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Next-Gen Apples To Include 1394b, USB 2.0

seletz writes: "According to this article on The Register, Apple will ship its next-generation PowerMacs with USB 2.0 and double FireWire. USB 2.0 boosts data transfer up to 480Mbps, FireWire 1394b goes up to 3.2Gbps." It may seem a minor point, but the more and faster connections are built in, the less frequently the upgrade gremlins have to strike. 3.2Gbps!

304 comments

  1. old news and fake news by selderrr · · Score: 4, Informative

    this is old stuff... macNN (a rather silly mac site) had this a week ago. Shouldn't you be announcing flat panel iMacs ? Anyway, its pure bollocks : G5 procs aren't coming out in another 1.5 years. It's the G4 story all over again. They were announced 2 years early, came out at an insane price tag and lowerer MHz than expected, and stuck to a MHz barrier for 2 years. Apple should buy out Moto sommerset facilities and rent them to IBM. That might help a bit.

    1. Re:old news and fake news by CmdrTaco+on · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Motorola said the G5 (8500) is in first silicon. This doesn't sound like 1.5 years off. Sounds like .5 years off.

      --

      saru mo ki kara ochiru

    2. Re:old news and fake news by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Actually, buying AMD and renting it to Motorola would make more sense.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    3. Re:old news and fake news by selderrr · · Score: 1, Interesting

      True, but I really remember the G4 being on silicon for a pretty long time. Same holds for the 700+MHz G4. Motorola has been having a really really hard time getting yields up...

      there's a difference between having a wafer that can crunch 1GHz G5's, and the wafer actually crunching out usable processors...

      By god I hope that this time, they don't take 1 year to get the percentage of decent processors per wafer to more than 2%... Apple really really needs this if they want to market their new SuperDuperPowerOS...

    4. Re:old news and fake news by Spruitje · · Score: 2


      True, but I really remember the G4 being on silicon for a pretty long time. Same holds for the 700+MHz G4. Motorola has been having a really really hard time getting yields up..


      Which G4?
      There are at the moment for processors with the G4 nametag.
      The PPC7400 was the first one with a 5 stage pipeline.
      Due to the fact that this processor couldn't run above 500 Mhz because of this 5 stage pipeline Motorola made a new processor with a larger pipeline and onboard level 2 cache (256Kbyte) called the PPC7450.
      This processor starts nowadays at 800 Mhz and runs up to 1.2 ghz.
      Second, there is the 7410 which is a lower power version of the 7410 and it can run up to around 700 mhz.
      And the new G4 is the PPC7460 which can run upto 1,4 ghz.
      Apple shifted from 666 to 733 and now to 800 as the bottomline.
      The reason is quitte simple.
      The yield is getting better and better and so does the average clockspeed of the G4 processors.
      All 7450 processors run at least 800 mhz nowadays with almost 10% top out at more than 1 Ghz..
      The same goes with the 7410.

  2. Re:sorry that this is off topic... by dinivin · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    There are numerour replies to them... However Slashdot, in it's utter crappiness, is broken (as usual) and isn't showing the number of replies on the homepage.

    Dinivin

  3. Faster USB by krikke · · Score: 4, Funny

    So now the mouse will have the bandwidth to have more than one button?

    Actually, it will be nice to have the speed for video editing on external harddrives without having to use a firewire one.

    1. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The mouse buttons have nothing to do with bandwidth. It's more for usability. The PARC computer had 3 but in useability studies it found that people perfered the 1 button mouse.

    2. Re:Faster USB by bare_naked_linux · · Score: 1

      Obviously, the original poster's sarcasm fell on deaf ears. I doubt *very* seriously anyone would think that the Mac has only one mouse button because of bandwidth.

      --

      --
      Unscrample my email, win a prize.

    3. Re:Faster USB by winterstar · · Score: 0

      OS X is not limited to a single mouse button. They fully support right-click context menus and all that. It even supports the mouse wheel.

    4. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Further tests also proved that users prefered round shapes to (original) elongated mouse shapes.
      This new design, affectionately refered to "soap-on-a-rope", amongst users of other pc brands, has been proven to reduce the sense of direction during prolongued use. Usability guru's at apple, had the following to say:

      "We found that users experienced an enhanced sense of direction while using traditional mice as input devices. The mouse pointer in the digital world would actually start to corrospond to the movement of the mouse in the physical world. To counter this effect, we have created a round mouse. We hope that it will keep future users on their toes. Interaction is meant to be challenging and fun".

      Additional references to articles about apple's usability lab:

      "Why putting the cd in the trashcan makes sense. Encouraging the act of file deletion"

      Pun aside:

      The new optical mouse for macs looks cool. Its literally a one-button mouse. ok, so I cant stop making mac jokes. I'll be good now and shut up now.. after all, I've got a G4 in the office as well.

    5. Re:Faster USB by Stackster · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I wonder if and when Apple's mice will have more than one button.
      I had to get a 2-button mouse to avoid going nuts when browsing (trying to right-click by clicking the same button but with the middle finger just won't help), and X-windows (there are actually several decent PPC Linux diststibutions nowadays) is a bit lame with just one button.
      Just these reasons should be enough to have Apple considering an extra button or two (and perhaps a wheel, too). It shouldn't be less "easy-to-use", because you don't *need* to use the extra buttons if you don't want to.
      But if even their own OS supports more buttons, they really should have the hardware for it, too.

      I wonder how the Apple Pro Mouse (the-entire-mouse-is-just-a-big-button-mouse) could have two buttons...

      --

      There are 010 kinds of people. Those who understand octal, those who don't, and 06 other kinds of morons.
    6. Re:Faster USB by krikke · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I thought about replying to it, but thought it was about as offtopic as this post is making it's way to be.

    7. Re:Faster USB by grondin · · Score: 1

      WHAT is this _obsession_ this one button mice? Is your pinky on your other had broken so you can't press the control key?

    8. Re:Faster USB by Tower · · Score: 1

      Well, for me, in X w/KDE (on a PC and/or RS/6000, not a Mac)
      Left button - use to select text or click on function
      Middle button - paste
      Right button - context menu, etc

      ALT + Left button - Move window
      ALT + Middle Button - Resize window
      ALT + Right Button - raise/lower (saves the trouble of a click autoraising a window when I don't want it raised, just active. Also quicker to lower it without having to find a border or title bar)

      Also, for any CAD programs, one shouldn't be bothered with extra key combinations when buttons are available... two buttons are a minimum for many apps... three makes things so much easier (including web browsing).

      What is the obsession with pressing keys to do normal mouse function, anyway? :)

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
    9. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      For me, in OS X on a G4;

      Left Button: Select

      Right Button: Contextual Menu

      Side Button Left: Copy

      Side Button Right: Paste


      And a whole butload of keyboard shortcuts/combos.


      Point?

    10. Re:Faster USB by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Well there have been weird issues similar to that before... the hardware guys _seriously_ had to work to squeeze a 512 x 384 one-bit display out of the Mac's hardware back in the 80's.

      Obviously the mouse thing is a joke, but there have been instances where that wasn't terribly far from the truth either.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    11. Re:Faster USB by CaseyB · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The PARC computer had 3 but in useability studies it found that people perfered the 1 button mouse.

      Usability studies from 30 years ago, when people were still having trouble with the abstraction of a video screen instead of working right on a real sheet of paper.

      Fewer and fewer people are so unfamiliar with computers that multiple mouse buttons confuse them.

    12. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. go to computer store
      2. buy ANY usb mouse, with any number of buttons you want
      3. go home, plug it in
      4. stop beating a dead horse

    13. Re:Faster USB by thatmoron · · Score: 0

      Macs since 7.* (maybe further, I don't know) could support right clicking.

    14. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What kind of mouse are you using? I've got an MS 4-button IntelliEye, and I can't get the side buttons to do anything. Does Logitech or Kensington (or some other company I don't remember or haven't heard of) have working 4-button mice in OS X? Or has MS updated their drivers since the last time I looked?

      --xxk

    15. Re:Faster USB by meeder · · Score: 1

      Why wouldn't you want a firewire external harddrive? Firewire is a much better choice...
      Don't see why USB2.0 would be better for a external hardrive...

      Remco

    16. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OS X supports 99 mouse buttons. So there.

    17. Re:Faster USB by jasonbw · · Score: 1

      As much as those with experience hate the idea of a one button mouse, there are those (and i know a few) who have problems with anything more than a one button mouse.

      Of course, what any of those people would be doing buying a tower system is beyond me.

    18. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares about apple mice? I got a logitech optical wheel mouse (USB) for 20 bucks. OS X supports 99 buttons, fer crissake. If you don't like apple mice, DONT USE THEM!

    19. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only users who find 1 button easier (assuming there are ANY) are total dolts and morons. Who wants a computer designed for them?

    20. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have the left side button as "back" for browsing, and the right side one as "refresh". Similarly to a wheel, once you have more buttons going without them seems hopelessly primitive and slow.

    21. Re:Faster USB by flatrock · · Score: 2

      Why wouldn't you want a firewire external harddrive?

      Price. Firewire is a better high end technology, but it cost more to implement. If USB 2.0 becomes common, then external USB 2.0 drives should cost less than firewire ones. If the performance is suficient with USB 2.0, why pay for firewire.

    22. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not taking the time to re-read your post before sending it, makes you look like an idiot.

    23. Re:Faster USB by aonifer · · Score: 2

      WHAT is this _obsession_ this one button mice? Is your pinky on your other had broken so you can't press the control key?

      My other hand is busy doing, um, other things.

    24. Re:Faster USB by Tower · · Score: 1

      >OS X supports 99 mouse buttons. So there.

      Which is great... everyone I know who has a Mac uses a multi-button mouse (3 or 4, usually)... but why have they continued shipping increasingly outdated and less useful equipment, when most people will just replace it immediately... it was one thing on the old lunchboxes, but there is no reason they shouldn't have been shipping 2/3 button mice for the last several years.

      --
      "It's tough to be bilingual when you get hit in the head."
    25. Re:Faster USB by pinkpineapple · · Score: 1

      I'm running MacOS 9, thanks to (Free Dmitry) Adobe, who haven't move their ass to OS X, and therefore, are alienating mac users on the prone crashing 9 version (and it's getting worse as Apple energy diverges from it with time).

      Under MacOS 9, if you press the mouse while doing anything else in the background (playing a Quicktime movie or MP3) the machine comes to a still and will only care about what is happening to your cursor. Not a bandwidth problem really, but it may look like the mouse events are suddenly being treated exclusively by your embedded PowerPC chip.

      A design based fault caused by a system designed about 20 years ago. Having this behavior these days is barely acceptable (well for 4% of the market only, so that's okay.) The single mouse button is another concept based on the original design that has not evolved with time neither.

