[0:00] Oh, it's citrus. Is it 599? Is it? [0:02] Everyone's talking about the MacBook [0:03] Neo. And you know, fair enough. It's [0:05] actually really cool. And review for [0:06] that coming very soon. But what about [0:08] this guy, the MacBook Air? This has also [0:11] had some love with an M5 chip. We've got [0:13] Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 6. They've doubled [0:16] the base storage to 512. Although it is [0:18] 100 quid more expensive than last year, [0:20] but when you factor in the cost of the [0:21] storage upgrade, actually it's cheaper [0:23] than before if you were going to do [0:24] that. 16 gigs of RAM, 512 storage, and [0:27] M5 chip for $1099. This is probably the [0:30] laptop that most of us are going to want [0:32] to buy. [0:37] To be fair though, this new MacBook Neo [0:39] at $599, $499 for student teacher [0:41] discounts, which does by the way apply [0:43] to this as well, that is very tempting. [0:45] It's almost half the price of a MacBook [0:48] Air. The downsides, I mean there's [0:50] actually quite a few. The main ones are [0:51] you're stuck with a iPhone chip, the A18 [0:53] Pro. Also, you have chunkier bezels, a [0:56] slightly smaller screen. You don't have [0:57] a back lit for the keyboard, back lit, [0:58] back light for the keyboard. The ports [1:00] are USB 3 and USB 2, and there's no Mag [1:03] Safe. This has two Thunderbolt 4, so you [1:05] can output two much higher resolution, [1:07] high refresh monitors, and two of them, [1:09] only one on the Neo, and you have Mag [1:11] Safe, so that's not taking up one of the [1:12] ports for charging. You also get Wi-Fi 7 [1:14] with this, which is not that important, [1:15] although you do also need a Wi-Fi 7 [1:17] router to take advantage of it. Router [1:19] for my American friends. Higher quality [1:20] webcam. More importantly though, you get [1:22] the force haptic. I was going to say [1:25] force sensitive. The proper force [1:27] feedback touchpad on the Neo. It is [1:29] actually a traditional design where like [1:31] the corners go into the chassis a little [1:33] bit. Still feels good, but not as nice [1:34] as this. Also, the Air comes with 16 [1:37] gigs of memory, 512 storage as standard [1:40] rather than 8 and 256. Also, the storage [1:42] is much faster. The M5 chip, which we'll [1:44] come to in a second, is significantly [1:46] more powerful. Obviously, if you're [1:47] doing any kind of proper video editing, [1:49] any kind of gaming rendering, and of [1:51] course, we'll make this a lot more [1:52] future proof as well. You can probably [1:53] use this for the next 10 years, [1:55] honestly, and it'll be absolutely fine. [1:57] You also have Touch ID uh in the power [1:59] button here. You have to pay an extra [2:01] 100 quid on the Neo. So, it goes from [2:03] 599 to $699 to get Touch ID. That also [2:06] doubles as storage and an extra 2 hours [2:07] of battery. Apple say you'll get 16 [2:09] hours on the Neo, you'll get 18 on the [2:11] Air. 6 in larger screen because we have [2:14] the thinner bezels versus the Neo. Oh, [2:16] also you've got the larger 15.4 in [2:18] option if you do fancy a bigger screen. [2:20] I think that's it. There's probably [2:22] something else. There are a lot of [2:23] reasons to go for an Air over a Neo. [2:25] Whether it's worth paying an extra 500 [2:27] quid going from $599 to $1099 subject to [2:31] discounts and blah blah blah, I'm not [2:33] sure. But certainly this is a much [2:35] better all round laptop. [2:42] Since Apple refreshed the MacBook Air [2:44] and in fact the entire Mac lineup with [2:47] their M series of chips, starting with [2:49] the M1 back in 2020, they've had a [2:51] problem, a really big problem. They've [2:53] been too bloody good. And so anyone who [2:55] bought an M1 Air, this one, this lovely [2:58] little copper color, the design was [3:00] updated with the M2 Air, so