I certainly understand the Intel and Nvidia issue, but that will not go over well even though there are some pros and cons between sticking with C2D or moving to Core-i.
It's not a new issue, but then, nothing has changed either. Apple finds 2x graphics performance and 20% less CPU performance in a smaller footprint better value than a Core-i3 system. All arguments will be rehash of the 13" MB/MBP arguments.
Who knows, maybe Apple will reveal some OpenCL driven UI magic in Mac OS X 10.7 or Mac OS XI that really needs the GPU. If so, this will make a lot of people happy, no?
It just hit me... 10.7 will not be dual boot, no need for it. OS X will simply just run all your iOS apps. Mac hardware is powerful enough to easily tackle virtually any iOS app, even in emulation or whatever.
What sucks is that i have no money. Hell, i'm using the library computers right now.
Sorry to hear that. I went broke in 2003-2004 buying all kinds of Apple stuff and selling them on eBay to buy new Apple gear. I kinda solved it by working in an Apple Reseller the past few years.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe hs;
(kinda off topic): Will there be another live stream of this event?
Hopefully. I think there should be.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shogun;
How about a sheet of paper? Too thin to be useful? How about a clipboard? In ten years the MBA will be the thickness of a clipboard. It'll stand by itself and the camera will watch your fingers type on the tabletop and input the text. Then, maybe, it'll be thin enough. Maybe.
Quote:
Originally Posted by FuturePastNow;
Proprietary storage is not cool, Apple.
Apple will not rest until everything is just a thin sheet of glass bordered in liquid metal. Or just borderless.
Let the ranting about nothing on the MBA being replaceable begin...!!!
It's not a new issue, but then, nothing has changed either. Apple finds 2x graphics performance and 20% less CPU performance in a smaller footprint better value than a Core-i3 system. All arguments will be rehash of the 13" MB/MBP arguments.
I don?t understand why it?s always assumed it will be a Core-i3 if it?s a SFF CULV. I?d think Apple would go for the SFF CULV Core-i7, then i5, and possibly not even touch the Core-i3.
Quote:
Originally Posted by nvidia2008
It just hit me... 10.7 will not be dual boot, no need for it. OS X will simply just run all your iOS apps. Mac hardware is powerful enough to easily tackle virtually any iOS app, even in emulation or whatever.
I?ve made mention before of an intermediate layer that can run iOS apps like the Xcode simulator, and not unlike the Front Row app that became the AppleTV UI. I don?t think anything but iPad apps would look good, but that is same with running iPhone/Touch apps on the iPad, too.
I’ve made mention before of an intermediate layer that can run iOS apps like the Xcode simulator, and not unlike the Front Row app that became the AppleTV UI. I don’t think anything but iPad apps would look good, but that is same with running iPhone/Touch apps on the iPad, too.
Ah but the OS X advantage is that your iOS apps don't have to run full-screen. IPhone apps would be like widgets in the "layer" like Dashboard or simply sit like a normal app in it's own window. Ditto for iPad apps, though those could run full-screen as well.
mention of a proprietary SSD drive is somewhat of surprise to me. i suppose it was customised for the MacBook Air form factor.
It was a surprise, but now that we've heard it you know it sounds 110% like what Apple would do.
Quote:
Originally Posted by myapplelove;
I am very worried about that 11.6 display...
won't it be too small? The only way I can see it not being small is if it's not 16:10. I sure hope apple do the right thing and add a 4:3 ratio one, really the vertical real estate of the 11.6 will be atrocious otherwise.
But then again apple are prone to a few idiocies (such as that horrid glass on the imacs and lappies) so I think they won't have the right aspect ratio in, which will be a shame.
I think it will be 16:10. Take a stroll through your local netbook store and see the display that will be in your MBA. The display will be LED, though not IPS, and while better quality than a netboook be similar ratios to what netbooks are.