      If you look at how long it took for Apple to replace the hockey puck mouse from the first iMac to the more ergonomic version (2 years and half), knowing that world+dog were complaining about the design flaw for this device, then you will obviously notice that this company is not as innovative as they would like you to believe.

      Now, not having a wheel on the new mouse, let alone, a wireless connection, is at the minimum a joke.

      Taking simply the keyboard and looking at the functions keys positions, missing 'ins' key, and other discrepancies, and you just have to rush to Fry's and get at least another $100 bucks of technology to replace Apple stubborn butt head crappy "cool" design.

      If like me, you didn't want to invest more than what you already did (as it is already about $1000 more than what Dell would let you buy), then put your translucent keyboard upside down and take a look at the hair, nails and skin deposit that this wonderful clear design lets you admire. And if you are trying to clean it up, beware that the fragile plastic will probably break up, this of course if you are lucky to get the right torx screwdriver size to start with.

      Apple != functional design

      --
      -- I feel better now. Thanks for asking.
    26. Re:Faster USB by naasking · · Score: 1

      Performance will not be anywhere near sufficient, especially not for video. Mark my words.

    27. Re:Faster USB by Phroggy · · Score: 2

      Fewer and fewer people are so unfamiliar with computers that multiple mouse buttons confuse them.

      "Fewer" is still a HELL of a lot of people. I've been doing tech support for several years, and I am constantly amazed by Windows users who STILL can't figure out the difference between a single-right-click and a double-left-click. Apple's one-button mice are a godsend to tech support reps everywhere.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    28. Re:Faster USB by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Actually, it will be nice to have the speed for video editing on external harddrives without having to use a firewire one.

      You, sir, are an idiot.

      USB 2.0 is crap, and using it for a hard drive - ESPECIALLY for video editing - is retarded.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    29. Re:Faster USB by frogstomper · · Score: 1

      but there is no reason they shouldn't have been shipping 2/3 button mice for the last several years.

      There's an excellent reason: for most users (approximately the complement of the set of users who read /.) multiple buttons are severely confusing, and remain so indefinitely. Power users may, at their oprion, aquire special hardware to meet their special desires.

    30. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BS. All those non-power users are doing just fine right-clicking away on Windows. Apple's usability research that led to the choice of one button mice was conducted back in an era where 95% of computer users had no idea what a mouse was.

      Further, the OS X interface makes heavy use of contextual menus, and there is simply NO WAY that Ctrl-clicking is faster, easier, or less confusing than clicking a right mouse button.

    31. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Under MacOS 9, if you press the mouse while doing anything else in the background (playing a Quicktime movie or MP3) the machine comes to a still and will only care about what is happening to your cursor. Not a bandwidth problem really, but it may look like the mouse events are suddenly being treated exclusively by your embedded PowerPC chip.

      Heh - that's a graphical trick, to provide attention to what you're clicking on instead of trying to animate things in the background as well. You can click & hold your mouse button as long as you wish while your browser downloads, your Finder copies files, your MP3 player plays in the background, etc.

      UI designers call it focus, you call it lack of multitasking. Sheesh.

      But I agree with the lack of a wheelmouse - my Logitech WheelMouse Pro was an essential addition. Crikey, who wants to play Quake3 with a single-button mouse?
    32. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clicking an alternate mouse button to get a contextual menu is simpler, easier, faster, less confusing, and more intuitive than Ctrl-clicking.

      It's hypocritical to sell your computers with one-button mice for simplicity's sake and then force your users into two handing chording because your GUI relies increasingly on contextual menus. It just doesn't make any sense.

    33. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And somehow these same people are going to have an easier time getting used to Control & Command clicking?

    34. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a dead horse if you own an Apple laptop. Presumably, if you have one, you're going to use it in places where it is inconvenient or impossible to connect an external mouse. And believe me, Ctrl-clicking on a laptop is a lot less convenient than on a desktop.

    35. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that contextual menus play a large role in the OS X interface, so these people are going to have to learn how to access them sooner or later. You can either provide additional buttons, or you can resort to chording. Which do you think people are going to have an easier time with?

    36. Re:Faster USB by gig · · Score: 2

      I can't believe I'm replying about a one-button Mac mouse in 2001, when Macs have been using plain USB mouses for three years, and Mac OS X features native support for a ton of USB peripherals, no drivers needed, including multi-button USB mouses. The Mac API for mouse buttons features support for 99 buttons if you want it.

      The short answer as to why Apple ships one-button mouses is that 70% of their users like the one-button mouse and continue to use it throughout the life of their Mac, while the other 30% of their users prefer something else. The 30% is split amongst trackball users, scroller lovers, 2-button former-Windows users, 3-button X-Windows users, people who want a specific mouse for gaming, people who want a mini-keyboard on their pointing device, etc. The 30% who don't like the default mouse have vast, cheap, third-party options. This is the perfect way for them, because they would not likely all be satisfied with one kind of mouse anyway. If Apple ships a two-button mouse, the X-Windows people will freak out about it, especially now that Mac OS runs X-Windows natively; if they ship with a scroller, some will complain; without it, others will complain. So they ship an easy mouse for everyone that most people are satisfied with; and you can go to Fry's and buy any other mouse you want and it will just work with your Mac and Mac OS X.

      I have also read in a number of places that MOST Windows users don't use the second button on their mouse; this jibes with Apple's figures that 70% of their users don't want a second button.

      This debate falls under the category of things geeks think are essential and non-geeks just find to be either extraneous and somewhat confusing or totally uninteresting and always in the way. In other words, if you've ever used a Unix command line, then have the humility to believe that Apple actually knows better than you how to ship iMacs for Grandma.

      There are a number of other reasons why Apple continues to ship a one-button mouse as standard:

      most beginners find a one-button mouse much easier to use when they are learning computing
      the Mac OS user interface has traditionally only required one button, so there are a number of Mac users who have never used anything else
      the fact that Macs ship with one-button mouses means that third-party hardware and software developers can never expect a user to have more than one button, just as they are never to expect a user to know how to use the command line; as a result, users aren't forced to use a second button ... it is always optional
      maintaining one-button navigation of the OS keeps it ready for tablet use (a no-button stylus that you tap against the screen to register a click is the easiest stylus to use; a stylus with a one clickable button is second-best; a multi-button stylus is way, way, way harder to explain and to physically use)
      Mac OS has a pervasive, context-sensitive menubar across the top of the screen that users quickly learn to hit with a quick flick of the mouse ... being able to pop-up a context menu under your cursor is just not as valuable in Mac OS as elsewhere
      a single button Trackpad on a notebook where a Control-click is the same as a right-click means your hands stay on the keyboard more as you work, and your Trackpad button can be large and be used by both righties and lefties
      there is a whole slippery slope of tech writing jargon that you avoid on the Mac: "right-button (unless you have your buttons swapped)"; "click (not right-click)"; "left-click (if you're right handed)"; "context-click" (many users don't know what that means) ... on the Mac, it is just "point and click"

    37. Re:Faster USB by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      The problem is that contextual menus play a large role in the OS X interface, so these people are going to have to learn how to access them sooner or later. You can either provide additional buttons, or you can resort to chording. Which do you think people are going to have an easier time with?

      I haven't really noticed this. Can you give me some specific examples of how contextual menus are used more in OSX than in OS9?

      The old Netscape click-and-hold idea is still used by the Dock, and I think it works rather well. I use a right-click myself, of course (it's faster). If I only had a single button, I'd use a control-click most of the time, but click-and-hold if I was feeling lazy.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    38. Re:Faster USB by gig · · Score: 2

      >> Why wouldn't you want a firewire external
      >> harddrive?

      > Price. Firewire is a better high end technology,
      > but it cost more to implement.

      Not true.

      > If USB 2.0 becomes common, then external
      > USB 2.0 drives should cost less than firewire ones.

      That is a big IF. FireWire is already common and cheap.

      > If the performance is suficient with USB 2.0,
      > why pay for firewire.

      Performance won't be sufficient with USB 2.0. FireWire was designed to be a peer-to-peer multimedia LAN. USB 2.0 was designed to be a way to get mouses and keyboards plugged into computers. USB still requires that a computer be part of the device chain; with FireWire, a FireWire camcorder and VCR can talk to each other without a computer. There is much more to this than just making both standards faster.

      FireWire is not just here NOW, it was here YESTERDAY. There is no place-your-bets atmosphere on FireWire, just incredibly happy and productive users doing things they used to only dream about.

    39. Re:Faster USB by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 1
      For me, in OS X on a G4;

      Left Button: Select

      Right Button: Contextual Menu

      Side Button Left: Copy

      Side Button Right: Paste

      That's exactly the way I was using my M$ Itellimouse Optical ... until it died on me ... now I'm back to using the no-button Apple mouse, which actually tracks really nicely ;-)

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
    40. Re:Faster USB by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 1
      I'm running MacOS 9, thanks to (Free Dmitry) Adobe, who haven't move their ass to OS X, and therefore, are alienating mac users on the prone crashing 9 version (and it's getting worse as Apple energy diverges from it with time).

      This sounds like a troll... but I'll bite ;-)

      Adobe just announced Illustrator 10, which runs native in OS X, and InDesign 2.0, which is also a native app.

      At work I run 9.1, and can go all week without a crash, except for MSIE, which I have to force quit every now and then. If 9.1 (or 9.2.1) is crashing on your Mac, then you are doing something wrong! If you are still using 9.0, or 9.0.4, then that's part of the problem.

      At home I run OS X 10.0.4 90% of the time, and there is no problem running Photoshop 6, Illustrator 9, or QuarkXPress 4.11 in classic mode. I also run GoLive 4 and 5 and M$ Office 2001 in classic and have no problems.

      As far as the new keyboard, it works just fine, and what the hell would you use the "ins" key for anyway? I paid $1650 for my G4, with 384 MB of RAM, I dont see where a Dell is $1000 cheaper! Dell's are WAY over priced!

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
    41. Re:Faster USB by pinkpineapple · · Score: 1

      You obviously didn't read carefully my original post.

      Adobe just announced Illustrator 10, which runs native in OS X, and InDesign 2.0, which is also a native app.

      Illustrator 10 will be shipping before year is over. InDesign 2.0 in first half of 2002. Come on! Don't hold you breath on that, because we all know how it goes as far as software deadlines (see MacOS X 10.1 slipping dates for a short reminder.) Beside I use only Photoshop so why should I care about Adobe other annoucements? But, thanks for the info and check your calendar dates to see how it's coming. Good luck!

      At work I run 9.1, and can go all week without a crash, except for MSIE,
      Of course, I don't see myself crashing when I run the clock in the menu bar ONLY. Seriously, being it MSIE or Mail or any other app, a crash most of the time brings the system down (on a USB machine with 9.2.1 because of buggy USB drivers. Don't ask me how I know, I just know.)

