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11.6-inch Apple MacBook Air

Apple MacBook Air (11.6-inch) Review

Apple has incorporated elements from the iPad into the paper-thin 11.6-inch MacBook Air, its smallest notebook ever.
Apple iMac 27-inch

Apple iMac 27-inch (Core i5) Review

We review the latest addition to Apple's iMac line, which features a 27-inch display, Intel Core i5 processor and pixel-pushing ATI Radeon HD 5750.
apple unibody macbook review left side

Apple MacBook 2009 Review

Apple's revamped unibody MacBook which we review, gets the same 13-inch LED-backlit screen, multi-touch trackpad and unibody chassis as its...

Apple MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2008) Review

The new MacBook Pro which we review, has discrete Nvidia graphics and LED-backlit display make a practical usability addition to the MacBook Pro.

Apple MacBook (2.4GHz, 2008) Review

We review the new MacBook which has a lot of updates, including Apple's unibody frame, LED-backlit display, and multitouch pad.

Apple MacBook Air (80GB) Review

The MacBook Air which we review, represents Apple's concept of a truly next-gen notebook. While it's not for everyone, you still need to check it out.

Apple MacBook Pro 15″ 2.4GHz Review

The new MacBook Pro which we review, features an LED-based LCD display, supports up to 4GB of RAM, and comes with an impressive 256MB video card.

Apple MacBook Pro 2.33GHz Review

The newly released MacBook Pro which we review, offers a massive increase in computing power and energy efficiency thanks to the Core 2 Duo processor by Intel.

Apple MacBook 2.0GHz Review

Just when you thought it was safe to buy a new MacBook Pro, Apple unleashes a product that is possibly one of the company's best and least expensive laptops ever.

Apple MacBook Pro 15.4-inch 2.16GHz Review

Apple's latest iteration of the MacBook Pro is better than ever, this time sporting a powerful Intel Core Duo processor and a whopping 256GB hard drive.
Senior Editor, Computing

Luke Larsen is a Senior Editor at Digital Trends and manages all content covering laptops, Macs, monitors, PC hardware, and peripherals. Around here we call it “computing,” but here’s a good rule of thumb: If it’s a computer or something that plugs into a computer, you found your guy. Oh, and these days, AI too. So much AI.

After getting a degree in music from the University of Oregon, Luke started his career in media hoping to get into music journalism. But when the opportunity arose, he landed in tech and hasn’t looked back since. He has over a decade of tech journalism experience, first joining Digital Trends in 2017 as a native Portlander, happy to join a tech media company that called his city home. Before working at DT, he worked as Tech Editor at Paste Magazine for over four years and has bylines at publications such as IGN, TouchArcade (RIP), and The Oregonian.

In his years at Digital Trends so far, Luke has covered high-profile industry events such as CES, IFA, and Microsoft Build, delivering on-the-ground coverage, breaking news, and first-hand reporting. He’s hosted countless YouTube videos, made podcast appearances, and written over 600 articles.

Some of his earliest tech memories include learning HTML through his MySpace account and trying to play Baldur’s Gate II on his parents’ dusty old beige box. These days, his obsession with technology is in telling stories with tech — in finding the narratives that ebb and flow through both technological advancement and product design, trickling right on down to our day-to-day experience of it. He is convinced that we all spend too much of our time using technology and not enough time thinking about it — cue a healthy dose of navel-gazing and philosophizing.

When he’s not endlessly debating what the best laptop is, Luke spends his days being a dad and a husband. Oh, and when there’s time (which there isn’t), he’s an avid fiction writer, player of designer board games, and still occasionally makes some music.