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It's our most dramatic torture test yet with the new MacBook Air. Plus, we ElliptiGo, control home theaters with Android, and Molly attempts to control your mind.

The premiere episode unboxes the hot new MacBook Pro, starts torturing an iPad, and Molly drives a solar powered race car. It's hot in there!

Private-Eye is a free network-monitoring application that shows all incoming and outgoing connections on your computer. Sort by incoming and outgoing, or even filter on an application basis.

Gfxstatus is a useful menubar item that lets you choose between Integrated or Discrete graphics on late 2008-2012 MacBook Pros. If you need more power, force the Discrete option. If you need to save battery life, choose the Integrated graphics. And if you trust the computer to switch back and forth, choose the Dynamic option and enable Growl notifications so you can see the switch occur.

The Samsung Chromebox may look like a Mac Mini. But as Bill Detwiler shows you, this Chrome OS Machine is anything but a regular desktop computer.

New evidence points to a 13-inch MacBook Pro Retina potentially coming soon. New next-gen iPhone parts are revealed, and we answer your e-mails!

Bill Detwiler tears down the 11-inch MacBook Air (2012) and finds no major design changes but several important hardware updates.

The latest version of Mac OS X comes with more than 200 new features that make several actions easier and make it more connected to your other Apple devices.

Molly Wood drops, freezes, soaks, and drives away without the new MacBook Air in Always On's most extreme torture test yet.

Molly Wood takes a look inside the MacBook Pro. The Apple notebook sports a 15.4-inch Retina display, which translates to a resolution of 2,880x1,800 pixels.

Mountain Lion's new Airplay Mirroring lets you wirelessly show your desktop on a big screen monitor via Apple TV for meetings, movies, and a better way to show photos.

The newest operating system has hit the Mac. Is it worth the upgrade? Plus: Netflix has a new rival, and Nintendo still can't catch a break.

Evidence of the 13-inch Retina Display MacBook Pro surfaces, the new iPod Nano might go back to its roots, and Mountain Lion goes gold!

Bill Detwiler dissects the 13-inch MacBook Air (2012) and finds better hardware, unchanged battery and internal design.

Bill Detwiler cracks open the MacBook Pro with Retina Display and discovers a laptop that's nearly impossible to upgrade and a pain to work on.

Spectacle is a Mac app that lets you easily arrange windows with keyboard shortcuts. You can align windows to the left, right, and every which way...enough to make even Windows 7 jealous.

Mass Effect gets new endings, Google computers love cat videos, and Orbitz steers Mac users to pricier rooms.

The $999 11-inch Air is still the cheapest MacBook in town, and it's faster and better than ever: but is it too small for everyday use? Either way, you'll want to pay up to increase the size of that lowly 64GB SSD.

A faster processor, improved graphics, and USB 3.0 highlight a series of internal improvements in the new 15-inch MacBook Pro.

The latest 2012 13-inch MacBook Pro and Air both start at $1,199, and are both more similar than ever. Which is for you? Scott Stein runs down the differences.