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I ran across an
interesting rumor on AppleInsider this morning: Apple may be
considering a 14" MacBook Air just for the Asian market, where that
screen size accounts for 40% of all notebook sales. (Western markets
prefer a 15" screen.)
Apple Has Done It Before
If
this is true, it won't be the first time Apple has produced a Mac
especially for the Asian market. The first was the 1993 Colour Classic II
(left), a 33 MHz update to the original 16 MHz Color Classic. In 1995, the
PowerBook 550c was unique to
Japan, using a full-fledged 68040 CPU instead of the 68LC040 version,
which had no built-in math coprocessor and was used in the PowerBook
520 and 540 models.
However, only one Mac was ever designed
specifically for the Asian market, the 1997 PowerBook 2400c(right), which was
intended to replace the PowerBook Duo and has a small footprint similar
to the 1991 PowerBook 100. (Until
the first MacBook Air
shipped in 2008, these two models were the smallest full-fledged Mac
notebooks ever made.) Apple contracted manufacture of the 2400c to IBM
in Japan.
Simplifying the Mac Line
Ever since Steve Jobs returned to Apple at the end of 1996, the
company has worked to streamline its offering of models, with the first
goal being a four-product ideal of the consumer iMac desktop, the pro-oriented
Power Mac desktop, the
PowerBook pro-grade
notebook, and the consumer-oriented iBook. The consumer models
originally came in one clock speed, while the PowerBooks and Power Macs
had two or three speed options.
Over time, Apple began to expand from the minimalist 1998/99 ideal
by offering multiple speeds of iMacs, two different sizes of iBooks,
and three different sizes of PowerBooks. Then came the
education-oriented eMac
in 2002, the simplification of the consumer notebook category with the
13.3" MacBook, and the introduction of a whole new category with the
2008 MacBook Air.
In 2010, Apple added a smaller MacBook Air (MBA) model, and over the
past year the MacBook was phased out of the consumer market and, later,
the education market, where the MBA replaced it.
Back in the late 1990s, simplification was a matter of survival for
Apple. During Jobs' absence, sometimes the same Mac would be sold with
three different nameplates: Performa for the home market, LC for
education, and yet another name for the general market. And some
Performa models came with 3 or 4 different model numbers depending on
the software bundled with the identical hardware. Confusion was the
order of the day.
Does a 14" Asian MacBook Air Make Sense?
With Apple growing at an unprecedented rate and Mac sales at record
levels ever since the 2006 switch to Intel x86 CPUs, Apple can afford
to target models to specific markets. Apple makes special iPhones for
some markets, and with the company selling well over 4 million Macs per
quarter (compared to less than 1 million per quarter through 2004), the
numbers are there for market-specific Macs.
An
additional benefit is that because Apple is already one of the leading
users of notebook displays, a 14" model could take some pressure off
the 13.3" and 15.4" markets. Since the MacBook Air is already its
best-selling line, it certainly makes sense to expand it, as Apple has
already done with the 11.6"
MBA.
The 13.3" MacBook
Air has a 1440 x 900 pixel screen, just like the 15.4" MacBook Pro
(MBP) and a whole lot more than the 1280 x 800 pixels on the 13.3" MacBook Pro.
The typical 14" ultrabook has a 1366 x 768 or 1600 x 900 pixel screen,
so it doesn't seem unreasonable that a 14" MacBook Air might have the
same 1440 x 900 pixels as the 13" MBA and 15" MBP. (If Apple wants to,
it could make 1366 x 768 the default screen and offer 1440 x 900 as a
build-to-order upgrade.)
The slightly larger model would mean even more room for the battery,
which should result in better battery life than the current 13" MBA,
just as the widely rumored 15" MBA would have even more space for a
battery and still longer battery life.
While there was a very real need to simplify the Mac line 10-15
years ago, the Mac's growing popularity since 2005 means the market is
big enough to justify market-specific models, and if Apple thinks a 14"
MacBook Air will sell well in the Asian market, I see no reason it
wouldn't target that market. (And if that succeeds, perhaps someday we
can prevail upon Apple to create a more rugged, more modular MacBook
Pro to replace what was lost when the Pismo PowerBook was discontinued,
let alone a smaller, expandable, more consumer- and geek-oriented
desktop Macintosh to fill the sub-$2,000 niche that has been unfilled
since the Mac Pro was introduced in Mid 2006.)
I can't weigh in on the validity of this rumor, but I see no reason
it couldn't be true.
Dan Knight has been using Macs since 1986,
sold Macs for several years, supported them for many more years, and
has been publishing Low End Mac since April 1997. If you find Dan's articles helpful, please consider making a donation to his tip jar.
Links for the Day
Mac of the Day: Performa 630, introduced 1994.07.01. The first desktop Mac with an IDE hard drive could accept a TV or radio tuner.