Apple Goes Enterprise - A Third Kind of Notebook (
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Finally, there's the news Jobs announced Jan. 15. No, not the iPhone
news, although that's pretty nifty. I'm talking about the MacBook Air,
which Jobs called "a third kind of notebook." Now, first let me say that
when it comes to serious notebook use, I'm a big fan of ThinkPads. Yes,
they're more expensive, but they're built like little tanks, and,
better still from where I sit, Lenovo is finally selling models with preinstalled Novell SLED (SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop) 10.
But, oh me, oh my, that MacBook Air also has some of the features I
love in notebooks. It's tiny. It's about 3 pounds—bringing back fond
memories of my long-gone NEC UltraLite—and not quite ¾ of an inch thick
at its thickest. But, and this is a big one, it has a full-size
keyboard and a 13.3-inch display.
Now, much as I like the Linux-powered UMPC (ultramobile PCs) such as the ASUS Eee PC 4G and the forthcoming Everex CloudBook, their screens and keyboards are on the small side. Of course, they're also much cheaper.
The Air, which comes with 2GB of RAM, an 80GB standard hard drive
and 802.11n Wi-Fi, will cost $1,799. If you go for what Job called
the--gulp--"pricey" 64GB SSD (solid-state drive), it will cost more. How
much more? Try $999, according to the Apple Store--yes, you can pre-order
one now.
Check out images of the ultraslim MacBook Air here.
On the other hand, can you imagine what the battery life must be
like on this system? It has no moving parts whatsoever. No, it
doesn't even have a CD or DVD drive. For that you can either get an
exterior one or use Remote Disk to borrow a nearby PC's optical drive.
To me, Remote Disk will be enough. Lately, I find that I use optical
drives about as much as I ever did floppy drives on my notebooks, which
is another way of saying, I don't use them at all. If I need to manually
move data from place to place I use a USB drive.
Taken all-in-all, I look at the MacBook Air and I see the future of
business notebook computing. Come to think of it, my corporate laptop
is about five years old now. If someone in Ziff Davis Enterprise IT
thinks I could use a new one, I have a suggestion for them.
Add all this together and what do you get? I get a vision of offices
integrating Macs into both the office desktop and in the server room. I
see executives with MacBook Air laptops inside their briefcases.
Indeed, I see enterprises moving to superior Apple and Linux products
in place of the moribund Windows ecosystem.