the year [3:02] after this, uh, which got rid of that [3:04] sort of tapered design, which I actually [3:05] really quite like. Also, you've got [3:07] these chunkier bezels, but this is still [3:09] a fantastic laptop, very, very usable. [3:12] And I think one of the big questions [3:13] coming out of the MacBook Neo is, should [3:15] I spend 599 on that or should I get an [3:18] M1 Air that might offer similar [3:20] performance in some ways? So, the [3:23] problem Apple have had is that their [3:24] laptops have been so good for so long, [3:26] there really just hasn't been much [3:28] reason to upgrade. So, here we are [3:29] again, 2026 new MacBook Air. And the [3:32] main reason, honestly, to consider [3:35] upgrading is the fact that you're [3:36] getting 16 gigs of memory, 512 storage [3:39] as standard. Now, because in every [3:41] previous MacBook Air review, I've said [3:43] this is a great laptop, really good [3:44] value for money if you want, you know, [3:45] Mac OS, but you're going to have to [3:47] spend an extra 200, whether it's [3:49] upgrading the storage or upgrading the [3:50] RAM. Now, I would not spend another [3:52] penny on this. Just get the cheapest [3:54] version. If you need more storage, just [3:56] buy an external SSD. If you need more [3:58] memory because you think you're going to [3:59] use it, then you're probably best off [4:01] going with a MacBook Pro instead if you [4:03] really need that higher performance. [4:05] This base entry- level MacBook Air M5 is [4:08] exactly the one you should buy and don't [4:10] spend anymore, except for maybe buying a [4:12] power adapter because it doesn't come in [4:13] the box here in the UK and Europe and [4:16] some other places. What hasn't been [4:18] upgraded again is the screen. still 60 [4:21] Hz IPS LCD, 500 nits of brightness. It [4:24] is a nice screen, especially with True [4:26] Tone, which you don't have on the [4:27] MacBook Neo. Uh the color accuracy is [4:29] really nice. It's the best one of these [4:32] screens you can get, but for similar [4:33] money on a Windows rival, you'll get [4:36] OLED 120 Hz. This screen needs updating [4:39] next, and it's a little bit frustrating [4:41] that we've not had any change this year. [4:43] So, how much faster is this new M5? [4:45] Well, it's not just the chip, because [4:46] the storage is also faster. they've [4:48] doubled the read and write speeds of the [4:50] SSD. I think that's largely because they [4:52] have just discontinued that lower 256 [4:54] gig capacity and it was the case before. [4:56] If you're upgraded from 256 to 512, then [4:58] you'd get the faster speeds. So, that's [5:00] mainly because they've got rid of the [5:01] 256. So, faster storage, but the M5 [5:04] chip. Bear in mind though, there are a [5:05] couple different versions of this new M5 [5:07] Air. The base model has an 8 core GPU, [5:10] but if you pay an extra 200, you not [5:12] only get double the storage, the [5:13] terabyte, but also it bumps the GPU up [5:15] to 10 cores. So naturally that will have [5:17] an effect on the graphics performance as [5:19] well. But the big headline upgrade with [5:21] the M5 is the AI performance mostly [5:24] because each GPU core has its own neural [5:28] accelerator. This is the same case as [5:30] the M5 that we get in the MacBook Pro. [5:32] But how will we know unless we put it to [5:33] the test? This is the Draw Things app. [5:35] I've got the M4. I've got the M5. We've [5:37] downloaded a fairly simple uh Quen image [5:40] one uh local image generation AI model [5:43] uh sixbit. The exact same prompt. and [5:46] we're gonna see how much quicker the M5 [5:49] is. Go. [5:52] And even just 30 seconds in, this is [5:54] estimating 31 minutes. This is [5:56] estimating 11 minutes. If this kind of [5:59] thing is part of your workflow, then [6:01] that is a heck of an upgrade. [6:12] But I think realistically most