I just hope it has a decent display. I'm not sure, it will probably have a crappy display. I just hope it is at least 1280x800 and I hope it has a decent sized trackpad.
A macbook air with an 11.6" display and at 16/10 or 16/9 screen aspect will be very wide, and unless they have a 2" thick bezel around the outside of the screen to give it depth, it's going to be hard to fit in a full sized keyboard and trackpad.
I hope for a 1280x800/720 screen but I can't see that happening.
Although, I am 90% certain we will see Macbook/13" MBP updates soon too. A 1440x900 13" display? i3 processor?
Ah but the OS X advantage is that your iOS apps don't have to run full-screen. IPhone apps would be like widgets in the "layer" like Dashboard or simply sit like a normal app in it's own window. Ditto for iPad apps, though those could run full-screen as well.
Out with the old dashboard - meet IOS. It makes sense... kinda. The trouble is that running IOS on OSX will be very messy. Especially since OSX has a 'finder' and IOS doesn't. The last thing Apple will want to do is confuse the simplicity of IOS and add a layer of complexity to OSX. But with millions of IOS users who have never been near OSX they are sure to try to capitalize on IOS. Somehow.
How about an iPad that can dual boot? When it is in its docking shell with a keyboard and track pad it can boot into OS X, when it is taken out it boots into iOS. When docked they could make the OS X partition sync with iOS. Or maybe the switching between the two OSs could be more seamless like parallels does the windows/OS X thing. Hey, one can dream right?
Let me preface this by saying I understand it's a dream, but you got me thinking, so...
I like the idea a lot, the execution seems like it would risk being confusing software-wise and inelegant hardware-wise. I'd imagine that it'd go straight into iOS with no reboot. Probably there'd be a SSD in the iPad part/screen part and a bigger SSD or HDD in the keyboard part and they sort of sync key specific folders into apps. Ignoring the notion that folders don't have anything to do with the iOS philosophy...
Software-wise: particularly when doing something with Microsoft Office that's on OS X, but not available for iOS, when you take off the iPad part on a whim, what happens to your work in the unsupported program? It just disappears? Is it securely saved on the keyboard part as it goes to sleep? People are going to wonder why they can't just finish their word doc when they split it. And to be elegant, it should just be available instantly but with a touchscreen keyboard instead of the physical in an iOS equivalent program. Before anyone says iWork... not enough people use that, especially at work. Plus there's other programs where this'd be a problem, Word's just a Prime example.
Hardware wise:
1. How are you going to have a keyboard that's able to be easily separated from the screen, yet still feel like a single, solid device when it's together? It'd be hard to make it feel solid like a unibody macbook.
2. Plus... you've got to be able to do something cool with the keyboard when the screen is undocked. If it's just sitting around useless, well that makes it clutter, especially if it's only designed to be docked with the iPad part. But then, if you give it the ability to hook up to a monitor like a standard mac, then you're going to be stuck with two basically separate computers doing two separate tasks and they'll never really link up without breaking one computer or the others work flow.
3.Or (assuming my software issue above were solved) what if you're doing a word doc on the full computer, then break off to the iPad part and continue working, then later you plug the keyboard into the monitor and go off in another direction with your story/report/whatever? Then you need to merge two dissimilar documents based on the same thing. That or you need to save another copy (to avoid overwriting) which might make you think twice about putting them back together at all. And you'd want to be encouraged to put them together effortlessly since they're supposed to be one thing.
I think it'd be really cool, don't get me wrong. But, I don't know how you'd solve this stuff in a slick way. Not even getting into the cost part of things, just as a concept it seems like it'd be difficult to execute. That said, if they do it, I want one too.
Seems to me there's a good reason the input method has persisted for so long. If we really want to predict the future on text input we need to come up with another, better, silent method for getting the text you want on the screen. Speaking won't cut it. No one wants to bear you writing and editing your paper.
So what would it be? Short of mind reading or tracking your eyes on the screen as the hover over letters, or ??? Typing will be around for a loooooong time.
