The MacBook Air has always been the sensible choice — great battery, light enough to forget it’s in your bag. What it’s never been is the one that makes MacBook Pro owners feel slightly embarrassed. Until now, apparently.
When Apple switched the M5 MacBook Air to PCIe 4.0 NAND flash, it didn’t just make it faster than its predecessor — it made it faster than some M4 Pro MacBook Pro models too.
Digital Trends
Benchmark numbers that raise eyebrows
NotebookCheck’s hands-on review of the 13-inch M5 MacBook Air, using the Blackmagic Disk Speed Test, puts the numbers on the table:
Model
Read (5GB)
Write (5GB)
vs. M5 Air (Read)
vs. M5 Air (Write)
MacBook Pro 14 M5
6,752.1 MB/s
6,194.2 MB/s
+4.31% faster
−5.57% slower
MacBook Air 13 M5
6,473.4 MB/s
6,558.6 MB/s
—
—
MacBook Pro 16 M4 Pro
5,401.3 MB/s
6,713.2 MB/s
−19.85% slower
+2.30% faster
MacBook Air 15 M4
2,904.0 MB/s
3,023.9 MB/s
−122.91% slower
−116.89% slower
On reads, the M5 Air clears the M4 Pro MacBook Pro 16 by nearly 20%. On writes, the M4 Pro edges back by just 2.3% — a gap so small it wouldn’t show up in any real-world task you threw at it.
Chris Hagan / Digital Trends
The quiet upgrade Apple didn’t talk about much
The jump over the M4 MacBook Air is where things get a little hard to believe. Over 122% faster on reads, nearly 117% faster on writes. That’s not a spec sheet footnote — two drives this far apart don’t feel like the same product category.
Day-to-day, it adds up faster than you’d expect. That big RAW wedding shoot that used to grind away on import? Done before you’ve poured your coffee. ProRes footage off the internal drive no longer feels like a gamble.
And if you’re running local AI models, the difference between waiting and not waiting is exactly this kind of storage speed. For a laptop that starts at $1,099, none of this was supposed to be part of the conversation. Apple barely mentioned it at launch, which — in hindsight — was a strange call.
I spend an unhealthy amount of time lurking in communities where people share aesthetic desktop setups. One of my friends recently set the group chat on fire with a triple monitor setup that had two vertical screens and an ultrawide curved panel at the center. An impulse swipe later, I achieved a similar makeover for my desk at home.
Here’s the problem, though. My $600 workstation overhaul did bring me visual joy, but not much utility. For reporting assignments, I spend the majority of the year away from home, working from deserted cafes or unnaturally uncomfortable bunk beds. I do miss the convenience of large secondary screens. Interestingly, that yearning is addressed by a rather unconventional device —the humble iPad.
Over the past couple of years, I have carried iPads in all shapes and sizes. From the tiny iPad mini and the entry-level iPad to the 13-inch iPad Pro. I have used them extensively for video editing, photo touch-ups, gaming, and reading comics. But the best utility that I’ve got from Apple’s tablet is pushing it as an external monitor.
The problems an iPad solves
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
There is no dearth of minimalist monitors out there. Some are even thinner than the MacBook Air, while a few snap right to the lid, like some protective case. However, there are a few fundamental issues with external monitors, even if you aren’t vexed by lugging one around in your bag.
First, they burden you with the hassle of a wired connection. That, in itself, is troublesome for a couple of reasons. It leads to unnecessary wire clutter. Plus, plugging in an external monitor means you lose one port, for as long as you are working.
In the age of ultra-sleek laptops, ports are a luxury. The MacBook Air, for example, only features a couple of ports. That means you will have to juggle between charging and peripheral connection with the other USB-C port, but can’t do any of it simultaneously.
Yes, that is a full-fledged macOS running on the iPad mini.Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
If your profession entails handling heavy media files, plugging in (or out) external storage is a part of the daily routine. And that means you really a free port always at your disposal. The solution? Of course, prepare to live the dongle life. Or fork out extra cash for a dongle.
The biggest problem of them all? Power draw. You may not always have a power outlet at your disposal, especially if you are someone who works on the move or away from home. I recently tried a sleek external monitor from Arzopa, and quite liked it. But booking up to my laptop drained its battery, and I quickly found myself hunting for a power port.
So there I was, juggling with power bricks, wires, and port anxiety, once again. The iPad solves all those problems in one go. You don’t need any cables. You aren’t burdened by a power-sipping peripheral. You aren’t tasked with handling a clunky third-party app. The iPad is just ready.
The world’s most convenient monitor
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
The Apple ecosystem is just seamless.
No situation exemplifies the above argument better than pairing an iPad to your Mac. Actually, no pairing process is involved. As long as your Mac and iPad are signed in with the same Apple account, you’re good to go. No pain-in-the-back Bluetooth pairing or manual Wi-Fi tethering is needed.
Just bring the two devices close, and it’s a smooth-sailing journey from there. All you need to do is expand the control center, click on the screen mirroring icon, and select your iPad from the drop-down menu. Heck, you can skip that, too.
Just hover the cursor over the green window shortcut in any Mac app, and you will see a dedicated option that says “move to iPad.” A click is all it takes to move that app to your iPad’s screen. That’s it. Your external display is now in action mode.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
In fact, you don’t have to worry about unlocking your iPad. Even in a locked state, you just have to click on the aforementioned window control on your Mac, and it will open on your iPad’s screen directly. No unlock or preparatory setup is needed across either device.
