
I just found the perfect back-to-school laptop deal — Apple's new MacBook Air M4 is $150 off right now
The 13-inch MacBook Air M4 is one of the best MacBooks and the laptop I use every day at home. It's a notebook I frequently recommend, especially true for students. If you're looking for a dependable laptop for the next school year, I've just found an incredible MacBook Air deal.
Right now, the 13-inch MacBook Air M4 is on sale for $849 on Amazon. This isn't the lowest price we've seen for this machine, but saving $150 is still pretty good. This entry-level machine has everything you need to make your school year a success. Let me tell you why.
The 13-inch MacBook Air M4 offers the same design as the previous model but delivers better performance and a sharper camera while also delivering long battery life. While we wish Apple would have included a nano-texture display option to reduce glare and that the SSD ran a bit faster, this price cut makes this particular model the perfect back-to-school laptop.
As we said in our MacBook Air M4 review, this model features a 13.6-inch Liquid Retina display, delivering bright and colorful picture quality with a sharp 2560 x 1664 resolution and a smooth 60Hz refresh rate. Not only is the display perfect for everyday school work, but it's also great for watching streaming content when you want to unwind between or after classes.
This MacBook Air also packs plenty of power thanks to its M4 chip, which features a 10-core CPU and 10-core GPU. This model has 16GB of RAM, which is enough for most school work and web browsing. 256GB of storage might not be a lot if you want to store big files, but if you use cloud storage from services like Google Docs, you should be fine.
If you're frequently in video calls, whether for classes or keeping in touch with family and friends back home, the 12MP webcam will help you look your best. Thanks to the Center Stage feature, you'll always remain centered even if you move a lot.
The 13-inch MacBook Air M4 is already a good value even without this discount, but the $150 savings make this an even better back-to-school laptop deal. We don't know how long this deal will last, so I suggest taking advantage now before it ends.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fast Company
35 minutes ago
- Fast Company
VisionOS 26 proves Apple isn't treating the Vision Pro like a hobby
In 2023, the flagship reveal at Apple's WWDC keynote was unquestionably the debut of the Vision Pro. The headset wasn't just Apple's first all-new platform since the Apple Watch. It was also the company's opportunity to define what, exactly, a computer you strap to your head should do. Being Apple, it purposefully steered clear of existing concepts such as the metaverse and virtual reality. Instead, it embraced a term it stood a shot of owning: spatial computing. Rather than aiming to nail one or two experiences—movie-watching or gaming or even industrial-strength applications such as training—the Vision Pro would aspire to deliver general-purpose utility reminiscent of the Mac. Just in a radically new, immersive form. Flash-forward to this year's WWDC. No longer the keynote's headliner, Vision Pro took its place among the Apple platforms getting operating system updates in the fall—in its case, VisionOS 26. That's not a sign of diminished relevance, though. Those yearly software upgrades keep Apple gear evolving and improving; over time, they contribute more to a product's relevance than even the biggest-bang hardware introductions. And VisionOS 26's meatiness makes for a striking contrast with the barely evolving Apple TV box, a product that still feels like a hobby at best more than 18 years after Steve Jobs described it as one. Last week, after watching the keynote at Apple Park, I got some eyes- and hands-on experience with the Vision Pro's new features and discussed them with Steve Sinclair, senior director of Apple Vision Pro product marketing, and Jeff Norris, senior director of apps and content for the Vision Products Group. The two executives emphasized the practical ways VisionOS 26 expands on the Vision Pro's capabilities. The upgrade, Sinclair told me, 'adds new ways to connect. It adds new ways to be more immersed. It unlocks new methods to interact with the spatial digital content that we have. And it makes Vision Pro something that users can enjoy using every single day.' Increasing the everyday value of an existing product is always worthwhile, particularly when the product in question costs $3,500 and is still in the process of establishing itself. But VisionOS 26 is part of a longer-term bet. In April, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported that Apple is working on two new headsets and that CEO Tim Cook is eager to release something in a more glasses-like form factor when the technology is ready. Nobody at Apple is going to speak publicly about such unannounced products. But just the plurality of the 'Vision Products Group' in Norris's title indicates that the company doesn't see the Vision Pro as a one-off. In terms of sheer visual and technical wonder, VisionOS's standout feature may be the updated Personas, the photorealistic avatars that can appear in FaceTime calls, other forms of videoconferencing, and SharePlay-enabled communal experiences such as movie watching. Personas already received a significant upgrade last year, shortly after the Vision Pro shipped, and even in the new version, the concept remains the same. The setup process—you take off the Vision Pro and use it like a camera to scan your head—also remains quick and easy. What's new is that the Personas are much more detailed and natural-looking, complete with the ability to turn from side to side in a more realistic fashion as you move your head. 'We continue to push [Personas] forward, because we knew how important it was for you to be able to represent yourself while you're on a call with someone,' Sinclair says. 'And you needed to look like yourself, and feel real, and have the other people who are in the call with you feel real as well.' During my demo, I created a VisionOS 26 Persona of myself and recorded a brief video of it talking in front of a virtual Apple Park backdrop—an Inception -like moment given that the real me was inside the real Apple Park at the time. Coming face-to-face with your own Persona might not be the most effective way to assess the feature; it's other people's Personas you'll see most of the time, and staring at an uncanny digital representation of yourself can be unnerving. (The first thing I noticed was that mine could use a shave.) Judging from my own Persona and glimpses of others in the WWDC keynote, their realism seems to be in the same vicinity as the Meta research project that powered a 2023 conversation between Mark Zuckerberg and podcaster Lex Fridman. (It took place 'in the metaverse' but still hasn't resulted in a commercial product.) Apple's version hardly amounts to photorealistic avatars for the rest of us—just for the privileged few who own a Vision Pro. Still, it feels like a meaningful step toward mainstreaming the technology. By tiptoeing ever closer to faithfully re-creating its customers as digital people, does Apple run the risk of creating an unsettling uncanny valley effect that cartoony avatars such as Memoji will never provoke? 'The last thing I would want to see is for us get so scared of that valley that we don't make the leaps ahead that we're making with the new version of Personas,' Norris says. 'It's a valley, not a cliff, you know? And there is a place beyond that.' Another VisionOS 26 update is also about upping the Vision Pro's level of realism, though in ways less fraught than simulating actual human beings. You can now plunk down widgets—the same ones available on iPhones, iPads, and Macs—in a specific spot in 3D space, where they'll stay until you move them. For instance, you could put a digital clock on your real living room wall for consultation every time you don the Vision Pro. It's a convincing effect: In my demo at Apple Park, I wasn't positive that a poster of Lady Gaga wasn't really there until I learned I could gesture at it to summon her songs, courtesy of Apple Music. Now, the ability to precisely stick widgets in your real-world environment is not in itself a killer feature. Plain old wall clocks still work quite well, no $3,500 headset required. However, if you think ahead to a future in which AR is a bigger part of our lives, this sort of sophisticated melding of digital and physical reality starts to feel like table stakes. Apple has been chipping away at this challenge for years: Back in 2020, I reviewed a new iPad Pro whose AR features were intriguing, though a bit out of place in a tablet. On the Vision Pro, they make far more sense. 'It sounds kind of obvious that things should stay where you put them,' Norris says. 'Things certainly seem to do that normally. But there is a lot that has to come together for that to happen.' advertisement Content created with spatial computing in mind is gradually hitting the Vision Pro's App Store: During our chat, Sinclair waxed enthusiastic about D-Day: The Camera Soldier, an interactive WWII documentary coproduced by Time magazine. But some of VisionOS 26's adjustments turn stuff that might currently be languishing in your iCloud storage into new experiences. For example, an improved version of Spatial Scenes applies multidimensional depth to 2D images. Reminiscent of Facebook's 3D photos or maybe even the View-Master, it's a tad gimmicky. Thanks to 2025-level generative AI, however, it produces an especially convincing effect; you can even crook your neck to peek at plausibly reconstructed details that weren't visible in the original shot. VisionOS 26 also adds native support for 180- and 360-degree video shot with cameras from GoPro, Insta360, and Canon. The results aren't in 3D, but the samples I saw in my demo, including a skydiving shot, were pretty breathtaking. Amid all of VisionOS 26's additions, I was struck by one thing that hasn't changed: the fundamentals of using it. Even on day one, the Vision Pro's combination of eye tracking and a few hand gestures was simple to master and capable of more than you might expect. It's not a given that a wildly new type of product will get that right on its first attempt: The Apple Watch has been through several sweeping makeovers, and the 15-year-old iPad received WWDC 2025's most thorough redesign. That Apple largely nailed the Vision Pro interface from the start may help explain why it's been able to build out so many features in VisionOS 26. 'When we launched Vision Pro, we saw immediately how quickly people got up to speed in using their eyes and their hands to interact,' Sinclair says. 'And so, we continued to encourage [third-party] developers and of course our own teams to lean into that, because it is such an easy way to interact with the content that you have.' That said, he notes that some scenarios benefit from other forms of input, a fact reflected in VisionOS 26's support for Logitech's upcoming Muse 3D stylus and Sony's existing PlayStation VR2 hand controllers. Numerous technical obstacles still stand in the way of anyone releasing comfy, affordable, power-efficient glasses that rival the Vision Pro's capabilities. I'm still not positive that anyone in the industry will pull it off soon. Nor is it certain that the concept will ever reach smartphone-like ubiquity. Nevertheless, watching Apple use the Vision Pro as a proving ground for some of the necessary building blocks right now is fun—and makes me wonder what VisionOS 27, 28, or 29 might bring. You've been reading Plugged In, Fast Company 's weekly tech newsletter from me, global technology editor Harry McCracken. If a friend or colleague forwarded this edition to you—or if you're reading it on can check out previous issues and sign up to get it yourself every Friday morning. I love hearing from you: Ping me at hmccracken@ with your feedback and ideas for future newsletters. I'm also on Bluesky, Mastodon, and Threads, and you can follow Plugged In on Flipboard. More top tech stories from Fast Company


