheets by dragging two fingers down or across the pad, a terrific feature that's unique to Apple laptops. The MacBook Pro's 15.4-inch (diagonal) wide-screen display features a fine 1,440x900 native resolution and looks noticeably brighter than the 15-inch PowerBook's display and about as bright as the average PC laptop display.

Features
Apple updates some of the PowerBook's ports and connections with the MacBook Pro and scales back a few others; overall, we think the MacBook Pro comes up a bit short of what you'll find on similarly priced PC laptops, such as the TravelMate 8200 and the Pavilion dv1000t. That said, the MacBook Pro features two USB 2.0 ports (fewer than most comparably sized PC laptops); a FireWire 400 port; an ExpressCard slot; and DVI and VGA ports for connecting to an external monitor. It's also equipped with Bluetooth 2.0+EDR (enhanced data rate), and you can access the Internet via 802.11g Wi-Fi radio and Gigabit Ethernet.

As with the PowerBook, the MacBook Pro features a slot-loading SuperDrive that plays and burns DVDs and CDs. One new extra is a small remote control, which looks like an iPod Shuffle, that controls the included Front Row multimedia player; we wish the MacBook had a storage slot for it (like the Pavilion dv1000t has for its remote). Unlike most PC laptops, however, the MacBook Pro lacks a built-in media reader for flash memory cards; also, there's no S-Video output, composite-video connection, FireWire 800 port or built-in modem -- all of which the PowerBook had.

The MacBook Pro ships with Mac OS X Tiger, highlights of which include the incredibly cool Spotlight search utility and the customisable Dashboard, a collection of handy desktop tools. Also included is the robust iLife '06 software suite and a handful of other apps; an equivalent batch of PC software could easily run hundreds of dollars.

Performance
The MacBook Pro comes in two standard configurations, each running Intel's new Core Duo processor: a 1.83GHz model for AU$3,199, and a 2.0GHz model for AU$3,999 (which you can upgrade to 2.16GHz for AU$460 more). We tested the base 1.83GHz version, which was equipped with 512MB of 667MHz DDR2 RAM; an ATI Mobility Radeon X1600 graphics card with 128MB of VRAM; and an 80GB 5,400rpm hard drive. In testing the MacBook Pro, we compared it against a number of older Apple laptops running the PowerPC processor, as well as a group of Windows-based laptops running Intel's Core Duo processor. As with the iMac Core Duo, which we tested in January, the results were mixed.

Apple has prepared its own software, such as iLife, to run with the new Intel processor and has developed a translation program called Rosetta to help the Intel Macs run older applications for the Mac. Not every software vendor has completed the necessary reprogramming to ensure full performance on the Intel Macs, however, so some applications, Photoshop and Sorenson Squeeze among them, run significantly slower -- slower than on even the lowest-end iBook. But Rosetta is required only when running the Mac OS; with Boot Camp, you can turn the MacBook Pro (and the other Intel-based Macs) into a dual-boot machine that runs full versions of Mac OS X and Windows XP.

After Boot Camp was released, we pitted a MacBook Pro running Windows XP against a MacBook Pro running Mac OS X, as well as the PC competition. We found that nonnative apps such as Photoshop run much faster in the Windows environment. We expect this performance delta to shrink or disappear altogether once more universal binary apps--nonnative Mac software built for the Intel platform--are released. Still, the transition is far from complete. Though Apple can boast of the hundreds of apps that do run natively on Intel-based Macs, Adobe's universal binary version of its next Creative Suite (which includes Photoshop) is likely more than a year away. Do note, however, that if you are currently frustrated by Photoshop performance on a MacBook Pro, you'll need to purchase the Windows version in order to do an end run around Rosetta and operate within Windows. You'll also need to pick up a copy of XP Home or Pro.

That said, the MacBook Pro runs native applications such as iTunes considerably faster than previous Apple laptops, and working within the OS just feels faster. We also found that applications that have been patched  for Apple-Intel machines, such as Unreal Tournament 2004, show serious speed gains; in UT2004, the MacBook turned in about twice as many frames per second as the 17-inch PowerBook G4, making it the first Apple laptop possibly worth gaming on. (Our testing of a MacBook Pro running Windows XP reinforced this finding.)

It's only a matter of time until the software catches up, and most major vendors have committed to the transition. We do recommend looking into your favorite apps -- especially if you use them for work -- to see how the compatibility is shaping up before making a purchase. CNET's iMac Core Duo review contains many more details about Rosetta, universal binary, and other issues related to application performance on the new Intel-powered Macs.

For such a portable laptop, it's a shame that the MacBook Pro's battery life comes up short. In our DVD battery-drain test, the MacBook Pro lasted for 2.9 hours -- a bit more than the 15-inch PowerBook we tested last summer, but still inferior to the PC competition. The TravelMate 8200 lasted for almost 3.5 hours and the Pavilion dv1000t just shy of 4 hours.

Support
Apple backs the MacBook Pro with an industry-standard one-year warranty that covers parts and labour, but toll-free telephone support is limited to a mere 90 days -- well short of what you'll typically find on the PC side -- unless you purchase the AU$579 AppleCare Protection Plan, which extends phone support and repair coverage to three years. By way of contrast, you can upgrade most PCs' warranties to three years of support for around AU$300. Apple does offer online troubleshooting, and its Web forums are a good resource to get tips from other users and download the product's printed manual.

 




Inquire now