      At home I run OS X 10.0.4 90% of the time, and there is no problem running Photoshop 6, Illustrator 9, or QuarkXPress 4.11

      Are you just running OS X for the beauty of saying that and then missing the point by ultimately running Classic (aka BlueBox) and then losing about 80MB of RAM just for the hell of it? Reboot in 9 and run with 384 MB of memory. I'm sure you can make better use of the memory than by just running 1 bloatware OS under another one.

      I paid $1650 for my G4, with 384 MB of RAM
      I paid the same for a P4 Dell with 1.6GHz and 256MB of RDRAM dam it. this not only account for more memory in as far as CISC code goes, the memory bus is 300% faster, the IDE is faster and I get room for expansion. Your G4 is twice as fast (if you really want to believe that), maybe but still half of what you can buy on the PC side. Wake up! You've been listening to SJ too much!

      What the hell would you use the "ins" key for anyway?

      You maybe, but that's your business. Making a complete extended keyboard and missing ins, which I would use under emacs (running OS X or Linux), Apple had no excuses for missing the key from the mapping. Moving the function keys close to the upper row and other details (like using a green LED for capslock to lower cost: great design my ass!)

      In about 2 or 3 years, Apple will come up with a new "killer" design of a 2 button wheel mouse optical and wireless. By that time, it'll probably be completly outdated, and they have you buy a new machine just to plug the thing into (see the ADC connector stories), but at least people like you will appreciate it.

      By 2005, Apple will be a religion, and they'll convince you to make donations when you buy their hardware. Great future!

      Have fun.

      --
      -- I feel better now. Thanks for asking.
    42. Re:Faster USB by dmarcov · · Score: 1

      Just wander around your local Best Buy or CompUSA for about 20 minutes. Then you will understand why one mouse button is one too many.

    43. Re:Faster USB by gig · · Score: 2

      > The problem is that contextual menus play
      > a large role in the OS X interface

      The only place they are important is on the Dock, and they can be accessed with a click-and-hold, just like in a Web browser. The right-click that also shows them is the "other" way to get them, if you prefer a two-button mouse.

      > You can either provide additional buttons, or
      > you can resort to chording. Which do you think
      > people are going to have an easier time with?

      People are used to chording, especially on the Mac, where there are more keyboard modifier keys (more physical keys on the keyboard). Command+O is the shortcut for Open, and Command+click is the shortcut for context menus. You can explain context menus to a Mac user like this: "hold down the Control key and click on the item that you want to control; a context menu will appear with options that are specific to the item."

      I use my Apple one-button mouse for Web surfing, email, and writing. It doesn't need a mouse pad and it is relaxing to use it because you can click with your whole hand. I have a three-button Wacom mouse that came with my graphics tablet, and I use that sometimes when I'm drawing. The tablet has programmable buttons for Cut, Copy, Paste, etc. so I don't use the right mouse-button that much anyway.

      You can plug five or six mouses into a Mac and it's happy to let you use whichever one is under your hand. It's amazing how big an issue non-Mac users think this is. It's like "Apple ships computers with only one display!" ... yeah, but you can add four more to a tower machine if you want to, and the people who want to do that buy four PCI video cards and four displays and they don't complain. It's not an issue.

    44. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >mouse events are suddenly being treated exclusively

      That would be because of the cooperative multitasking, as opposed to preemptive, which rules modern OSes.

    45. Re:Faster USB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Contextual menus are absolutely vital on the Dock and in browsers, but also highly useful in the Finder and Office.

      Click & hold is a bad idea for several reasons:

      - It's slow.

      - It's error prone. In the Dock, all it takes is a little bit of inadvertent mouse movement to trigger a drag, which I'm sure will be frustrating to new users.

      - It only works in a couple places. Why would you want people want to learn one way to access the menus in the Dock and another way in the Finder?

      Yes, other ways of accessing contextual menus are provided, but all of the other ways are less convenient, less efficient, and less intuitive. Why does Apple resist the obvious? It's not just non-Mac users that have a problem with it. I'm a Mac user, and I think it's a big deal.

      I simply don't buy the ease of use argument anymore. You're already asking users to learn three different actions with one mouse button (click, double click, click & drag). Adding a fourth action (click & hold) that is so easily mistaken for click & drag is not a good way to enhance ease of use. And if you're going to argue that chording is easier to learn than a right mouse button, I just don't buy it.

    46. Re:Faster USB by meeder · · Score: 1

      FireWire is not just here NOW, it was here YESTERDAY. There is no place-your-bets atmosphere on FireWire, just incredibly happy and productive users doing things they used to only dream about.

      Absolutely true, I don't use the full potential of my firewire adapter, I use it only for my camcorder which pumps through 3,6 mbytes per second on average. No dropped frames, very low CPU load, try that with USB....

    47. Re:Faster USB by flatrock · · Score: 2

      Performance won't be sufficient with USB 2.0.

      Why? That completely depends on the application. USB 2.0 has the bandwidth to handle what most single drivers can deliver. It's true that it's not a peer-to-peer technology, but talking to a hard drive isn't a peer-to-peer task.

      USB 2.0 was designed to be a way to get mouses and keyboards plugged into computers.

      USB 2.0 was designed to allow higher bandwidth devices to be attached to computers. Few people need more than 1 keyboard and 1 mouse. A lot of people can use a portable backup device such as a CD-RW or tape drive. USB 1.X really wasn't fast enough for these tasks. Even printers and scanners are pushing the 12 Mbit limit.

      USB still requires that a computer be part of the device chain; with FireWire, a FireWire camcorder and VCR can talk to each other without a computer. There is much more to this than just making both standards faster.

      Of course there's more to this than making the standards faster. There are a lot of things Firewire can do that USB 2.0 can't. Firewire is especially good for multimedia, where you want devices to be able to control other devices, or be controlled, for lack of better, simple explaination. However, if all you need is external, portable storage, then USB 2.0 may become a more cost effective solution.

      Notice I said it may become a more cost effective solution. That depends on if it becomes widely accepted. Firewire is a mature, established technology. That means that the cost of developing devices has come down, and they have become reasonably affordable. From a quick search, I still think that external firwire drives are priced too high compared to internal devices. If USB 2.0 becomes commonly used, the simplicity of the controller on the devices should make USB 2.0 devices cheaper that a firewire device that performs the same task. USB can't do everything that Firewire can. But for tasks that both can perform, USB should be cheaper. There are other costs, USB is likely to use more processor power on the host machine, but if that doesn't effect your application, and you want to save money, USB 2.0 may be right for you once it becomes established.

      FireWire is not just here NOW, it was here YESTERDAY. There is no place-your-bets atmosphere on FireWire, just incredibly happy and productive users doing things they used to only dream about.

      Sounds like Firewire weets your needs very well, that doesn't mean that USB 2.0 doesn't have a place of it's own where it excels as well. Firewire could probably meet those needs as well. You could easilly have a firewire mouse and keyboard, but it just wouldn't be cost effective. Use the right technology for the job. I work with Fibre Channel. It's very fast. It's peer-to-peer (and can do one to many in a limited fasion), and you can use multiple protocols over it such as FCP (SCSI) and IP. You can also use many devices over long distances. Using optical, longwave tranceivers you can have cable lengths up to 10 km. But it's not for every task. Use the right technologh for the job.

    48. Re:Faster USB by flatrock · · Score: 2

      Absolutely true, I don't use the full potential of my firewire adapter, I use it only for my camcorder which pumps through 3,6 mbytes per second on average. No dropped frames, very low CPU load, try that with USB....

      USB 2.0 will likely be able to only get you 2 out of 3, though implemented well, it could get all 3. The 3.6 MB/s shouldn't tax USB 2.0 much, and since it supports Isychronous transfers like Firewire does, it can reserve the bandwidth so that frames aren't dropped. The issue is CPU load. In most cases, the USB controller on the computer side doesn't have much brains to it. It relies on the system processor and a device driver to do most of the work. It may also use PIO to transfer the data from the FIFO's to system memory. This will result in high processor utilization. It doesn't have to be this way. The USB controller could contain a very basic processor that runs firmware to implement it's tasks rather than doing them in software on the system processor. Think of it as the difference between a hardware or software modem.

      So if both were solid, established technologies (which USB 2.0 isn't yet), why use firewire? Wouldn't you like your nice camcorder to be able to print stills on a color printer? How about it copying that video clip to a hard/tape drive? You could even have it control lighting over firewire. There are many uses for having the additional intelligence in the camcorder, rather than just having it be a dumb device. That's the reason to use firewire.

    49. Re:Faster USB by frogstomper · · Score: 1
      Ahh well. Better late than never...
      BS. All those non-power users are doing just fine right-clicking away on Windows. Apple's usability research that led to the choice of one button mice was conducted back in an era where 95% of computer users had no idea what a mouse was.
      Incorrect. Later usability tests consistently show that the vast majority of windows users do not understand the difference between mouse buttons.
  4. Good Thing. by Stackster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Probably takes someone like Apple to be the first to make boxes with USB 2.0 and 1394b. Hopefully, PCs will have them too, in a not-too-distant future.

    From what I remember (from the distant 20th century), Apple where first with "regular" USB too. Some PC:s had it (I had an old pentium MB with a USB bracket (sold separately)), but noone where able to use it (no drivers or hardware).
    Think it was the same with FireWire too.
    Why is this? Are Apple more daring and adventureous than all PC manufacturers? Or is it because noone wants to spend money on a technology that might not be "wanted" (meaning: Windows won't support it)?

    --

    There are 010 kinds of people. Those who understand octal, those who don't, and 06 other kinds of morons.
    1. Re:Good Thing. by mnordstr · · Score: 0

      Why is this? Are Apple more daring and adventureous than all PC manufacturers?

      I think it's because Apple is just Apple, and can basically do whatever they want with their systems.
      PC manufacturers have to be more careful, because the product has to be supported by other hardware and *all* the different OSes (which usually means M$ Windows). The open nature of the PC makes its development pace in some cases slower than ie. the Mac's.

    2. Re:Good Thing. by Stackster · · Score: 1

      That's just *so* wrong. I mean, that the company that makes the OS more or less decides what should be in the hardware.
      MS said that they won't support USB 2.0 (they also said something like that they would, sort of, but never mind that for now, thank you) because there is no available hardware to test it on. And noone wants (dares) to make any hardware for it, because the major OS for their hardware maybe won't support it.
      The OS should just support the hardware that's aviailable. Linux seems like that (to me at least), it does what it can on whatever hardware people might have out there.

      I wonder if there's some kind of similar situation over at Apple, hardware dudes saying "let's have this Cool Gizmo", and the OS guys go "naah, we don't want to support it, because we don't care, and you guys smell bad", and everyone gets mad at each other.

