Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-22 Thread Chris Blouch
visionaries" Sent: Monday, July 15, 2013 7:58 PM Subject: Re: MacBook Air upgrade options Hi, For the majority of folks, The difference between the midlevel and high end processor won’t be noticed much. I would much rather spend my money on RAM and an SSD. The performance upgrade is no

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-22 Thread Chris Blouch
e ram, and also the size of the SSD from 128 to 256, to 512. - Original Message - From: "Chris Blouch" To: Sent: Monday, July 22, 2013 4:09 PM Subject: Re: MacBook Air upgrade options From what I've read, the only thing you can upgrade on a MacBook Air is the SSD, an

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-22 Thread Phil Halton
Monday, July 22, 2013 4:09 PM Subject: Re: MacBook Air upgrade options From what I've read, the only thing you can upgrade on a MacBook Air is the SSD, and even that requires taking out a bunch of screws to remove the back cover and such. CB On 7/16/13 3:36 PM, Scott Davert wrote: Hi all. I

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-16 Thread Scott Davert
ally afford a 512 ssd) > > - Original Message - > From: "Ricardo Walker" > To: "Macvisionaries" > Sent: Monday, July 15, 2013 7:58 PM > Subject: Re: MacBook Air upgrade options > > > Hi, > > For the majority of folks, The difference between the midle

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-16 Thread Phil Halton
ne I5 1.3 GHZ. - Original Message ----- From: "Harry Hogue" To: Sent: Sunday, July 14, 2013 1:45 PM Subject: Re: MacBook Air upgrade options Hi Phil, I have only ever worked with a MacBook Pro running 4gb of ram and with a 320 hard drive (not an SSD). From my experience, the

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-15 Thread Ricardo Walker
>> the money involved. So, I'll probably bump up the processor a bit from the >> base-line I5 1.3 GHZ. >> >> - Original Message - From: "Harry Hogue" >> To: >> Sent: Sunday, July 14, 2013 1:45 PM >> Subject: Re: MacBook Air upgrade op

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-15 Thread Chris Blouch
des is worth the money, but moving up to the utmost upgrade generally doesn't return much for the money involved. So, I'll probably bump up the processor a bit from the base-line I5 1.3 GHZ. - Original Message - From: "Harry Hogue" To: Sent: Sunday, July 14, 201

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-14 Thread Phil Halton
generally doesn't return much for the money involved. So, I'll probably bump up the processor a bit from the base-line I5 1.3 GHZ. - Original Message - From: "Harry Hogue" To: Sent: Sunday, July 14, 2013 1:45 PM Subject: Re: MacBook Air upgrade options Hi

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-14 Thread Kimberly thurman
Hello all: I have been running Windows 7 in Fusion along side OSX with 8 gigs of ram on a 2009 MBP, and it runs very well, even with several apps open in windows and OSX. The ram is certainly the main issue here, but I'm sure all the processor speed you can afford will have added benefits. I'

Re: MacBook Air upgrade options

2013-07-14 Thread Harry Hogue
Hi Phil, I have only ever worked with a MacBook Pro running 4gb of ram and with a 320 hard drive (not an SSD). From my experience, the virtual machine setup with usable for tiems when you only want to run Windows for a few minutes, in somewhat limited situations. What I have found, however, is t