Spot on!
Just imagine voice to text:
- Composing business correspondence, emails home or to significant other on a plane.
- An office with several computers being used.
- imagine the privacy issues, potential embarrassment and noise levels at internet cafes, any indoor public hot spot etc.
+ Might cut down a lot of the sexting problem with teens and others on smartphones.
I don't see speech ever replacing typing in a major way, in niche areas yes but not in general EVER.
I just hope it has a decent display. I'm not sure, it will probably have a crappy display. I just hope it is at least 1280x800 and I hope it has a decent sized trackpad.
A macbook air with an 11.6" display and at 16/10 or 16/9 screen aspect will be very wide, and unless they have a 2" thick bezel around the outside of the screen to give it depth, it's going to be hard to fit in a full sized keyboard and trackpad.
I hope for a 1280x800/720 screen but I can't see that happening.
1) Why would the display be ?crappy?? This isn?t something Apple typically does, especially not on their MacBook Air.
2) If it?s !6/9(sic) aspect ratio it can?t be 1280x800.
Every 11.6" screen on a notebook/netbook today is 16:9 and 1366x768.
The UI elements are tiny though. When Apple's philosophy is about the end user experience, I don't think they'd do this. The OS X UI running on an iPad is usable though:
And if they make it a tablet, too, you could have even more options for playing video. So far, the iPad is great for such things, but being “productive” on a flight isn’t one of its strong points if you need a typical PC app for business.
They could have a hinge that lets you flip the display almost right round but lets you prop it up like a tent with the screen facing you and the keyboard facing away. If they can run the OS in an 'iPad mode' in this configuration, you'd get pretty good battery life on a flight. The footprint would be even smaller too.
Quote:
Originally Posted by solipsism
I don’t get this. Why? 1280x800 sounds reasonable to me. It puts it around both the PPI of the high-res MBP displays and the iPad. In fact, it sounds too coincidental not to be expected..
Possibly, I just feel 1280 x 800 makes UI elements quite small on even a 13" screen. I think they'll stick to 13".
Quote:
Originally Posted by solipsism
25nm would be nice, but I doubt we’d see more than 256GB in such a machine. I’d thin it will be regulated as a satellite computer therefor not needing excessive storage.
I agree, I think this class of device can get by fine with at most 256GB and the PCI SSD chip rumour points to this being the case.
Quote:
Originally Posted by solipsism
I’ll be shocked if they use the same CULV C2D tech in the current MBPs. I’m fully expecting Core-i chips.
The picture in the new MBA design article has the heatsink going over two chips. It wouldn't have a 330M and IGPs don't work with the core-i series chips so it has to be an NVidia IGP plus Core 2 Duo. It's the only way Apple can get OpenCL running on a GPU.
Also AFAIK, Apple doen't use ULV chips in the Air.
Quote:
Originally Posted by nvidia2008
It was a surprise, but now that we've heard it you know it sounds 110% like what Apple would do.
It's not such a big issue for the MBA. Because they have 1.8" drives people would opt for an already difficult to upgrade SSD anyway. This is just a cheaper way of getting an SSD and it will be faster.
The UI elements are tiny though. When Apple's philosophy is about the end user experience, I don't think they'd do this. The OS X UI running on an iPad is usable though:
It is more than usable on my Dell Mini 10 HacBook and that's a resolution of 1024 x 600. Mind you, the hight is an issue sometimes, but as for size of UI elements, it's fine.
Quote:
Possibly, I just feel 1280 x 800 makes UI elements quite small on even a 13" screen. I think they'll stick to 13".
Did I miss something?. Doesn't the news clearly state there will be a 11,6" display?
Every 11.6" screen on a notebook/netbook today is 16:9 and 1366x768.