      --

      There are 010 kinds of people. Those who understand octal, those who don't, and 06 other kinds of morons.
    3. Re:Good Thing. by Idjit+Savant · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I remember seeing a Compaq DeskPro with USB on the logic board in early or mid 1997. The first Apple machine to have this feature was the first iMac, which showed up in August/September of 1998.

      In both cases, I would say support through the OS and the availability of USB peripherals was weak for at least another year after their initial release.

      As for the "daring" Apple, I would argue that they have the advantage of a less fragmented target market than most Intel-based manufacturers. Aside from coming to USB late, Apple had been working with others on FireWire since the 1980s. This, it seems, was simply their strategy to move away from SCSI, one of the largest sources of customer dissatisfaction since the arrival of the first scanners and SyQuest drives.

    4. Re:Good Thing. by liquidsin · · Score: 1

      Probably takes someone like Apple to be the first to make boxes with USB 2.0 and 1394b

      I use macs all day at work and I'd take it any day over ANY pc os for what I do (graphics), but come on. Sure, they're *announcing* their plans to build these boxes, but there's no bloody way they'll be first to release it. That's my main gripe with Apple, is that it takes them so long to release ANYTHING at all...promises, promises.

      --
      do not read this line twice.
    5. Re:Good Thing. by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Wow, USB on the logic board. So, did it have USB connectors on the outside?

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    6. Re:Good Thing. by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Please learn how to read. Apple isn't announcing shit, its a RUMOR that The Register is reporting on.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    7. Re:Good Thing. by l0wland · · Score: 1
      I remember seeing a Compaq DeskPro with USB on the logic board in early or mid 1997. The first Apple machine to have this feature was the first iMac, which showed up in August/September of 1998.

      It was in september 1998 when USB lost it's previous name "Unused Serial Bus" and became a "Universal Serial Bus".

      --

      "Honey, I feel a certain distance between us..." "Really? A 31ms ping ain't that bad..."
    8. Re:Good Thing. by phillymjs · · Score: 5, Informative

      I remember seeing a Compaq DeskPro with USB on the logic board in early or mid 1997.

      Who had the hardware first is irrelevant. Until Windows 98 added functional USB support (Win95 OSR2 does not count because its USB support was half-assed crap), those USB ports were little more than extra holes in the backplate. And aren't DeskPros aimed at the corporate market anyway, where (since NT is the "recommended" OS) USB was unusable until Windows 2000 was released in 1999?

      Even with the USB support that came with Windows 98, Wintel users still hung on to those serial and parallel port devices for their dear little lives. Apple was the first company to fully support USB, which it did by producing a product that exclusively used USB to connect peripherals-- and that is what created the market for USB.

      You can argue that forcing people to replace their legacy devices or buy adapters so they can continue to use them kind of sucks, but it is a tactic that is sometimes necessary. For example, to make sure people used the mouse on the first Macintosh, its keyboard had no cursor keys, so they couldn't stick with the 'old' ways. Once the mouse became accepted and it was shown that cursor keys still had a useful place on the keyboard, they were reinstated on the keyboards of subsequent Mac models.

      ~Philly

    9. Re:Good Thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure Apple wasn't the first with USB, but I believe they were the first to use ONLY USB. Previously nobody bothered to make USB peripherals, because everyone could use the legacy ports and no company wanted to limit themselves to the smaller USB crowd. Making the iMac (and later every Mac) completely dependant on USB forced peripheral manufacturers to either upgrade to USB or stop supporting the Mac. And since USB is cross-platform, companies only had to make 1 type of hardware and 2 drivers, rather than seperate Mac and PC hardware.

    10. Re:Good Thing. by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      Just support the hardware that's available? Geez. If everyone took that totally uninspired position, we'd be using PCs with ISA buses on EGA monitors. And Macs wouldn't even exist.

      --
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      Max V.
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    11. Re:Good Thing. by kirkb · · Score: 1

      So whoever had hardware first is irrelevent, unless it's apple, right :)? FWIW, the 1997-era deskpros came with Win9x stock. NT was an upgrade.

      Thank goodness that PC's still come with serial and parallel ports. As an embedded systems engineer, I use them daily to connect to all sorts of hardware (compilation targets, modems, terminals, custom circuits, etc). It is impossible for many developers, particularly those interacting with hardware, to use apple hardware (don't even get me started on software!)

      --
      Slashdot: come for the pedantry, stay for the condescension.
    12. Re:Good Thing. by magnetHEAD · · Score: 1

      Apple can add new technologies to their hardware and operating systems because quite simply, they have total control over the system. If they put 2.0 in the box, they'll sure as hell be making a bunch of peripherals to run on it, otherwise it wouldn't matter to them. USB got added to the imac, because it was cheaper to make devices than using ADB. mh

      --
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      "Double-click the lifestone to attune your spirit to the lifestone"
    13. Re:Good Thing. by liquidsin · · Score: 1

      Apple's next Power Macs, due to be announced early next year at Macworld Expo San Francisco, will "definitely" support the USB 2.0 and 1394b connectivity specifications and the DDR SDRAM memory standard, company deep throats have told The Register.

      Looks like a little more than your run of the mill rumour (excerpted from the article at the Register). In any case, rumour or not, doesn't change the fact that Apple is slow at hell when it comes to releasing, which, if you had read my comment before replying, was the point I was making.

      --
      do not read this line twice.
    14. Re:Good Thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you even have a clue how few people use paralle/serial daily? Ever see how many exclusively USB things there are at CompUSA?

    15. Re:Good Thing. by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it was a bastardized, big square connection. It ran the keyboard & mouse, allowed you to adjust the volume on the built in speaker on the keyboard, and plug headphones into said speaker.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    16. Re:Good Thing. by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Compaq had their own drivers....

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    17. Re:Good Thing. by SightlessOne · · Score: 1

      Why would it be *so* wrong for the company that makes the software to make the hardware? That position gives them an advantage to *innovate* (please insert your favorite marketing keywords).. and in doing so they can basically try out new and better technologies. If the OS just supported existing hardware, and hardware manufacturers just created hardware based on what the OS supported, we'd get nowhere.

    18. Re:Good Thing. by SightlessOne · · Score: 1

      of course, whoever had the hardware first is irrelevant, unless it's apple. I must say i'm a former apple advocate (raving-fanatic), and there's nothing we love more than to regurgitate apple's accomplishments (ie yell and scream at windows users). USB, Firewire, the first GUI (even though it really wasn't)... all the good stuff like that.

    19. Re:Good Thing. by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      The Register also jumped on the "LCD iMac" bandwagon a few months ago. In any case you'll get no argument from me that Apple is slow as hell in releasing. I'm dying for 10.1 AND a better PBG4....you know one with a video card made in this century?

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    20. Re:Good Thing. by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

      What you are thinking of is NOT a USB connector.

      I have a Deskpro XL right here with that plug staring right at me, and it's nothing more than a keyboard/mouse/sound in/sound out combined into a single cable. A special keyboard ('voystra?')has a built-in speaker, vol knob, and mic/line out/mouse jacks.

      However, I will back up your story that we got other Compaq 'workstation' Pentium Pro machines in the 1996 timeframe that had USB ports. They were covered with little stickers explaining how software support was pending.

      --
      Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
    21. Re:Good Thing. by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      You're right. It has the USB symbol on the back of the box (or one very similar) so I was confused. btw the keyboard is call a Vocalyst.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    22. Re:Good Thing. by gig · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > The open nature of the PC

      That is a myth that PC manufacturers are currently riding all the way to hell. A typical PC these days is made up of components that were spec'ed by Microsoft (without input from Intel, since 1999), OS and application software by Microsoft, curvy box and branding by Gateway/Dell/HP/etc, hardware construction by far east subcontractor. It is exactly the same with the XBox, except the curvy box and branding are now also done by Microsoft. Same with Microsoft UltimateTV, same with the upcoming Microsoft HomeStation (XBox with keyboard, mouse, and MS Office "HomeStation Edition").

      Microsoft has long-since taken over the PC and made it the "Microsoft PC". Apple and Microsoft are pretty much the only vendors with unique products in the PC space. Users want Apple or they want Microsoft, and anyone else is generally incidental. People have been buying Microsoft PC's for years, then stripping off Windows (which they paid for) and telling themselves "this is a generic, open PC that I have here". Check out the Windows logo on your keyboard ... it's a Microsoft PC. Change all the Compaq, HP, Gateway logos on boxes out there to Microsoft logos and the constraints that the box makers are under ("thou shalt ship only Windows") begin to make sense.

      My wife recently bought a new handheld, and she preferred Palm over HandSpring because using Windows and then a Mac had taught her that getting the OS with the hardware and from one company is a better experience. When faced with the choice of a cheap Microsoft PC or a cheap Gateway PC featuring Microsoft Windows, people are going to go with Microsoft in droves. They will know that their box and bundled apps will be TOTALLY supported in the next OS rev (just like a Mac), and they will flock to it.

      > PC manufacturers have to be more careful,
      > because the product has to be supported by
      > other hardware

      Macs also have to be supported by other hardware ... Mac users have printers, scanners, MP3 players, CD/DVD burners, USB devices of every description, FireWire this and that. USB and FireWire and PCI and AGP are in both Macs and PC's. Connectivity is king these days, and Apple has plenty of that ... even the little $1299 subnotebook-sized iBook has modem, Ethernet, FireWire, USB, VGA out, TV out, audio out, and AirPort (802.11) wireless. It also includes high-quality software for actually using these hardware features. If you need more capabilities, you can easily install third-party software by dragging a single icon from a CD or similar to your hard disk. "Uninstalling" means dragging that same single icon to the Trash. There is a huge Mac community to continue to support with each new Mac, and that includes third-party software and hardware makers. Even hardware makers that don't make Mac drivers ... you can plug a FireWire hard disk into a Mac and it just works, even if the hard disk was made for a PC and is formatted with FAT32.

      > and *all* the different OSes (which usually
      > means M$ Windows).

      A new box from Gateway is no more guaranteed to run Linux than a new box from Apple. They both run Linux, and you generally have to get the go-ahead from your distro's author before you know it is going to work on a brand-new box. Only Windows and Mac OS are fully supported, on Microsoft and Apple PC's, respectively. Anything else has turned into repurposing hardware, and that's why Linux and BSD face such a hard time ... Linux boxes are generally Microsoft PC's that won't run the latest Microsoft OS (XP is not recommended on anything pre-2000 due to BIOS issues). Many Mac users are now running Linux for the first time on old Macs that won't run OS X (1997 and earlier).

      Talking about "generic PC's" or "open PC's" these days is just being a Microsoft apologist. They own it, and have owned it for a while. Soon, they will actually put their name on the front door (on the box) instead of just on the deed (their contracts with PC manufacturers).

