MacBook Air with M2 is available to order now and will ship to customers, Apple Retail Stores and Apple Authorized Resellers starting June 13
Posted Date – 12:06 AM, Tue – 6/6/23

Photo: IANS
Cupertino: Apple on Monday unveiled the 15-inch MacBook Air, featuring a large 15.3-inch Liquid Retina display, the M2 chip and up to 18 hours of battery life.
MacBook Air with M2 is available to order now and will ship to customers, Apple Retail Stores and Apple Authorized Resellers starting June 13.
The 15-inch MacBook Air with M2 is available in Midnight, Starlight, Silver and Space Gray colors starting at Rs 134,900 and Rs 124,900 for the Education Edition.
“With its incredible performance and compelling design, the new MacBook Air is the world’s best 15-inch laptop. And that’s only possible with Apple silicon,” said John Ternus, Apple’s senior vice president of hardware engineering .
“From the large Liquid Retina display and ultra-thin fanless design, to the incredible battery life and immersive six-speaker sound system, the new MacBook Air has it all.”
The company also unveiled the new Mac Studio and Mac Pro, two of the most powerful Macs ever built.
Mac
Mac Studio starts at Rs 209,900 and Education Edition starts at Rs 188,900.
The Mac Pro (tower case) is available in tower and rack cases starting at Rs 729,900 and Rs 687,900 for the Education Edition.
Mac Studio comes with the M2 Max and the all-new M2 Ultra, delivering massive performance gains and enhanced connectivity in their stunningly compact designs.
Mac Studio is 6x faster than the most powerful Intel-based 27-inch iMac 1 and 3x faster than the previous generation Mac Studio with the M1 Ultra.
Mac Pro now features M2 Ultra, combining the unprecedented performance of Apple’s most powerful chip with the versatility of PCIe expansion.
Mac Pro is up to 3 times faster than previous generation Intel-based models.
With up to 192GB of unified memory, Mac Studio and Mac Pro with M2 Ultra have more memory than the most advanced workstation graphics cards and can take on demanding workloads that other systems can’t even handle, Apple says.