I'd also go with the already mentioned 16:9 option, because it will give the MBA enough width to still hold a full-sized keyboard. The screen bezel would have to be about the same size and at the same time the margin around the keyboard would have to go. At the moment Apple is using that margin to "sink" the keyboard so it doesn't touch the screen when the lid is closed. But they could make the keyboard look like the desktop keyboards and simply have a deeper rim around the screen bezel, so the lid would still seal the MBA when it's closed.
That's what I would do, but the reports said that the new MBA is pretty much a smaller version of the current one. If that refers not only to the "outside" (appearance with closed lid) but also the look of the MBA when its opened, I have no idea how Apple wants to fit a full-sized keyboard on that thing...
The anticipated problem with 16:9 is that there might not be a lot of space for a decent sized trackpad. On the other hand, the trackpad usually has the same aspect ratio as the screen, since it virtually represents the screen. So a trackpad for a 16:9 display doesn't need a lot of "hight".
Still in the "glossy sucks" crowd, eh? Quit whining.
I know you man, from mac rumors, i remember your nick, you can still post over there if you want to be a prick, it's a very conducive climate there for such attitudes.
They could have a hinge that lets you flip the display almost right round but lets you prop it up like a tent with the screen facing you and the keyboard facing away. If they can run the OS in an 'iPad mode' in this configuration, you'd get pretty good battery life on a flight. The footprint would be even smaller too.
And what happens to that keyboard when you use it as a tablet? It seems this type hinge would have to come with a case (or third components) so the keyboard could be hidden.
The other possibility could be a swivel at at the hinge, but also adds complexity.
Quote:
Possibly, I just feel 1280 x 800 makes UI elements quite small on even a 13" screen. I think they'll stick to 13?.
It would be in line with the PPI of the high res displays of the MBPs, so that is feasible, and it could be argued that this smaller display would likely be closer to the eyes than the 15 and 17? MBPs with high-res displays. Also, it puts it in line with the iPad resolution thus making iPad apps feasible.
Comments
I certainly understand the Intel and Nvidia issue, but that will not go over well even though there are some pros and cons between sticking with C2D or moving to Core-i.
It's not a new issue, but then, nothing has changed either. Apple finds 2x graphics performance and 20% less CPU performance in a smaller footprint better value than a Core-i3 system. All arguments will be rehash of the 13" MB/MBP arguments.
Who knows, maybe Apple will reveal some OpenCL driven UI magic in Mac OS X 10.7 or Mac OS XI that really needs the GPU. If so, this will make a lot of people happy, no?
What sucks is that i have no money. Hell, i'm using the library computers right now.
Sorry to hear that. I went broke in 2003-2004 buying all kinds of Apple stuff and selling them on eBay to buy new Apple gear. I kinda solved it by working in an Apple Reseller the past few years.
(kinda off topic): Will there be another live stream of this event?
Hopefully. I think there should be.
How about a sheet of paper? Too thin to be useful? How about a clipboard? In ten years the MBA will be the thickness of a clipboard. It'll stand by itself and the camera will watch your fingers type on the tabletop and input the text. Then, maybe, it'll be thin enough. Maybe.
Proprietary storage is not cool, Apple.
Apple will not rest until everything is just a thin sheet of glass bordered in liquid metal. Or just borderless.
Let the ranting about nothing on the MBA being replaceable begin...!!!
It's not a new issue, but then, nothing has changed either. Apple finds 2x graphics performance and 20% less CPU performance in a smaller footprint better value than a Core-i3 system. All arguments will be rehash of the 13" MB/MBP arguments.
I don?t understand why it?s always assumed it will be a Core-i3 if it?s a SFF CULV. I?d think Apple would go for the SFF CULV Core-i7, then i5, and possibly not even touch the Core-i3.
It just hit me... 10.7 will not be dual boot, no need for it. OS X will simply just run all your iOS apps. Mac hardware is powerful enough to easily tackle virtually any iOS app, even in emulation or whatever.
