The latest M2 MacBook Air is an incredible machine, but it has one fundamental problem: the M1 MacBook Air. Despite being someone who is so shamelessly easy to sucker into getting the latest version of a perfectly good product I already own, I haven’t felt any pull to get one, and I was fully expecting that thing to forcibly extract my wallet from my pocket. The other day I was in an Apple Store and thought I’d have another play with one, but I actually prefer the design of the previous model – the tapered edge is easy to pick up. Now, that’s the kind of thing that could be easily overcome if I was excited by it elsewhere, but… I’m not. Its biggest selling point is the M2 chip at its core, but I don’t even push the M1 to its limit. The M2 doesn’t really offer me any crucial extra. And my concern is that this is going to be an problem for the M3 too, and the M4, and…