A review on M1 MacBook Air

· river's blog

TL;DR - decent

# Introduction

I had this thing for almost 3 years, it was gifted to me on my birthday and is technically my first ever computer - before that I was using my dad's old laptop. After (youtuber buzzword) daily-driving it for so long I came up with a list of pros/cons. Not that I recommend it to anyone, mostly just a list for me to remind me never to buy Apple products in the future.

# Pros

# The chip is truly jawesome.

Putting credit where it's due - Apple's chips are really good. I do think they cheated a little bit by using ARM architecture instead of regular x86_64. It's overpowered for things I do, which are basic browsing, usual Premiere Pro editing and occasional GIMP'ing.

# Resell value will be close-ish to original price.

That's just a thing with all Apple products, they resell better than everything else.

# The battery lasts...

Period. I'm not going to say it's bad, but it's not good either. On an average day, I come back home with around 50-60% of battery. However, if I use Premiere Pro, that number takes a dip into 20%'s. Too close for my comfort, but at least it's not dead.

# Linux support is good-ish.

Asahi Linux has come a long way, and though I don't use it anymore, in my short 1 month experiment I found that for daily use it's really close to completion. I wish Apple would open-source some stuff inside but that'll never happen.

# Speakers are awesome.

Apple is all in on audio stuff, they talk a lot about it during presentations and it shows. Once again, credit where it's due.

# Cons

# MacOS sucks.

It's just not for me. I don't like it. I do appreciate the fact that it's UNIX-based, but that's about it. Window management - awful, it doesn't even have hot corners. I have to use 3rd party tools like yabai to make window management feasible, which is fun in a way? But I wish it was stock.

# Oh you have csrutil disabled? Too bad.

To make yabai work, I have to disable system integrity, which "can leave my system in unusable state" which is fair enough. The system prevents you from starting App Store apps.

"App" can't be opened because Security Policy is set to Permissive Security

Something something "le security!!! and and privacy!!". Apple will keep being Apple, there's no changing that.

# You can't remove stock apps in Finder.

I've never used Chess. Even with sudo privileges I can't delete stock apps. They don't take up much space but I just don't want them there. Why is this an issue?

With that, you also can't change Finder icons since Catalina/Big Sur. I have a theme going on with old icons, and this stupid smiling face just won't go. Purely an inconvinience.

# Ports, or lack thereof.

All you get is 2 Type C's with Thunderbolt and a headphone jack. Want to plug anything else? Buy a "dongle" - what a silly name. It is not enough even for daily use - for average workflow, I want power, Type A mouse and HDMI monitor. And the lack of diversity in the ports isn't helping either! At least there's a headphone jack.

# Repairability.

In the past 10 or more years Apple has come under fire of R2R activists and for a good reason - their products are impossible to fix. With new MacBooks simple upgrades like RAM or storage are impossible, as everything is soldered to the board or is on the chip. It sucks because those 2 components are very prone to breaking and wearing out over time, so once your storage dies it's over. In fact I already had a scare around the time I was putting Asahi on; my disk wouldn't get partitioned because it was corrupted, though that was fixed after running First Aid for about a dozen times.

# No touchscreen, or at least a matte screen.

Purely a personal nitpick. It doesn't change much, but a glossy screen with no touchscreen is just asking to be touched and covered in fingerprints.

# THERE IS NO FAN IN THIS.

What were they thinking?? I get it, it's a cheaper, more average consumer oriented model, but not putting even a small fan was a dubious decision. Whenever I render in Premiere Pro, it becomes so hot to touch it's actually painful. Talk about compromises for that tiny bit of slimness.

# Conclusion

Though I hate this laptop with passion, I'm going to use it for as long as it's resell value is above 500. I'll occasionally dump my entire ~ folder to a separate drive just so that I won't kill myself when the inevitable comes. My next laptop would probably be a smaller Framework, they're all in on repairability and I'm more comfortable with Linux than MacOS. Only time will tell.