    23. Re:Good Thing. by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 1
      I wonder if there's some kind of similar situation over at Apple, hardware dudes saying "let's have this Cool Gizmo", and the OS guys go "naah, we don't want to support it, because we don't care, and you guys smell bad", and everyone gets mad at each other.

      Ha! Actually at Apple, it's Steve Jobs thinking something is good and yelling at everyone to do it! Look at the iMac. Steve always liked small one piece "appliance" computers. It was his idea for the original Macintosh to take up the space of a piece of paper on your desk.

      He also hates the noise of a fan, so the newer iMacs (and the Cube) don't have a fan.

      He liked the cube shape at NeXT and he still liked it at Apple.

      He hates floppy disks, and the rumor was that most of the repairs on Macs were floppy related, so out they went (and who cares really...)

      The USB thing was funny in the beginning. I think he just thought it was cool. Remember that there were very few USB peripherals when the iMac came out ... and it had no serial ports for printers, no ADB for input devices, and no SCSI! It was a brave thing to do, and luckily the iMacs sold well and started the whole USB peripheral cottage industry.

      Apple invented Firewire, so of course they have a vested interest in making that a big thing.

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
    24. Re:Good Thing. by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 1
      I'm dying for 10.1

      Should be out tomorrow (Tuesday the 24th) ;-)

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
    25. Re:Good Thing. by gig · · Score: 2

      It's pretty widely acknowledged that Intel couldn't get USB off the ground because of lack of support from both Microsoft and their box-makers. Intel put USB on their motherboards (starting with Pentium Pro systems, I believe), so the ports showed up on boxes from many manufacturers, but they were non-functional without software support. That is almost worse than not including them at all, because they caused a lot of confusion. Apple's iMac not only had functioning USB ports, it also lacked legacy ports, so every iMac purchase also counted as a person who was "in the market for USB peripherals". They sold millions of iMacs, and that's why the first generation of USB peripherals were all iMac-colored. I recall buying a USB hub in 2000 and having a choice of "Mac colors" (translucent blue, red, green, etc.) or (for the first time in my experience) "PC style" (solid beige) which made me laugh thinking of all the translucent blue peripherals I'd seen around beige boxes lately.

      I bought an IBM workstation in 1998, and it had USB ports on it, but had rubber plugs in the ports and a sticker next to them that said something like, "Use pending OS support". The mouse and keyboard that came with the system were both PS/2-style, and it also had a "joystick" port somewhere, and the modem hooked up to a COM port, and the printer to a parallel port. In early 1999 I replaced that machine with a PowerMac G3 (the blue iMac-styled one) that had USB ports that worked, a USB keyboard and mouse, and the printer and scanner hooked up via USB as well. The printer I bought had USB, PC-parallel, and Mac-serial connections, but it only worked at that time on USB if you were using a Mac. The Mac box also had FireWire ports, even then.

      The transition from Mac-serial to USB was so much easier on the user on the Mac side than the transition from PC-serial to USB was for PC users. When Apple introduced USB, they killed on-board serial; when they introduced FireWire, they killed on-board SCSI. Both times, third parties stepped right in with serial-to-USB and SCSI-to-FireWire converters for users who bought new Macs and wanted to use old peripherals. Users knew to make their next external hard disk a FireWire model and their next joystick a USB model because those were the "new" ports, each having over 10 times the bandwidth of the built-in ports they replaced, and both being hot-pluggable, too.

    26. Re:Good Thing. by gig · · Score: 2

      > So whoever had hardware first is irrelevent,
      > unless it's apple, right :)? FWIW, the 1997-era
      > deskpros came with Win9x stock. NT was an
      > upgrade.

      Only a geek would care who had USB hardware first. Yes, obviously, Intel did; they created USB. To get from there (dead ports on PC's) to here (vast USB peripheral market) they needed somebody to say "I second that". Who bet the farm on USB other than Apple? Even Intel's mobos just added USB without removing even the PS/2 port. Apple showed off the iMac in early 1998 and it had a USB keyboard and mouse and no legacy ports. USB peripherals came in iMac colors for years.

      You can add PC-style serial or parallel ports to a Mac, by the way, through USB or PCI. There is an iMac stand that plugs into USB and features all kinds of geeky ports.

    27. Re:Good Thing. by kirkb · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm very aware of such things. But my point is that parallel and serial can't disappear totally. There are several technologies (and technologists) that still depend on them.

      --
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  5. If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Shivetya · · Score: 2

    I don't think Apple supporting USB 2.0 is going to make the technology be worth the effort. Realistically if Ms doesn't add the support to the OS what manufacturers are going to create USB 2.0 items?

    I think the bigger effect here might be seeing real processing power from the G5s and DDR. Its been way to long for the powerpc to remain so far back in the "apparently important" mhz race.

    Still, I don't think faster interfaces mean diddly when it comes to upgrading PCs, my PCs get upgraded when the components inside, meaning processor and memory, cannot be upgraded to sufficient levels for what I need to run... (stuff outside the computer has a tendency to get upgraded when it developes legs of its own)

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Diamon · · Score: 1

      MS *is* supporting USB 2.0 the drivers just weren't available to go into the RTM XP. I believe they are already available via Windows Update.

    2. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you not remember the plethora of USB devices that came out as a result of the origonal iMac's introduction?

    3. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Refrag · · Score: 2

      Apple supporting USB is what made USB what it is today. So, yes they can do the same with USB 2.0. Like it matters, FireWire is where it's at!

      --
      I have a website. It's about Macs.
    4. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Kaiser+Sose · · Score: 1

      "Firewire" is also a term coined by apple for stuff they started and pushed . . . seems to me the mouse would be yet another thing, and the GUI (you could argue xerox), they've all now spread rather widely. Apple may not be a mega-giant . . but it seems they've got it where it counts . . .

      --
      "All that we see and seem is but a dream within a dream." --Edgar Allen Poe
    5. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by orpheus2k · · Score: 1
      Realistically if Ms doesn't add the support to the OS what manufacturers are going to create USB 2.0 items?

      I think Microsoft intended to support USB 2 but backed out of including it with the initial rev. of WinXP to ensure, among many other factors, a timely release. I would expect service packs or whatever upgrade vector it is this time will bring it along in due time.

    6. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by tshak · · Score: 2

      Apple supporting USB is what made USB what it is today.

      You wish - as much as you may hate it, it wasn't mainstream until M$ caught on. And you're right, firewire is where it's at. We don't need TWO external busses anyway.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    7. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by thrig · · Score: 1

      If Microsoft had so much to do with USB, why did the majority of USB devices introduced after the iMac came out come in pretty, translucent colors?

    8. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Ryano · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You wish - as much as you may hate it, it wasn't mainstream until M$ caught on.

      Given that Microsoft represents such a large share of the market, it's true to say that USB couldn't be described as "mainstream" until Windows supported it. However, neither could it become mainstream without a large pool of useful hardware being developed for it. This latter category was very visibly driven by Apple, and specifically the iMac.

      Intel will tell you that the introduction of the iMac led to an explosion in the demand for and development of USB devices, from hubs to floppy drives, CD burners etc. USB usage on the the PC took off more slowly, but it would have taken off a lot more slowly had it not been for an existing pool of useful hardware. Intel hadn't been having much luck promoting the technology on their own, and although I'm sure they could have pushed it into the mainstream with Microsoft's help, USB was given a serious shot in the arm by Apple.

      Apple may have a tiny market share compared to Microsoft, but they still sell machines in enough volume to spearhead new technologies like this.

    9. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by n3m6 · · Score: 2

      given the huge base of products with usb 1.0 .. and all the pc's that are currently sold with usb ports, forwards and backwards compatibility of usb 2.0 is one feature that will make a difference in this "battle" .. all the devices that are usb 2.0 capable can also be used on the current usb 1.0 ports..

      we'll see how it turns out right ..

    10. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Ryan+Amos · · Score: 1

      If you look at the way USB works, you'll see how utterly crappy (even at 800 mbps) the protocol is for a lot of things. Let's say you have 4 devices on a USB2 controller. The most any one device can pull at a time is 200 mbps. It doesn't matter if the other devices are in use or not. This also ignores the fact that USB uses a lot of CPU. 1394, on the other hand, is a derivative of SCSI, and thus achieves great speed with a minimal of CPU usage and none of the symmetry requirements of USB. I'm not saying USB is useless, to the contrary, it's great for stuff like keyboards, printers, mice, palms, etc. Just not for applications with a large volume of data being transmitted. Personally, I'd take a 1394 CD-RW over a USB2 CD-RW any day.

    11. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Matthias+Wiesmann · · Score: 2

      To convince yourself about the influence of Apple on USB devices, look at their look. Most USB devices can be recognised because of their iMac look. Those devices where not designed with a beige PC in mind.

    12. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      It's a common misconception that those early USB devices were Bondi blue, they were infact BSOD blue.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    13. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by tricorn · · Score: 1

      Microsoft doesn't have to support it, OEMs have to support it for it to become popular. They can install the drivers for it if they're installing the hardware, so it doesn't have to be part of a default Windows installation.

      Support from the Wintel world is necessary to get prices into the reasonable range. If PCs had gone with SCSI rather than IDE, SCSI drives would be the cheap ones now. Diskettes are cheap now because everyone uses them; when they first came out, and only Macs could use them, they were $5 each (for a 400K single-sided diskette). However, Apple support DOES have an influence - look at the price of SCSI drives after Apple stopped using them as the standard internal drive. Prices soared.

      Is there anything inherently more expensive about Firewire than USB (in either version)? How do the two higher-speed versions of each handle backwards compatibility with the the slower-speed version?

    14. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by Lally+Singh · · Score: 2

      We don't need TWO external busses anyway.


      Actually, multiple external busses makes perfect sense. One for high speed mass transfer of data, and another for low latency low bandwidth data. Firewire mice make no sense, and neither do USB disk drives (when you actually care about performance...). Bus & protocol design requires tradeoffs - cost vs performance, latency vs bandwidth, etc.


      Besides, how many busses does the PC have? Serial, PS/2, USB, Parallel, etc. Two ain't too bad :-)

      --
      Care about electronic freedom? Consider donating to the EFF!
    15. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 1
      You wish - as much as you may hate it, it wasn't mainstream until M$ caught on.

      I have to disagree... why were all the first USB peripherals on the market iMac colored? That had nothing to do with M$!

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
    16. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by gig · · Score: 2

      I think Microsoft's hardware people aren't really behind USB 2 ... XBox has USB 1.0 and FireWire on it and it won't even ship until November, so putting USB 2 into Windows XP might suggest that XBox's USB is not state-of-the-art. I presume that Microsoft's new set-top boxes have FireWire like most TiVo-style stuff ... they may have an interest in slowing USB 2 down in order to keep convergence centered around FireWire.

