I'm in the same situation as you, college student, recently bought an Air.
Here are a few things that I do:
1. Use a sleeve (extra padding while in backpack or in transit)
2. Buy a laptop backpack
3. Buy a hardshell case for it (If you want to protect it from scratches, dings)
4. DO NOT drink around it or have it out on the weekends when you're drinking/with drunk people. Spilled alcoholic drinks has killed more people's laptops than I'd care to admit in just my first year of college.
If you're careful with it then it should last you for a long time, it seems like mine will!
All in all very good advice on protecting my air, thanks guys!
But i have read in some forums, that the screen is very sensitive (up to the point in which it damages, or having the apple mark in the back bleed through to the screen) any points to take care of my MBA screen wise?
I use this black incipio hard case:
Inside this Incase sleeve:
Which itself is carried in this Belkin laptop backpack:
//3rd year electrical engineering student
Yeah, you're right, it's totally overkill haha. I actually usually skip the sleeve and just throw the MBA into my backpack in the padded laptop compartment, but I just included it in the post to give some ideas. Sometimes I just carry it in the sleeve though if I don't need to take my backpack somewhere; but nonetheless, you can never be too cautious lolOh thats crazy overkill! Its definitely protected there. As a 5th year chemical engineering student, I am not even able to carry mine around due to 1) its a 17" MPB, so not very portable and 2) all my engineering programs are sadly only on Windows, which I removed from my MBP a while ago.
Yeah, you're right, it's totally overkill haha. I actually usually skip the sleeve and just throw the MBA into my backpack in the padded laptop compartment, but I just included it in the post to give some ideas. Sometimes I just carry it in the sleeve though if I don't need to take my backpack somewhere; but nonetheless, you can never be too cautious lol
All my engineering programs (aside from Matlab) require Windows too, but I just virtualize Windows 7 Ultimate using Virtualbox (2 cores, 1.5GB of RAM, 20GB of space) and it works beautifully- LTSpice, PCSpim, SMOK, Mathcad, etc. For more of my current classes though, I have to use NX Client to tap into my schools servers to remotely run a unix distro so that I can use Cadence and FPGA Advantage. Still works quite nicely though.