Apple laptops are separated into two main types: the MacBook Air and the MacBook Pro. While both families include some of the highest-performing laptop models on the market, the Air focuses on packaging quality features in a lightweight design while the Pro targets the data and graphics-heavy needs of professionals who work with visual content or run complex programs.
Within each category, you will find a variety of processor, RAM, storage and display options. The high-end MacBook Air options include MacBook Air computers with 500GB to 1TB of storage. And there are many models of MacBook Pro with 1TB of storage as well.
MacBooks also rely on different central processing units: intel processors and Apple processors. Intel MacBooks run on the same processors as most traditional Windows desktops and provide reliable performance for a wide range of computing tasks. Apple MacBooks, on the other hand, run on Apple’s custom-designed processor, which has showcased impressive performance improvements compared to Intel processors in certain tasks, such as multitasking and energy efficiency.