Why would you want to handicap your professional applications with just passable hardware?
Thank you, Pete. It's a good question. Here is my answer:
1)
The MBA has a better screen as standard equipment. The screen resolution of the 13" MBA is the same as the standard 15" MBP (1440 x 900), but the gloss is much less reflective, which I greatly prefer. Yes, the MBP has a matte option, but at greater cost ($150 because it is also higher res).
2)
The MBA has a better disk-drive, standard. The SSD in the MBA makes it quite peppy, which users just love (nearly "instant-on" machine and apps). Yes, the MBP has a SSD option, but at greater cost ($750 for 256GB from Apple; less from third-parties).
3)
The MBA is much more portable. Users love taking it everywhere, and working in an easy chair (it runs cooler and doesn't burn their laps).
4)
The MBPro will be refreshed soon. Informed people believe it will be next spring, with faster processor, standard SSD, and Light Peak port. This may hurt the resale value of current MBPros more than current MBAirs.
http://modmyi.com/forums/iphone-news/738289-macbook-air-ssd-light-peak-april.html
5)
I need to buy now, and video editing is a secondary use for me. I'll use the machine primarily for light-duty tasks, which the MBA does well. I'd just like to know if it can also run Final Cut Studio, since I hope to get into that in the next year. I'd like to avoid the hassle/expense of trading up or buying an additional machine in the next few years.
Part of my problem is I'm not doing video editing yet, and I know just enough about it to be dangerous. As I understand it, you are correct that the recommended method has been to import/encode footage from tape via firewire, and store the encoded footage on a firewire RAID, for faster access than the boot disk can provide.
But I also understand that new cameras encode footage right in the camera, and store it on a SD card. Also, a SSD boot disk is so fast that a RAID is unnecessary. Am I misinformed? If my system and application files consume 50GB, that leaves 200GB of work space on the SSD of the 13" MBA "ultimate". Is that not enough space to get some work done? Or can I work off the SD card in the slot? (64GB now, higher capacities coming).
I can get a special deal on the 13" MBA ultimate ($1500). Retail cost of the 15" MBP with the same RAM, same SSD (from Apple), similar screen (high-res matte), and faster processor (unneeded except for rendering?) is $2700.
You said the MBA is "just passable hardware." I'd be thrilled to hear that it is passable for not only Final Cut Pro, but also Motion and Soundtrack Pro and Color. Anyone else have an opinion?