MacBook Air (2022): rumors, news and leaks

Apple MacBook Air is currently sitting comfortably at the top of our list for the best Apple laptops and the best laptops on the market that you can buy now, and for good reasons. One of the most popular Apple products, this portable premium feeling is the most affordable MacBook on the market, making it accessible for professionals and students who work together.

It has been a full year since Apple revealed MacBook Air (M1, 2020) on November 2020, along with other Apple silicon products such as 13-inch MacBook Pro (M1, 2020), and Mac Mini (2020).

When we approached the first birthday, silicon-powered MacBook Air could be caused by a refresh design, and rumors all point to the next generation of Apple launched on October 18 at the company’s autumn 2021 event.

The MacBook Air currently offers an Apple M1 8-core system on the chip (SOC) that integrates CPU, GPU, and other essential inner jobs into a strong single chip. While the design remains unchanged since 2018, the latest model shook the 3.5x CPU faster and 5x GPU faster than the previous version supported by Intel.

Along with the other benefits we expected to proceed to MacBook Air 2022, you also have a fanless design for the silent and battery work, which even if it remains unchanged giving the longest battery life seen on a Mac laptop.

While the current model is a fantastic product, there will be an increase that will be carried out, with many rumors who suggest that complete redesign planned which will display colorful chassis spectrum to be chosen, inspired by classic MAC products, as we see with 2021 IMAC and 4th generation iPad air release.

The current webcam remains at 720p even though 1080 resolutions for broadcasting cameras are standard for some time now (with new iMac also displays enhanced full HD webcam), and the MacBook Air enhanced M1 is actually a step back about connecting to additional display because you can only Run one external monitor with the current model. For context, the last Intel-based MacBook Air can run two 4K external monitors, so we might see this feature back.

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