I?ve made mention before of an intermediate layer that can run iOS apps like the Xcode simulator, and not unlike the Front Row app that became the AppleTV UI. I don?t think anything but iPad apps would look good, but that is same with running iPhone/Touch apps on the iPad, too.
You can't get ahead of the competition without doing something new. And new things can't be a standard (though they could eventually become that).
Mmmm them kool-aid sure taste nice inside the walled garden, huh...
(Couldn't resist. I thought the trolls will be all over this...)
I’ve made mention before of an intermediate layer that can run iOS apps like the Xcode simulator, and not unlike the Front Row app that became the AppleTV UI. I don’t think anything but iPad apps would look good, but that is same with running iPhone/Touch apps on the iPad, too.
Ah but the OS X advantage is that your iOS apps don't have to run full-screen. IPhone apps would be like widgets in the "layer" like Dashboard or simply sit like a normal app in it's own window. Ditto for iPad apps, though those could run full-screen as well.
mention of a proprietary SSD drive is somewhat of surprise to me. i suppose it was customised for the MacBook Air form factor.
It was a surprise, but now that we've heard it you know it sounds 110% like what Apple would do.
I am very worried about that 11.6 display...
won't it be too small? The only way I can see it not being small is if it's not 16:10. I sure hope apple do the right thing and add a 4:3 ratio one, really the vertical real estate of the 11.6 will be atrocious otherwise.
But then again apple are prone to a few idiocies (such as that horrid glass on the imacs and lappies) so I think they won't have the right aspect ratio in, which will be a shame.
I think it will be 16:10. Take a stroll through your local netbook store and see the display that will be in your MBA.
A macbook air with an 11.6" display and at 16/10 or 16/9 screen aspect will be very wide, and unless they have a 2" thick bezel around the outside of the screen to give it depth, it's going to be hard to fit in a full sized keyboard and trackpad.
I hope for a 1280x800/720 screen but I can't see that happening.
Although, I am 90% certain we will see Macbook/13" MBP updates soon too. A 1440x900 13" display? i3 processor?
Ah but the OS X advantage is that your iOS apps don't have to run full-screen. IPhone apps would be like widgets in the "layer" like Dashboard or simply sit like a normal app in it's own window. Ditto for iPad apps, though those could run full-screen as well.
Out with the old dashboard - meet IOS. It makes sense... kinda. The trouble is that running IOS on OSX will be very messy. Especially since OSX has a 'finder' and IOS doesn't. The last thing Apple will want to do is confuse the simplicity of IOS and add a layer of complexity to OSX. But with millions of IOS users who have never been near OSX they are sure to try to capitalize on IOS. Somehow.
How about an iPad that can dual boot? When it is in its docking shell with a keyboard and track pad it can boot into OS X, when it is taken out it boots into iOS. When docked they could make the OS X partition sync with iOS. Or maybe the switching between the two OSs could be more seamless like parallels does the windows/OS X thing. Hey, one can dream right?
Let me preface this by saying I understand it's a dream, but you got me thinking, so...
I like the idea a lot, the execution seems like it would risk being confusing software-wise and inelegant hardware-wise. I'd imagine that it'd go straight into iOS with no reboot. Probably there'd be a SSD in the iPad part/screen part and a bigger SSD or HDD in the keyboard part and they sort of sync key specific folders into apps. Ignoring the notion that folders don't have anything to do with the iOS philosophy...
Software-wise: particularly when doing something with Microsoft Office that's on OS X, but not available for iOS, when you take off the iPad part on a whim, what happens to your work in the unsupported program? It just disappears? Is it securely saved on the keyboard part as it goes to sleep? People are going to wonder why they can't just finish their word doc when they split it. And to be elegant, it should just be available instantly but with a touchscreen keyboard instead of the physical in an iOS equivalent program. Before anyone says iWork... not enough people use that, especially at work. Plus there's other programs where this'd be a problem, Word's just a Prime example.