      We used to think that Microsoft would like USB 2 because it (unlike FireWire) requires that a PC be present in order for it to operate. Microsoft's answer was to start building set-top boxes, game consoles, and handhelds ... now they want FireWire interoperability as much as anybody. (Or so they would like us to think ... )

    17. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by aanantha · · Score: 1

      MS didn't put in USB 2.0 support because they wanted to push Firewire. This is a good thing from Apple's standpoint. Apple invented Firewire, and Intel invented USB. Intel is trying to kill Firewire with USB 2.0 so they can receive more royalty money. But MS is in favor of Firewire because it is a better technology. Apple is just trying to play it safe by supporting USB 2.0 . They would much rather you use Firewire for high speed connectivity. Hopefully the industry will give Intel a well deserved bitch-slap and stick with Firewire for digital camcorders and such. MS is adding support for USB 2.0 in the next XP service pack.

    18. Re:If MS doesn't support USB2.0 is Apple enough? by thrig · · Score: 1

      The term "Bondi Blue" has actually always annoyed me, as I see it as a wierd shade of green.

  6. Go Apple by zarathustra93 · · Score: 1

    I am an electronic musician, and just recently purchased an EOL dual g4 450.

    This almost makes me wish I would have been a little more patient. With as much bandwidth as these new mac's will have, one could reasonable expect to be able to master full surround dvd's without even spiking processor usage. I'm glad to see that apple is still innovating on the technical end. It's this type of innovation that reminds me why I use a mac for all things music :-)

    If you are at all interested in my music, click on my link above!

    Moderators: you should browse at 0. I may have made some dumb ass comments in the past, but I frequently have something worthwhile to say. Take a look!

    1. Re:Go Apple by Guns+n'+Roses+Troll · · Score: 0
      ... but I frequently have something worthwhile to say. Take a look!


      No you don't. HAND.

  7. IANAM (I am not a marketer) by Chazmati · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't 1394b ("double FireWire") be FireFireWireWire and not just FireFire?

    1. Re:IANAM (I am not a marketer) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Shouldn't 1394b ("double FireWire") be FireFireWireWire and not just FireFire?

      Well, unless you're in Texas, in which case it would be FahrFahrWarWar. I'll stop now, Ah'm tarred.

  8. It's not a minor point by Uttles · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The speed of the bus in a computer is a big point these days. Processors and RAM are getting so fast that now the limiting factor on overall speed is the device that moves data around in a computer: the bus.

    --

    ~ now you know
    1. Re:It's not a minor point by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It should also be mentioned that your average non-techie computer user is likely to feel more comfortable plugging in cable than a card. As the computer becomes a comodity item, then more and more of your stuff will be plugging in from the outside, unless you are a techie and then you will insist on putting everything inside because it takes less room and because there are less wires.

      If I could get a computer with the form factor of a Sun Classic and stackable HDs using the same form factor, using a simple bus extender, then I would go for it.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    2. Re:It's not a minor point by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      The speed of the bus in a computer is a big point these days. Processors and RAM are getting so fast that now the limiting factor on overall speed is the device that moves data around in a computer: the bus.
      Indeed. Gigabit Ethernet is close to the theoretical maximum bandwidth for 32-bit 33-MHz PCI. IEEE-1394b is more than triple that speed, which would put it well beyond what ordinary PCI can deliver. Does this mean that this new flavor of FireWire will require 64-bit 66-MHz PCI (rarely seen outside servers and workstations), or will it sit on some other bus (such as HyperTransport)?
      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    3. Re:It's not a minor point by znu · · Score: 2

      Apple's current Firewire implementation isn't on the PCI bus, so I doubt any future implementation would be. And Apple has joined the HyperTransport consortium.

      --
      This space unintentionally left unblank.
    4. Re:It's not a minor point by richard-parker · · Score: 1

      Gigabit Ethernet is close to the theoretical maximum bandwidth for 32-bit 33-MHz PCI. IEEE-1394b is more than triple that speed, which would put it well beyond what ordinary PCI can deliver. Does this mean that this new flavor of FireWire will require 64-bit 66-MHz PCI (rarely seen outside servers and workstations), or will it sit on some other bus (such as HyperTransport)?

      Probably neither. The current line of G4 desktop machines use an Apple custom north and south bridge chipset. The north bridge (called Uni-N) is the memory controller and bridge to the AGP and PCI busses. More significantly, it also contains an integrated controller for both FireWire and Gigabit Ethernet. The lower speed I/O interfaces (such as USB) are handled in the standard way, i.e. by the south bridge. To keep down both the chip count down as well as costs I expect that Apple will continue with their current strategy of integrating the high performance IO controllers directly into the design of their north bridge.

      Apple, however, has expressed interest in HyperTransport. Apple might choose to integrate the PCI controller into the south bridge and connect the north bridge and south bridge by HyperTransport instead of by PCI. Furthermore, if Motorola or IBM should decide to release a PowerPC chip with a HyperTransport interface you will likely see Apple switch from the Max bus to the HyperTransport bus to connect the north bridge to the CPU.

    5. Re:It's not a minor point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      THere is nothing which can be exactly described as a South bridge on Apple hardwar. For one reason, the south bridge on PC is where the ISA bus and all the legacy crap at fixed addresses and (most of the time) fixed edge triggered interrupts lie.


      What you call south bridge is a fully functional PCI device in which all addresses are programmable and so on. It is a complement of all slow interfaces which are needed in a computer (USB, power management, modem, RTC, NVRAM, sound and a few other things I forget). However it is true plug and play and willl never interfere with anything else you plug in your machine. In a PC, the south bridge is literally all the legacy crap plus a few other things (very often th IO-APIC is on the X-bus, an 8 bit bus on the other side of the ISA bridge along with the Super IO chip).


      Conceptually, this area is incomparably uglier and crappy on the PC side of the world. This does not mean that it is clean on Macs because it is designed to support some kind of legacy IO for compatiblity with some 68k Macs, just that you probably need less barf bags when examining how it works. One area which is specifically ugly on Macs is the communication wit PMU (power management unit microcontroller, includes battery control on laptops), which uses an horrid protocol. Still, compared with PC (which hide most of these thing in the BIOS SMM and ACPI code), it's almost elegant and for once, even better documented (ACPI and SMM are ways to avoid documenting how some core functionality works).

    6. Re:It's not a minor point by Spruitje · · Score: 2


      One area which is specifically ugly on Macs is the communication wit PMU (power management unit microcontroller, includes battery control on laptops), which uses an horrid protocol.


      But only on Powerbooks.
      And the bus they are using is I2C.
      Yep, that's another industry standard.
      Dito for the protocol they are using.
      For powermanagement the I2C bus is perfect and don't forget that contrary to most PC-laptops Apple uses a dedicated 68C09 processor with some ram and rom to manage the power, clock and nvram.
      The thing is, Apple uses this concept in all their powerbooks.
      Which makes it very simple to support it in for instance linux.

    7. Re:It's not a minor point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gigabit ethernet is past the maximum bandwidth for
      32-bit 33-MHz PCI when running full duplex.

    8. Re:It's not a minor point by gig · · Score: 2

      > If I could get a computer with the form factor of a
      > Sun Classic and stackable HDs using the same form
      > factor, using a simple bus extender, then I would
      > go for it.

      This exists today. A stack of FireWire hard drives connects to a computer with one cable, because each hard drive is connected to the next one with a short cable. To add a drive, place it on top of the stack and plug a short cable between it and the last drive. Or plug a camcorder into the last drive to capture video.

      Some FireWire hard drives also have a third port on top, designed to plug into another similar drive stacked on top of it. The popularity of FireWire as a standard (many manufacturers) and its cheap cables and hot-plugging takes some of the steam out of the stackable plug, though.

    9. Re:It's not a minor point by larkost · · Score: 2

      Apple already has the solutions mapped out on their G4, and has now for 2 product revisions. The Gigabit Etherenet port is on the Uni-North Bridge chip (approximates a North bridge Chip in the standard PC layout), and if that were not enough, they have 64Bit PCI slots on the motherboard. Sounds like you can go either way with that one...

  9. Whats FireFire? by tonywestonuk · · Score: 0, Redundant

    You mean FireWire?

    I suppose double Firewire could be FireFireWireWire..

    T.

  10. Re:Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple has the same marketshare as Linux so if Apple isn't news then why is Linux?

  11. Motorola don't use PPC desktops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No Macs. They use Intel based desktop systems running Windows.

    Makes you wonder about the viability of PPC and Apple.

    1. Re:Motorola don't use PPC desktops by Mononoke · · Score: 1
      Makes you wonder about the viability of PPC and Apple.
      Makes me wonder about the viability of Motorola. Seems they are the ones tanking it lately.

      I'm sure their IT department didn't mind the extra staff positions required, though.

      --
      NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
    2. Re:Motorola don't use PPC desktops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What positions? They have cut so deep that no one is left, and the people with any skill left a long time ago.

    3. Re:Motorola don't use PPC desktops by DavidRavenMoon · · Score: 2, Interesting
      This is where obviously you don't know the story. They used to use Macs and Moto built Mac clones. When Apple ended cloning, Moto lost a bunch of money and got pissy... so out went the Macs... I have heard Intel uses Macs in their labs however.

      Also, IBM makes PowerPC chips too, and uses them for things other than Macs, like in the Game Cube. Same with Moto... they use PPC chips in a lot of embedded applications.

      --
      -- if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic - Lewis Carrol
  12. Combine this .... by Compulawyer · · Score: 3, Funny
    ...with the 1.6 GHz, 64-bit G5 PowerPC processor due out in January or February, and you have a VERY formidable machine.

    Remember too that SuSE and some others have PowerPC versions of Linux for these boxes as well. Imagine Linux on this? Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these?

    --

    Laws affecting technology will always be bad until enough techies become lawyers.

    1. Re:Combine this .... by whjwhj · · Score: 2

      Why wreck a perfectly excellent machine by installing Linux on it when you can run OS X?

    2. Re:Combine this .... by Compulawyer · · Score: 2

      I agree. OS X would be my first choice. However, I rant and rave about M$ trying to impose their way of computing on me, so I am not about to do the same. If someone prefers Linux with KDE or GNOME to OS X, and that's what works best for them, that's fine with me.

      --

      Laws affecting technology will always be bad until enough techies become lawyers.

    3. Re:Combine this .... by strictnein · · Score: 1

      with the 1.6 GHz, 64-bit G5 PowerPC processor due out in January or February, and you have a VERY formidable machine.

      Wait... you actually believe those rumors?
      Heh... sorry, but G5s are still no where on the horizon.

    4. Re:Combine this .... by jrockway · · Score: 1

      I have to admit, KDE is getting quite nice these days! Have you seen the Liquid theme? It's AWESOME! Translucent menus, neat buttons and stuff. I'm running it on my old iMac Rev. B and it's FAST! I was pleasently surprised anyway.

