There's no denying that what ASUS has done is better, it's just not perfect. You get sharpness, and additional desktop area, but not the total package you get with the rMBP. 2012 ASUS Zenbook Prime (right)ĪSUS also enjoys a resolution advantage, but it's not really high enough to make good use of integer DPI scaling (at 2x you get a UI sized for a 960 x 540 display). The difference is quite noticeable:Ģ012 MacBook Air (left) vs. As the MacBook Air retains its TN display, for the first time we can actually say that ASUS' Ultrabook offers better viewing angles than the Air. ASUS actually pre-empted all of the exciting announcements (rMBP included) with its Zenbook Prime, complete with 11 and 13-inch 1080p IPS displays. If there was one clear trend at Computex this year it's towards IPS 1080p displays in Windows 8 notebooks. The MacBook Air display continues to be good, and better than most, but no where near what the rMBP delivers and actually a step behind what the competition in the PC space has been cooking up. There's also the matter of maintaining its thin profile and battery life in pursuit of a retina display. While technically feasible, my guess is a lack of supply kept a rMBA out of the cards for this year. The MacBook Air is really Apple's mass-market notebook, and as such it's not going to be the target for a Retina Display upgrade, at least not this year.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |