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illutionz

macrumors 65816
Oct 2, 2007
1,339
49
Rhode Island
If you are going for the 11", i7 upgrade is a lot more noticeable as per Anandtech review.

The 13" i5 vs i7 is only about 10-15% increase in performance which is negligible.
 

newdeal

macrumors 68030
Oct 21, 2009
2,510
1,769
...

If you are going for the 11", i7 upgrade is a lot more noticeable as per Anandtech review.

The 13" i5 vs i7 is only about 10-15% increase in performance which is negligible.

plus to get the i7 in the 13" you have to get the expensive model...you have to get teh expensive 11" to get the i7 also but its not as big a deal since most people likely would opt for the expensive 11 anyway just due to the ram differance and storage differance (going from 64 to 128 is to me important, going from 128-256 is not)
 

LeakedDave

macrumors regular
Jun 26, 2011
211
11
If you are going for the 11", i7 upgrade is a lot more noticeable as per Anandtech review.

The 13" i5 vs i7 is only about 10-15% increase in performance which is negligible.

Only negligible to people with the i5 ;)

Anyways it's worth it to me cause having an i7 Air is epic sauce.
 

illutionz

macrumors 65816
Oct 2, 2007
1,339
49
Rhode Island
Only negligible to people with the i5 ;)

Anyways it's worth it to me cause having an i7 Air is epic sauce.

Tell me that again if you actually have the Quad Core i7 =]

Macbook Air 2011 with dual core i5 and dual core i7 is 10-15% difference. I will not notice it from what I plan to use my MBA for.
 

KPOM

macrumors P6
Oct 23, 2010
18,024
7,867
Only negligible to people with the i5 ;)

Anyways it's worth it to me cause having an i7 Air is epic sauce.

I have the 11" i7. That said, if I were going with the 13" model, I might have went with the i5.

To the OP, the thing to remember is that the 1.7GHz i5 actually operates at 2.4GHz most of the time, while the 1.8GHz i7 actually operates at 2.6GHz most of the time. By contrast, the 1.6GHz i5 operates at 2.0GHz most of the time. Newer Intel chips have what is known as "Turbo Boost," which lets the processor run at higher than its rated speed when it isn't being pushed to the limit. Because of the higher Turbo Boost speeds, the 1.7GHz i5 on the 13" is much closer to the i7 than the chip in the 11".
 

MRU

macrumors Penryn
Aug 23, 2005
25,368
8,948
a better place
He must be going for the 13" as it's $100 upgrade. The 11" is $150. ;-)


So by process of deduction = answer is No (probably :D)
 

GadgetGeek407

macrumors 6502a
Mar 26, 2009
994
61
florida
I was curious about this too, I have a 13 i7 pro right now. I use it with vmware, uploading pics from my nikon d90 to my website, ichat, Facebook, Skype, web surfing, iTunes, mail, and so on...so would an i5 13 pro with 256 be sufficient of i7?
 

vazelos

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 7, 2011
52
0
Totally forgot about this thread ! :D My whole selection is now up in the air again, I was banking on a friend of a friend giving me her employee discount but it seems for some reason that can't be done... So now im back to square one. I was planning on going for the MBA 13" i7 256GB but now I might be looking at the MBA 13" or MBP 13" both base models.... I have to redo all the calcuations to see if it fits my budget, which is about $1600.
 

nebulos

macrumors 6502a
Aug 27, 2010
555
0
now I might be looking at the MBA 13" or MBP 13" both base models.... I have to redo all the calcuations to see if it fits my budget, which is about $1600.

the base 13 MBA is an excellent machine well within your budget. as has been noted, the CPU upgrade in this case is not dramatic. the 1.7GHz i5 is a great CPU.
 

ZipZap

macrumors 603
Dec 14, 2007
6,076
1,448
Concensus in all the threads I have reviewed is i5.
-Heat
-Battery Life
-Fan Noise

Few here would really know/experience the difference between i5 and i7.
 

vazelos

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 7, 2011
52
0
Concensus in all the threads I have reviewed is i5.
-Heat
-Battery Life
-Fan Noise

Few here would really know/experience the difference between i5 and i7.

