The MacBook Neo (left) and the MacBook Air (right). Kerry Wan/ZDNET
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ZDNET's key takeaways
8GB of RAM is still enough for many Mac and Chromebook users.
Windows 11 laptops increasingly treat 16GB as the new baseline.
It really comes down to your workload and platform.
Apple's latest entry-level Mac, MacBook Neo, has been making all the waves. It starts at $599, and comes with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. For some, those specs may sound dated. After all, Windows laptops increasingly ship with 16GB of RAM by default, with gaming and premium PCs sporting 32GB, 64GB or more, along with 1TB of storage.
But here's the thing: I use a 2022 MacBook Air with Apple's M2 chip, 8GB of RAM, and 256GB of storage, and I haven't had any issues. At this very moment, I have Chrome running with 11 tabs open. I also have Finder, Slack, Canva, Notes, Atlas, Messages, Preview, TextEdit, and Calendar open. I started work at 7:30 a.m. with a full battery, and by noon, it was still at 65%.
Also: The MacBook Neo just upended the budget laptop market - and it's bad news for PC makers
My job involves light photo editing, writing long articles, doing research in dozens of tabs, and sometimes testing apps and even AI tools. Throughout it all, my MacBook Air rarely stutters. It remains responsive and easily lasts a full workday. So when I saw the Neo with 8GB of RAM, I immediately thought it might be a good upgrade for me when I'm ready to replace my Air.
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