Forbes
41 minutes ago
- Forbes
Urgent Upgrade Appeal After ‘Biggest Ever' 16 Billion Hack Hits Facebook, Google, Apple And Others
Passwords linked to accounts with Apple, Facebook, and Google as well as government services and other social media platforms are among a 'colossal" data breach, according to researchers. Front-run Donald Trump, the White House and Wall Street by subscribing now to Forbes' CryptoAsset & Blockchain Advisor where you can "uncover blockchain blockbusters poised for 1,000% plus gains!" 'This is not just a leak—it's a blueprint for mass exploitation," experts with Cybernews wrote. 'With over 16 billion login records exposed, cybercriminals now have unprecedented access to personal credentials that can be used for account takeover, identity theft, and highly targeted phishing.' The hack, which has been claimed to be the biggest ever and was earlier reported by Forbes writer Davey Winder, has led to the chief executive of major crypto company Tether declaring it's 'time to move beyond storing passwords in the cloud.' Sign up now for the free CryptoCodex—A daily five-minute newsletter for traders, investors and the crypto-curious that will get you up to date and keep you ahead of the bitcoin and crypto market bull run Apple, Facebook, and Google passwords are believed to be among the 16 billion leaked by hackers. Paolo Ardoino, the chief executive of dominant USDT stablecoin issuer Tether, has said the company will release a password manager called PearPass. "The cloud has failed us. Again," Ardoino posted to X alongside an ad for PearPass that pitches it as a "fully local, open-source" app, adding: 'It's time to ditch the cloud.' Hacks and data breaches, which can lead to phishing attempts, are a major concern for crypto companies that are trusted to look after users' digital assets. A recent high-profile spate of physical attacks on bitcoin and crypto holders has escalated demand for services that keep user data secret. Replacing cloud-based security with passwords and encryption keys stored on a user's device means hacks on centralized services are less likely to put user data or personal information like emails, phone numbers or home addresses at risk. Tether—which has boasted it made $13 billion in profit last year, mostly from the interest earned on the funds it uses to back its $155 billion stablecoin—is scrambling to diversify its business as looming U.S. stablecoin regulation is expected to open up the market to tech companies, Wall Street giants and even retailers like Walmart. Tether's biggest rival Circle has seen its freshly IPO-ed stock price surge this week following the passage of the Genius Act stablecoin bill by the U.S. Senate, cheered by U.S. president Donald Trump. In an interview with influencer Anthony Pompliano, Ardoino said this week he believes Tether is a $2 trillion business and also teased a new product that will be launched this year in an interview out Monday with Bankless. "If we are living in a disaster scenario, we need to be able to have technology that works locally first," Ardoino told Pompliano.


CNET
an hour ago
- CNET
Samsung's Stylish 55-Inch The Frame TV Has Never Been Cheaper Than Right Now
Buying a new TV is an exciting time, with plenty to look forward to. All of the best games, biggest movies and most binge-worthy TV shows will all look better than ever. And then you'll turn it off and look at a black screen when you aren't using it. That kinda sucks, so why not choose a TV that looks just as good when you aren't using it as when you are? Samsung's The Frame displays gorgeous artwork when idle, and right now you can pick up the 55-inch QLED model for just $1,198 at Amazon. This deal means that this model has never been sold any cheaper than it is right now, with Best Buy almost matching it at just $1,200. Just keep in mind that there is no telling how long these special prices are going to last. In use, this Samsung The Frame TV offers support for all of the features you'd expect at this price point. Those include Alexa support for smart homes and voice control. Playing games will be a treat thanks to a smooth 144Hz refresh rate, while variable refresh rate support ensures tear-free gaming. Hey, did you know? CNET Deals texts are free, easy and save you money. Other notable features here include support for 4K and HDR, as has become the norm, while Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connectivity are also included. It could be said that the real fun comes when you turn this TV off. The TV has a matte finish and slim bezels so it looks just like a piece of art on your wall -- thanks in no small part ot the gorgeous artwork it displays when it's off. Samsung has selected artwork from top-tier museums, so it'll definitely be better than looking at a blank screen all day. Why this deal matters It's easy to think that buying a TV that looks great while it's turned on is all that matters. But in reality, it'll be turned off more than it's turned on, so why not have it look as good as possible for longer? There's nothing quite like the Samsung The Frame TVs in that regard, and it's never been cheaper to buy this 55-inch version.