There is nothing that comes even close to this kind of seamless interplay between two entirely different classes of devices — separated across operating systems — except the Apple ecosystem.
Pushing an iPad as a secondary screen
My workflow is divided across more apps than I’d like. Technically, I can access a healthy few of them across browser tabs, but juggling between them is a hassle. I’d much rather hit the Command+Tab shortcut to shift between apps than head back to the mouse, find the appropriate tab, and switch back and forth. Apps, or web instances running as apps, do the job for me.
Moreover, with browsers, it becomes a chore to track the notifications on platforms such as Slack and Discord, where multiple buzzy channels can quickly throw your zen into disarray. It becomes difficult to track such conversations spread across multiple browser tabs.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
Apps, therefore, are the most convenient option for me. Of course, that means dedicated windows for each of them. But there’s only so much screen real estate you have on a 13-inch laptop, even with Stage Manager, you only get a partial reprieve.
With an iPad coming into the picture, I can safely switch at least two non-important or chat apps, in split-screen mode on the iPad. That leaves wme ith a near obstructed view of the apps that make up the bulk of my workflow, right in front of my eyes on the laptop screen.
In my case, Teams and Slack usually go on the iPad. Off the work hours, it’s usually a no-distraction slate for writing articles. When I have the iPad Pro handy, photo and video editing is deployed on the tablet’s OLED screen due to the superior color output.
I love that the macOS clipboard works just fine with iPadOS, too.Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
In the lowest-stakes scenario, the iPad mini simply serves as a screen for music playback control, watching lecture videos, or keeping an eye on my social media feed for gathering breaking news events.
A surprising OS versatility
One of the nicest things about Sidecar — the inherent tech that allows an iPad to work well alongside a Mac — is the OS flexibility. You can choose to either wirelessly mirror or extend the screen of your Mac to an iPad. But here’s the nicest part.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
Apple’s Universal Control tech allows you to use the Mac’s monitor as the input source on a nearby iPad. And once again, there’s no complex setup required. All you need to do is drag the cursor towards the screen edge near the iPad, and voila, your Mac’s keyboard and touchpad now serve as input devices on the tablet, too.
That means I can control the tablet running iPadOS, and interact with mobile apps in their natural state. It may not sound like much from a functional perspective, but this convenience slowly grows on you. For example, social media platforms such as X or TikTok work better as an app.
Compared to desktop apps, especially task management platforms where the workflow is updated in the cloud, I’ve found mobile apps to be the snappier option. What they lack in features, they make up for with speed and fluidity.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends
Plus, it’s easier to track notifications on a mobile device compared to a desktop environment. Despite the OS disparity, there is virtually no input, and I can easily copy-paste material across both devices.
I do a lot of standalone work on my iPad Pro, and even used the baseline iPad for the better part of a whole year, but the inherent limitations of iPadOS often repulse me. Overall, my iPads — of which I have an unhealthy number lying on my desk — have found more utility as a secondary screen for my Mac than standalone tablets.
I just wish could solve some of the scaling and screen rotation bugs. And while at it, maybe, enable Stage Manager for the iPad mini, now that it is technically ready from a hardware perspective.
Next to Black Friday, Prime Day is a great time to buy hardware from Amazon and Apple. On the latter brand, we’re seeing some of the best prices to date for the latest models of iPads, AirPods and AirTags, to name a few. And if you’re in the market for a new laptop, it’s also a great time to buy a MacBook, with prices starting at a record low $849 for the latest MacBook Air. It’s currently Engadget’s top pick on our best laptop list.
Here’s why: They get you in the door for that sub-$1,000 price, which is an enticing $250 less than you’d spend at the Apple Store. But Apple is notoriously stingy on memory and storage for its devices: The baseline model only has 8GB of RAM and a 256GB drive. That’s fine if you’re only using your laptop for the basics – say, social media, streaming video and light document creation. But even with cloud storage, that SSD will fill up very quickly with photos, audio and video if you’re doing anything creative. (Yes, you can get external USB drives, but they’re slower and ruin the lines of Apple’s sleek laptop.) And while Apple does a great job of managing software resources on the Mac, that 8GB of memory feels like a low ceiling.
So here’s what I did when Amazon ran a version of this same deal a few months ago: I paid to double both specs. For $1,249 (after clipping that same $50 on-screen coupon), you get 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage. Yes, a terabyte or more would be even better, but you pick your battles. And this configuration still saves you a cool $250 off the Apple Store price for the same configuration, while being a lot more future-proofed. For instance, if you’re laptop shopping for a high school or college student, this stepped-up model will survive a 4-year academic stint with more comfort than that $849 version.
If that’s still too steep, you can split the difference with the 512GB MacBook Air M2. It doesn’t have the extra RAM, but the otherwise identical slightly older model still gets you a very capable, modern Apple laptop with decent storage for just $999. But don’t wait: these laptop deals end today, and we don’t know if we’ll be seeing them again before Black Friday.
Your Prime Day Shopping Guide: See all of our Prime Day coverage. Shop the best Prime Day deals on Yahoo Life. Follow Engadget for Prime Day tech deals. Hear from Autoblog’s experts on the best Amazon Prime Day deals for your car, garage, and home, and find Prime Day sales to shop on AOL, handpicked just for you.