people [6:14] who are working with local large [6:15] language models and developing with AI [6:17] want a for lack of better word ton more [6:20] memory and a lot more performance. So [6:22] they probably go for a MacBook Pro uh [6:24] with the newly updated M5 Pro, M5 Max [6:26] chips. So this extra performance is [6:28] obviously nice, future proof, great, but [6:31] maybe not that useful to most people [6:33] buying a MacBook Air. Well, let's put [6:36] them to the test. M1 versus M4 versus [6:39] M5. All updated to the latest Mac OS [6:41] Tahoe. And in terms of the processor [6:44] speeds, this is Geekbench 6. It's [6:45] between 60 and 75% faster on the M4 and [6:48] upwards of twice as fast in terms of [6:50] multi-core on the M5. But going from the [6:52] M4 to the M5, it's a modest 10% bump. [6:55] However, jumping over to the graphics [6:57] test, this is where we see some of the [6:58] biggest gains, and that is impressive. [7:00] The M5 is still 34% faster than last [7:03] year's M4. [7:06] And it's a similar story when we run the [7:08] metal version of the test. 38% faster [7:10] this year. But it gets better, although [7:12] not straight away. This is Geekbench AI, [7:14] but both the M4 and M5 are significantly [7:17] faster than the M1. And while the M5's [7:19] neural engine is a bit faster, it's not [7:22] groundbreaking. What is groundbreaking [7:24] is when we use the graphics, the GPU, to [7:27] run this same AI test. And because we [7:29] now have those neural accelerators on [7:31] each GPU core, but look at those M5 [7:33] numbers compared to last year, 31, 99, [7:37] 149% faster. If you're running [7:39] graphically intensive programs that can [7:41] take advantage of AI acceleration, then [7:43] the M5 is significantly faster than even [7:46] last year. Although, even without AI, [7:48] just a raw graphics test, the M5 is [7:50] still a good 24% faster than last year. [7:52] To be fair, most of us aren't really [7:54] buying a MacBook for gaming, but they [7:56] have got a lot more capable and we are [7:58] seeing more games now supported on Mac. [8:00] And in Cyberpunk at full HD plus with [8:02] medium settings, I'm getting a [8:04] borderline unplayable 28 FPS on the M1. [8:07] A solid 47 fps on the M4 and a very [8:11] smooth 62 FPS on the M5. Even just from [8:15] last year, which no one realistically is [8:17] actually upgrading from, it's still a [8:18] good deal faster. [8:23] I also ran a quick Wi-Fi test because we [8:25] have gone from Wi-Fi 6 to 6E [music] to [8:28] seven now with the M5. Also, I had all [8:31] these at 100% when I started the test [8:32] and we're down to 85% on the M1, 94% on [8:36] the M4, and also 94% on the M5. This is [8:41] still a very capable laptop, but it is [8:42] showing its age. And what I think will [8:44] be really interesting is how the MacBook [8:46] Neo with its A18 Pro chip compares to [8:50] these. So, um, we'll have to come back [8:52] to that [music] in a different video. I [8:54] think for a lot of us though, it's that [8:55] question of, oh, is the Air going to be [8:57] powerful enough going forward? Should I [8:58] pay quite a bit more and get a Pro for [9:01] better long-term use? Well, I can tell [9:04] you with this M5 here, I am currently um [9:06] generating a image, the same one from [9:08] the previous test. Again, I have my uh [9:11] 4K Premiere Pro running here. We've also [9:13] got a YouTube video playing here mostly [9:16] smoothly. I am I think finding the upper [9:18] limit of the Mac. Although if we stop [9:21] the AI generation now everything is [9:24] pretty much flawless. Yeah, absolutely. [9:26] So there is an upper limit. Obviously [9:28] one of the downsides, one of the [9:29] compromises of the MacBook Air is that [9:31] it doesn't have a fan. And I can tell [9:32] you now actually it's it's actually [9:35] pretty hot underneath. So you are going [9:37] to