      --
      My other car is first.
    5. Re:Combine this .... by gig · · Score: 2

      I don't know whether the G5 rumors are true, but it's worth noting that The Register ran almost the exact same stories about Motorola last year, except that it was the G4e taping out and going first silicon and set to ship in PowerMac's "this January". The G4e-based PowerMacs were announced in January 2001 and shipped a month later.

      The 64-bit part is not surprising and not hard to believe because the Power architecture was 64-bit from the beginning. They always planned to go to 64-bits in a timely fashion with the PowerPC. The 64-bit PowerPC apparently runs 32-bit code natively, and nothing in OS X touches the hardware except the kernel (a modified Mach kernel), so maybe a new kernel is all that's needed to go 64-bit initially, with developers shipping apps with 64-bit binaries in them later to optimize things (Mac apps can contain multiple binaries, and the OS chooses the right one depending on the machine).

      I also heard somewhere that Apple has been very involved with the design of the G5, and I'm sure that pumping up the MHz, even at the cost of some performance per clock, was a pretty high priority. You can't expect to educate the world about Intel's empty MHz, so you have to get your numbers in line with their numbers, unfortunately. The G4 is a truly amazing chip, doing many common media tasks in no time at all, but the problem is that you basically have to use one to know that, because the MHz sounds small next to an x86 chip, and many people don't care that the pipelines and power consumption is also correspondingly small. Also, many people seem to think that Altivec is a band-aid like MME or something, or that Altivec is rarely used, when in reality, if your app needs CPU power (graphics, video, audio, etc) then it has long since started using Altivec, and long since supported dual CPU's. If every Intel mobo had an MPEG decoder on it, apps would use that, too.

  13. You believe the register? by lythari · · Score: 2

    Although I'd like to believe the story and wish it were true, I don't think we'll be seeing any G5s until this time next year at the very earliest.

    Moto have a topnotch chip design unit, but their fabs suck big time and can't produce the chips in large enough quantities

    1. Re:You believe the register? by uweber · · Score: 1

      Well in that case lets just hope BigBlue bails them out - once again (fast G3)

      --
      --Ulrich
      On no accounts allow a Vogon to read poetry at you
    2. Re:You believe the register? by InstantCool · · Score: 1

      Anything is possible. Nobody thought the G4 would ship as early as it did. Of course, looking back at the situation, maybe they should've waited.

      --
      InstantCool
    3. Re:You believe the register? by selderrr · · Score: 0

      hmm.. dunno

      the biggest problem here is that the altivec (aka velocity) engine is matented by moto. IBM doesn't do altivec.
      IMO, apple should ship multicore, multiprocessor G5 machines with a ton of RAM, and have it built by IBM. If it wasn't for the aqua interface being such a CPU hog, most users would never or rarely use altivec (except maybe for mp3 encoding, but then again, who encodes these days ? Don't we all just DL the encoded version ?)

    4. Re:You believe the register? by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Nobody thought the G4 would ship as early as it did.

      It didn't, Apple just announced it as "shipping" before it was ready.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  14. yeah, but... by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 0, Troll

    these benifits are offset nicely by the fact you have to run OS X on the damned thing.

    Ever use it? It's like driving a speedboat through mud.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    1. Re:yeah, but... by agby · · Score: 1

      Just wait for the 10.1 update. All reports indicate that this should be one hell of a speed bump.

      Also, now that RAM is so cheap, load up with that. OSX is RAM hungry.

    2. Re:yeah, but... by Niksie3 · · Score: 1

      I run bove macosX and linux on my macs. I could not live without both of them!!!

      --
      Sig you!
    3. Re:yeah, but... by Maktoo · · Score: 1

      Try 10.1

      it's safe to say that speed/responsiveness is no longer an issue.

    4. Re:yeah, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "
      these benifits are offset nicely by the fact you have to run OS X on the damned thing.
      "
      No. Several versions of Linux exist for PowerPC machines, including LinuxPPC and Yellow Dog Linux.
      "

  15. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by Slad · · Score: 1

    It was an incorrect rumor; to the fault of Apple.

    Apple made an annoucement that they were laying off some of their sales force, yet they did not disclose the number of employees. This led to rampant rumors that Apple was laying off a large number of employees - following the downward spiral of the other PC manufacturers.

    As it has turned out, Apple eleiminated 50,that fifty, total employees. The move was not a cost cutting one, but the result of a re-organization of sales regions. The new zoning was not finalized when they made tha announcement, which is why they did not give an exact number at that time.

    --
    I am Slad.
  16. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Informative

    [sigh] This is a borderline troll, and I probably shouldn't waste my time replying to it, but on the off-chance it's legitimate, I'll make an honest answer.

    The "massive Apple layoffs" thing seems to be a massive rumor, and no more. In fact, all the legitimate news indicates that Apple is weathering the storm much better than PC makers such as Dell. If someone has information to the contrary, please let me know.

    And where the hell were you pricing laptops (and if so, why were you looking at iMacs anyway?) IMO the iBook offers the absolute best price-performance ratio of any laptop on the market. Yes, the standard 64 MB RAM sucks, but you can bump that up cheaply enough. In every other way, the iBook is the best low- to mid-range laptop you'll find for your money.

    --
    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  17. NO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dev is AIX, Solaris, and Linux

  18. The importance of USB 2.0 by LenE · · Score: 1

    I don't quite believe this rumor, but let's just suppose its true.

    Apple would be including USB 2.0 and faster firewire (800 Mbps, not 3.2 Gbps), for two reasons. First, it would be accomodating a standard that many peripheral manufacturers would be supporting for LOW speed hardware. Second, it would be including it to showcase Firewire's supremecy as a HIGH speed interface.

    Remember, Intel has bee trying to market USB 2.0 as a FireWire killer. Everybody knows that the 480 Mbps spec. makes 1394's 400 Mbps look slower. Unfortunately for Intel, USB is a poorly hacked technology which is not capable of producing real-world results of this speed. Theoretically, it works this fast, until you add a slow device like a mouse or keyboard, peripherals which predominate the USB connected equipment today.

    Actually, they might use USB 2.0 for some integrated telephony and modem type devices, as that is what USB was originally developed for.

    Primarily, Apple would include the technology to maintain a pool of peripherals, since 2.0 devices will not work on 1.x buses. It will not be able to replace FireWire for high speed stuff, so they wouldn't be dropping 1394, even to save a few bucks on low-end models, since the "Digital Hub" requires high speed DV capabilities.

    -- Len

    1. Re:The importance of USB 2.0 by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2

      One advantage of USB is that it is designed for 'dumb' devices that don't do much work and thus cheap to implement. For these sort of devices the master-slave approach works well. As the connected devices become 'smarter' then there is a great need for FireWire to interconnect the devices.

      BTW, don't the 3Gb transfer rates depend on an optical connection?

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    2. Re:The importance of USB 2.0 by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2

      One advantage of USB is that it is designed for 'dumb' devices that don't do much work and thus cheap to implement.

      That's the theory but it isn't all that easy to implement for the small guys, or all that cheap unless you go high volume. It makes Apple's old ADB look simple. To sell a USB device it requires a $2000+ (or something like that) per year membership to get unique manufacterer & device IDs and get compatibility testing in order to use the logo. I love the idea of compatibility testing but it hasn't worked, there are still flakey USB products being sold.

      BTW, don't the 3Gb transfer rates depend on an optical connection?

      I wouldn't know. 1000bTX is said to use several voltage states on a 125MHz clock rather than two voltage states on a 1GHz clock.

    3. Re:The importance of USB 2.0 by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      That's the theory but it isn't all that easy to implement for the small guys, or all that cheap unless you go high volume. It makes Apple's old ADB look simple. To sell a USB device it requires a $2000+ (or something like that) per year membership to get unique manufacterer & device IDs and get compatibility testing in order to use the logo.
      So much for rolling your own USB devices, unless you intend to just grab some (hopefully) unused ID and hope for the best. With that kind of roadblock, is it any wonder that serial and parallel ports are still with us? At least you can still roll your own parallel-port EPROM burner without getting bent over.

      (Yes, I know that two large isn't a big deal for an established hardware vendor...but what about someone who just does this stuff as a hobby? Oh, I forgot...the average Joe isn't expected to actually create stuff; he's only expected to consume whatever is made available, and to be grateful for it.)

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    4. Re:The importance of USB 2.0 by Howie · · Score: 2

      is it any wonder that serial and parallel ports are still with us?

      Just barely, in some cases. I just bought a new Toshiba Satellite 3000 that has no serial ports at all. 3 USB, firewire, smartmedia, parallel (still)... but no serial. I ended up buying a USB serial dongle, which actually gave me the benefit of RX/TX/CD lights on my serial port (why doesn't anyone do that normally? They're really useful!)

      --
      "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
    5. Re:The importance of USB 2.0 by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Maybe we need to reserve get the association to allocate a number of address for non plug and play devices, so that the hobbyists can develop their own USB devices?

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    6. Re:The importance of USB 2.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't worry too much about hackability if the old ports finally get dropped from standard configs -- PCI Serial/Parallel combo cards can be found for about $10.

    7. Re:The importance of USB 2.0 by teener · · Score: 1
      BTW, don't the 3Gb transfer rates depend on an optical connection?

      Nope. Works fine on a shielded twisted pair (very much like existing FW cables). The connector, on the other hand, is different (and better ... smaller, better shielding, etc.). Macs will use "bilingual" ports that are compatible with both legacy 1394a and new 1394b connections. Initial 1394b implementations will be 800 Mbit/sec, but the first 1.6 Gbit.sec versions will start to appear in 2002 (late-ish) ... analog test chips have already been fabbed, but the actual deployment will depend on the success rate of the first S800 versions.

  19. Exagerration of the truth by Maktoo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes, it's most likely that Apples next revision of hardware will include USB 2.0 and IEEE 1394b (Firewire 2.0?). However, 3.2Gbs is not the number.

    The next step for Firewire is actually 800Mbs. 1.2Gbs, 2.8Gbs and 3.2Gbs speeds are possible with this new protocol though, given the use of copper and fiber for the physical connection.

    What I find more interesting, though, is that the next revision of PowerMac should sport some form of DDR SDRAM... and either the new "Apollo" G4 at around 1.2GHz or the brand new 64bit capable G5! Both Bandwidth Hungry CPUs... that should give the P4 and Palomino (?) a run for their money.

    RSN

    1. Re:Exagerration of the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most analysts in the semiconductor industry realistically don't expect G5 to ship in commercial quantities till late 2003 at the earliest. In fact, it may never ship, the way the economy is tanking.