Hardware wise:
1. How are you going to have a keyboard that's able to be easily separated from the screen, yet still feel like a single, solid device when it's together? It'd be hard to make it feel solid like a unibody macbook.
2. Plus... you've got to be able to do something cool with the keyboard when the screen is undocked. If it's just sitting around useless, well that makes it clutter, especially if it's only designed to be docked with the iPad part. But then, if you give it the ability to hook up to a monitor like a standard mac, then you're going to be stuck with two basically separate computers doing two separate tasks and they'll never really link up without breaking one computer or the others work flow.
3.Or (assuming my software issue above were solved) what if you're doing a word doc on the full computer, then break off to the iPad part and continue working, then later you plug the keyboard into the monitor and go off in another direction with your story/report/whatever? Then you need to merge two dissimilar documents based on the same thing. That or you need to save another copy (to avoid overwriting) which might make you think twice about putting them back together at all. And you'd want to be encouraged to put them together effortlessly since they're supposed to be one thing.
I think it'd be really cool, don't get me wrong. But, I don't know how you'd solve this stuff in a slick way. Not even getting into the cost part of things, just as a concept it seems like it'd be difficult to execute. That said, if they do it, I want one too.
(pardon my lazy writing, I'm beat)
Seems to me there's a good reason the input method has persisted for so long. If we really want to predict the future on text input we need to come up with another, better, silent method for getting the text you want on the screen. Speaking won't cut it. No one wants to bear you writing and editing your paper.
So what would it be? Short of mind reading or tracking your eyes on the screen as the hover over letters, or ??? Typing will be around for a loooooong time.
Spot on!
Just imagine voice to text:
- Composing business correspondence, emails home or to significant other on a plane.
- An office with several computers being used.
- imagine the privacy issues, potential embarrassment and noise levels at internet cafes, any indoor public hot spot etc.
+ Might cut down a lot of the sexting problem with teens and others on smartphones.
I don't see speech ever replacing typing in a major way, in niche areas yes but not in general EVER.
I just hope it has a decent display. I'm not sure, it will probably have a crappy display. I just hope it is at least 1280x800 and I hope it has a decent sized trackpad.
A macbook air with an 11.6" display and at 16/10 or 16/9 screen aspect will be very wide, and unless they have a 2" thick bezel around the outside of the screen to give it depth, it's going to be hard to fit in a full sized keyboard and trackpad.
I hope for a 1280x800/720 screen but I can't see that happening.
1) Why would the display be ?crappy?? This isn?t something Apple typically does, especially not on their MacBook Air.
2) If it?s !6/9(sic) aspect ratio it can?t be 1280x800.
3) What is a "1280x800/720 screen??
Either Jobs was wrong or the iPad is not a computer.
Apple never said it was.
Or the iPad is a piece of junk.
A very profitable piece of junk.
Wow with sources like this ... it must be a done deal!
Just wait until you hear what a third person said. Prepare to have mind blown.
How about an MBA with a touch screen and an OSX Touch/Legacy OS -- a transitional system, if you will?
,
Every 11.6" screen on a notebook/netbook today is 16:9 and 1366x768.
The UI elements are tiny though. When Apple's philosophy is about the end user experience, I don't think they'd do this. The OS X UI running on an iPad is usable though:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hnra9p0GtuE
And if they make it a tablet, too, you could have even more options for playing video. So far, the iPad is great for such things, but being “productive” on a flight isn’t one of its strong points if you need a typical PC app for business.
They could have a hinge that lets you flip the display almost right round but lets you prop it up like a tent with the screen facing you and the keyboard facing away. If they can run the OS in an 'iPad mode' in this configuration, you'd get pretty good battery life on a flight. The footprint would be even smaller too.
I don’t get this. Why? 1280x800 sounds reasonable to me. It puts it around both the PPI of the high-res MBP displays and the iPad. In fact, it sounds too coincidental not to be expected..