experience throttling depending on [9:39] how you use it. particularly for [9:40] sustained performance, like if you're [9:42] playing games for long periods of time, [9:43] if you're exporting video, because it [9:45] doesn't have a fan to cool the chip [9:46] down, it's going to have to throttle [9:48] more quickly versus a MacBook Pro, which [9:49] of course does have a fan. So, yeah, [9:51] absolutely, you can slow this down if [9:53] you really uh throw some, you know, [9:55] local AI generation, 4K video, and a [9:57] bunch of Chrome tabs at the same time. [9:59] But realistically, for most of us, this [10:01] is going to be more than powerful [10:03] enough. The M5 is an incredibly capable [10:05] chip, and you really should not spend [10:07] more on a MacBook Pro. Which brings me [10:09] to kind of the last bit of the video [10:11] really. Who should spend the extra 500 [10:14] pounds to go from a new MacBook Air M5 [10:16] to a MacBook Pro M5, the base model? [10:18] Well, what are you getting? You're [10:19] getting a terabyte of storage as [10:21] standard now. Apple quietly updated the [10:22] base storage when they have revealed the [10:24] M5 Pro and M5 Max versions of the [10:26] MacBook Pro. So, you're getting double [10:27] the storage. You're getting a much nicer [10:29] screen with their 120 Hz promotion. It's [10:31] miniLEDD. It's much brighter up to 1600 [10:34] nits, and it's more color accurate. can [10:36] spend a little bit extra to get the [10:37] nanoexture option, which I have on that [10:39] MacBook Pro right there, which I love. [10:41] You're getting an extra Thunderbolt 4 [10:42] port as well as an HDMI 2.1 and a [10:44] full-size SD card reader, so much better [10:47] connectivity. And of course, the Pros do [10:48] have a fan. So, as I say, for [10:49] potentially sustained performance, that [10:51] will help cool the chip and you'll get [10:52] slightly better performance. And [10:54] crucially, you can just spec the Pros [10:56] ridiculously. You can spend up to 7 and [10:58] a half grand on an M5 Max, 16in, 128 GB [11:02] memory, 8 terbte setup. The downside is [11:06] you're paying a lot more, at least £500 [11:08] more to go from the Air to the Base Pro. [11:10] It's thicker and it's heavier. That's [11:12] basically the three downsides. But [11:14] realistically, the biggest competitor to [11:16] the MacBook Air is the MacBook Neo. It's [11:18] smaller, cheaper brother. While this is [11:21] a lot more capable for students, for [11:23] your kids' first MacBook, for your [11:26] parents, maybe the MacBook Neo is going [11:28] to be the one you want to buy because [11:29] it's, as I say, almost half the price of [11:31] this. So, that is the new M5 MacBook [11:34] Air. What do you think? Are you tempted [11:35] to buy one? Are you going to upgrade? Do [11:37] you think finally we've come far enough [11:38] since the incredible M1 that it's [11:40] actually worth buying a new Mac? Or [11:43] should we maybe wait another year? Let [11:44] me know what you make of this in the [11:45] comments. And if you've got any [11:46] questions, drop a comment below. Just as [11:48] a little thank you for watching to the [11:49] end of the video. Can I show you [11:52] this [11:54] 2015 MacBook Air? The first MacBook Air [11:58] was, I think, 2008. So, this is far from [12:01] the first one, but look at that. You got [12:03] the glowing Apple logo on the back. This [12:05] is uh what have we got here? We've got [12:07] 1.6 GHz dual core Intel Core i5, [music] [12:10] 8 GB of memory, early 2015. And look at [12:14] those viewing angles, those chunky [12:16] bezels. Still kind of like it though. [12:19] Look at that tapered design. [music] [12:21] Feels like this is only 2015, but it [12:23] feels like it should be in a museum. [12:26] 2015 [12:27] versus MacBook Air M5 [12:31] 2026. [12:33] Let's put those side by side. Thanks for [12:36] watching.