Are these issues only with the i5?
The i7 won't have these problems?
 

Asmod4n

macrumors member
Jun 18, 2011
55
0
Battery Life is the same, its around 10-25% faster than the stock i5 (in the 11") it also gets warmer, i for one wouldn't play a graphics intensive game on my bare skin with it, but i doubt the i5 will be any better there ^^
 

Bottomsup

macrumors regular
May 10, 2011
205
5
I got it in my 11" because it makes me feel better! Lol

Couldn't justify ~300 more for the 256 upgrade thou so I had to BTO
 

KPOM

macrumors P6
Oct 23, 2010
18,024
7,867
Are these issues only with the i5?
The i7 won't have these problems?

I wouldn't characterize them as "problems" on either the i5 or i7. The i7 runs a few degrees hotter at idle, but in CPU-intensive tasks might actually run a little bit cooler since it won't be taxed as much. That said, the difference is negligible. The website AnandTech had a review with some data about a week ago.
 

buddybd

macrumors 6502
Jul 28, 2011
359
0
If heating was an issue, rest assured the MBA would be freezing or turning off on its own. Hardware won't die because of heating that easily, there will be a lot of signs before anything serious happens.

This is probably how the MBA was designed to work, so don't worry about anything heat related. All laptops get hot at a certain section, totally normal.
 

iphonsteve4ajob

macrumors regular
Aug 6, 2011
186
0
For those of us who will never fill a 100 GB hard drive the upgrade is more like $400.00. I have no use for the 256GB hard drive, so if I wanted to get the i7 it would cost me almost 30% of the total price of the computer. Personally paying a 30% premium for a processor that is benchmarking at 8-9% faster is not a worthwhile investment. The better value is the i5 if you do not need the extra storage. You will lose less money on your purchase for a computer which performs almost every task, short of heavy coding or photo editing, on par with the i7 version.

Ultimately in a few years both the 2011 versions will look slow and knowing you paid closer to $1000 rather than $2000 will give you the feeling of having gotten the most bang for your dollar.
 

vazelos

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 7, 2011
52
0
For those of us who will never fill a 100 GB hard drive the upgrade is more like $400.00. I have no use for the 256GB hard drive, so if I wanted to get the i7 it would cost me almost 30% of the total price of the computer. Personally paying a 30% premium for a processor that is benchmarking at 8-9% faster is not a worthwhile investment. The better value is the i5 if you do not need the extra storage. You will lose less money on your purchase for a computer which performs almost every task, short of heavy coding or photo editing, on par with the i7 version.

Ultimately in a few years both the 2011 versions will look slow and knowing you paid closer to $1000 rather than $2000 will give you the feeling of having gotten the most bang for your dollar.

I really like this post :)...
I have a question,
let's say I record some videos on a standard digital camera and want to make a little film to put on youtube.. does the mba i5 128gb have what it takes to get this done just as good as any other macbook?
 

iphonsteve4ajob

macrumors regular
Aug 6, 2011
186
0
I really like this post :)...
I have a question,
let's say I record some videos on a standard digital camera and want to make a little film to put on youtube.. does the mba i5 128gb have what it takes to get this done just as good as any other macbook?

Yes the mba i5 should have no issues. Don't know exactly what application you would be using, but you should not see any issues. These laptops really go beyond just email and web surfing. Which is why I particularly love this generation. They are well balanced in power and portability.

Now sure, I buy a MB Pro with a Radeon discrete graphics card, quad core processor, and play graphics heavy video games and applications the Airs would be playing catch up. But think about it is 20 seconds vs 30 seconds that bad? Or however the number play out. If the Pro is running an intensive application and it is beautifully accomplishing its task, then isn't it impressive the little Air with its built in graphics card and SSD drive is keeping up? For me....yes. For others...no.

I like my light as "Air" laptop. :)
 
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