Possibly, I just feel 1280 x 800 makes UI elements quite small on even a 13" screen. I think they'll stick to 13".
25nm would be nice, but I doubt we’d see more than 256GB in such a machine. I’d thin it will be regulated as a satellite computer therefor not needing excessive storage.
I agree, I think this class of device can get by fine with at most 256GB and the PCI SSD chip rumour points to this being the case.
I’ll be shocked if they use the same CULV C2D tech in the current MBPs. I’m fully expecting Core-i chips.
The picture in the new MBA design article has the heatsink going over two chips. It wouldn't have a 330M and IGPs don't work with the core-i series chips so it has to be an NVidia IGP plus Core 2 Duo. It's the only way Apple can get OpenCL running on a GPU.
Also AFAIK, Apple doen't use ULV chips in the Air.
It was a surprise, but now that we've heard it you know it sounds 110% like what Apple would do.
It's not such a big issue for the MBA. Because they have 1.8" drives people would opt for an already difficult to upgrade SSD anyway. This is just a cheaper way of getting an SSD and it will be faster.
Mmmm them kool-aid sure taste nice inside the walled garden, huh...
I don't know what you mean about Kool-aid, it's just logic: if you use the same technologies as everyone else you'll be at the same place as them.
The UI elements are tiny though. When Apple's philosophy is about the end user experience, I don't think they'd do this. The OS X UI running on an iPad is usable though:
It is more than usable on my Dell Mini 10 HacBook and that's a resolution of 1024 x 600. Mind you, the hight is an issue sometimes, but as for size of UI elements, it's fine.
Possibly, I just feel 1280 x 800 makes UI elements quite small on even a 13" screen. I think they'll stick to 13".
Did I miss something?. Doesn't the news clearly state there will be a 11,6" display?
EDIT:
Hm, you might be right after all....
http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/16/i...w-macbook-air/
/EDIT
Every 11.6" screen on a notebook/netbook today is 16:9 and 1366x768.
I'd also go with the already mentioned 16:9 option, because it will give the MBA enough width to still hold a full-sized keyboard. The screen bezel would have to be about the same size and at the same time the margin around the keyboard would have to go. At the moment Apple is using that margin to "sink" the keyboard so it doesn't touch the screen when the lid is closed. But they could make the keyboard look like the desktop keyboards and simply have a deeper rim around the screen bezel, so the lid would still seal the MBA when it's closed.
That's what I would do, but the reports said that the new MBA is pretty much a smaller version of the current one. If that refers not only to the "outside" (appearance with closed lid) but also the look of the MBA when its opened, I have no idea how Apple wants to fit a full-sized keyboard on that thing...
The anticipated problem with 16:9 is that there might not be a lot of space for a decent sized trackpad. On the other hand, the trackpad usually has the same aspect ratio as the screen, since it virtually represents the screen. So a trackpad for a 16:9 display doesn't need a lot of "hight".
Still in the "glossy sucks" crowd, eh? Quit whining.
I know you man, from mac rumors, i remember your nick, you can still post over there if you want to be a prick, it's a very conducive climate there for such attitudes.
They could have a hinge that lets you flip the display almost right round but lets you prop it up like a tent with the screen facing you and the keyboard facing away. If they can run the OS in an 'iPad mode' in this configuration, you'd get pretty good battery life on a flight. The footprint would be even smaller too.
And what happens to that keyboard when you use it as a tablet? It seems this type hinge would have to come with a case (or third components) so the keyboard could be hidden.
The other possibility could be a swivel at at the hinge, but also adds complexity.
Possibly, I just feel 1280 x 800 makes UI elements quite small on even a 13" screen. I think they'll stick to 13?.
It would be in line with the PPI of the high res displays of the MBPs, so that is feasible, and it could be argued that this smaller display would likely be closer to the eyes than the 15 and 17? MBPs with high-res displays. Also, it puts it in line with the iPad resolution thus making iPad apps feasible.