    2. Re:Exagerration of the truth by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Most analysts in the semiconductor industry aren't Anonymous Cowards, or at least give a reference.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    3. Re:Exagerration of the truth by Maktoo · · Score: 1

      That is why I mentioned the "Apollo" G4, which is slated to appear in the coming months from Motorola and break the 1GHz barrier. It's also a completely new revision of the G4, should have more AltiVec registers and an enhanced architecture for the IO (ie. DDR and/or HyperTransport support)

    4. Re:Exagerration of the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok. Yeah, that makes sense. But the G5 is a still
      aways off.

  20. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by alfredo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The layoffs were in the sales force. With the Apple Stores and the online store, FtF sales are not as essential.

    There are several reasons we pay a little extra, quality of hardware, tight integration between hardware and software, and it is not Windows. If you are into the creative arts, Apple is the first choice. The Mac has always been geared to the Artist, publisher, teacher, and scientist. These people will tend to buy from those who care about their concerns.

    I don't mind paying extra for quality. I know people that are still using the original Mac II. One uses his for fonts, another for HyperCard.
    One lady bought a new Compaq, but went back to her 6200, citing the difficulty of using Windows for making class projects. It didn't have HyperCard.
    BTW the 6200 line is probably the worst Apples made.

    --
    photosMy Photostream
  21. Upgrading by bribecka · · Score: 2, Funny

    It may seem a minor point, but the more and faster connections are built in, the less frequently the upgrade gremlins have to strike. 3.2Gbps!

    Yeah, I remember back in '89 when I upgraded to a 40MB hard drive and said the same thing. The upgrade gremline will never stop striking!

    --

    Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

  22. Nice FUD Attempt by winterstar · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sorry but Apple's overall head count has been increasing. While Dell, HP, Compaq, and so on have been laying off literally thousands of employees Apple has laid off 50 or so. But they've hired more than 50 or so in that same period.

    Apple has over $4.2 billion in the bank. When Steve Jobs originally took over they had like $200some million.

    Apple is an extremely efficient company these days. When their CFO last spoke recently (about a month or so ago) he remarked that they had their inventory down to 2 days. Apple is efficient for the same reason Dell is efficient: excellent inventory management.

    There are also a number of major factors which are working toward's Apple's favor. OS X 10.1 is coming out and within the next year virtually all of the major applications will be converted to OS X. Because of its UNIX and NeXT roots and Java capabilities OS X appeals to a much wider crowd than Mac OS 9. Also, while Apple has languished somewhat with their G4 processors (2000 was not a good year) Apple will actually be in a better position going forward with the G5. The G5 is 64-bit and also runs existing 32-bit Macintosh applications. While the Wintel world will be split between the Itanium, P4, and the AMD Sledgehammer architectures, the Macintosh will on one chipset architecture.

    Apple most certainly won't be crushing the Wintel world but they will most certainly continue to survive and yes, thrive in the marketplace.

  23. Re:Exagerration of the truth: addition by Maktoo · · Score: 1

    Oh, and the founder/creator of IEEE 1394, darn it I can't remember his name, said recently in a report on CNET that 1394b products will be shipping by the end of the year. So an Apple intro at MWSF in January, or Tokyo in February makes the most sense.

  24. Re:Macs are for loosers by Slad · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Flame will get you no where...

    Despite the fact that you are comparing Apples to Oranges (no pun intended), your case is weak and flaccid.

    Windows 2000 is a business OS; built on NT. Mac OS 9.x and before were more consumer operating systems. You should compare Windows 9x with Mac OS 9.x, and Win 2000/XP to Mac OS X.

    On those levels, both have advantages and disadvantages. Personally, I favor the Mac OS, but I can't condemn someone for using Windows.

    As far as your comment about Macs crashing all the time - that is due to Mac OS 9.x not having protective memory, something corrected in OS X. I have had OS X since its initial release. Since that time, it has not crashed. My Win 2K box has crashed three times - in a year. Does that mean that the Mac is more stable? Probably not, but it does further diminish your argument.

    --
    I am Slad.
  25. Re:Macs are for loosers by Niksie3 · · Score: 1

    I belief my macosX box(ibook rev A) will beat your win2000 box at just about anything. same goes for my linux box (imac rev B)

    --
    Sig you!
  26. double FireFire? by Trollsfire · · Score: 1

    Isn't that repetitively redundant?

    --
    "I'm a man... But I can change... If I have to... I guess..." -- the man's prayer, Red Green Show
  27. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 1

    And where the hell were you pricing laptops (and if so, why were you looking at iMacs anyway?) IMO the iBook offers the absolute best price-performance ratio of any laptop on the market. Yes, the standard 64 MB RAM sucks, but you can bump that up cheaply enough. In every other way, the iBook is the best low- to mid-range laptop you'll find for your money.

    I'm interested, now. I'd like to have a Linux-running laptop. What are the advantages of buying an iBook and running a PPC port of Linux on it, as opposed to buying a cheap used PC-based laptop?
  28. Re:I Agree, iBooks Are Good Value by Totally_Tux · · Score: 1

    Hiya,

    I week ago I got to check out a friend's iBook - the new ultra-portable white polycarbonate model. The engineering was fantastic, you have to understand this thing weighed around 2KG or less and had a 1024x768 12" screen, twin USB, single Firewire, 500 Mhz G3 CPU, 128MB RAM, 8MB ATI Rage128 Mobility graphics, single DVD-ROM inbuilt. 3 year warranty too. All for around AUD$3,500 - which is very competitive to an equivalent Dell-brand machine. My friend uses it for office work and DV video editing.

    The workmanship appeared to be top notch when I checked it out. Specs are one thing, but when you check it out you get the impression of a very well built machine.

  29. You can't eat these? by racerx509 · · Score: 1

    "Next-Gen Apples To Include 1394b, USB 2.0"
    When I saw this, I didn't know what to think. How can an apple be edible with all these new ports? Is Granny Smith going Hi Tech?

    --
    13 year old white supremacists are shitty web designers.
  30. Slinging disks, at a firey pace by michaeldouma · · Score: 1

    I like to think of old 3.5 inch disks, with 1.4 MB on each. The new double FireWire will be like shooting 2,000 disks a second through a wire. Blazing. Slung from a sling shot, that is 2kHz. Listening to this, the band on the shot would sound like a high note on a violin. (440 hertz is assigned the note middle A)

    For those of you who have never used FireWire, it is amazing, especially compared to USB and SCSI. The ease of hot-plugging is astounding, not to mention the data transfer. For example, I recently copied files from one PowerBook (Mac laptop) to another, with one laptop acting as a hard disk ("FireWire Disk Mode"). Boy does it fly. Megabytes of files flew though that cable. There seems to be much more than the raw speed of the protocol, the CPU, bus, etc., are all vital, and on these newer computers, the speed is impressive.

    1. Re:Slinging disks, at a firey pace by sh00z · · Score: 1
      I like to think of old 3.5 inch disks, with 1.4 MB on each. The new double FireWire will be like shooting 2,000 disks a second through a wire.

      As much as I love Apple, it's not quite that good. It's 3.2 gigaBITS per second, not bytes, so that's only 285 floppies per second.
    2. Re:Slinging disks, at a firey pace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could have let him have his joy.

  31. Re:I Agree, iBooks Are Good Value by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    And I can get a Compaq laptop for less than $1000 with a Duron 850 Mhz, DVD, 14.1" screen, twin USB, and 10 GB harddrive, with 128 MB of RAM and the same ATI mobility graphics card.

    Apple's engineering may be better, but for that price, it damn well better be. Think of it like this - for the same price as Apple is offering I can buy 2 additional SPARE laptops just sitting by in case the one I have breaks down.

    And no, I'm not saying Compaq is the way to go. What I am saying is that if you're interested in price/performance ratios, Apple does not do too well - especially when you consider the main uses of PCs for the majority of people - browsing the web, office documents and some games.

  32. I doubt it by frankie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm sure most Mac fans would love to have gigahertz G5s with DDR and FireWire 2. But there really is not a clamor of interest in USB 2, and I don't see a reason to include it.

    USB 2's entire purpose is to compete with Apple's own 1394 standard. USB2 is slower, uses more CPU resources, and has done surpisingly poorly in the marketplace. FireWire devices outnumber USB2 by huge proportions.

    Apple knows that iMac (which had no legacy ports) is the event that got USB 1.x rolling. That was a good move, since Apple needed to get with standards. But in FireWire, Apple has set the standard. Adding USB2 would have little benefit and a lot of risk for Apple.

    1. Re:I doubt it by Maktoo · · Score: 1

      There are actual products (Yamahas latest CDRW being one) being shipped with USB 2.0 now. So I don't think it's a bad move for Apple to start building it into their systems.

    2. Re:I doubt it by kirkb · · Score: 1

      Since apple so frequently deprives its customers if it, it's not a suprise that you forgot the reason for adding some form of USB - backwards compatability

      Given that implementing and supporting USB2 costs about the same as USB1, there's little risk in adding USB2 to a product.

      As for firewire devices outnumbering USB2, I hope you realize that firewire has been available for years, while USB2 has only been out for a few months.

      --
      Slashdot: come for the pedantry, stay for the condescension.
    3. Re:I doubt it by frankie · · Score: 1

      implementing and supporting USB2 costs about the same as USB1,

      Aha. Didn't know that. Yes, if replacing the USB 1.1 ports with USB 2.0 can be done for minimal cost (like pennies per mobo), then it's not a terrible move. Apple could score marketing points for having it, but they still won't want to hype it too much.

      If USB2 catches on, consumers are gonna be mighty confused or annoyed when they plug their new super-fast external drive into the spare port on their keyboard, and for some reason it's not fast at all...

    4. Re:I doubt it by Sigh+Phi · · Score: 1

      On the contrary, it keeps Apple standards-compliant and removes what may or may not be a stumbling block at some point, akin to the the "Mac has SCSI, PC has IDE" arguments of yore. By embracing both (and continuing to make Firewire kick ass), they simply make their hardware open to a lot of options.

      The price of inclusion in this case is trivial, and the potential benefit is significant. This can't be anything but good for Apple.

    5. Re:I doubt it by kirkb · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Personally, I dislike inferior technology, and would prefer that USB died a quiet death so that FireWire could take over.

      Unfortunately, it won't cost pennies per mobo. I think apple demands $1 per connector for royalties :(

      --
      Slashdot: come for the pedantry, stay for the condescension.
    6. Re:I doubt it by Polo · · Score: 2

      As a customer, I can see no logic in your reasoning.

      USB is already used in the mac keyboard and mouse. If adding USB2 is only marginally more expensive and provides access to more devices, I don't see *any* reason not to add it.

      As a matter of fact, not providing USB2 functionality might decrease market share.

    7. Re:I doubt it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope! The royalty to the FireWire Consortium (Not just Apple) is 25 cents per device (no matter how many ports on the device). Pretty cheap I'd say.

  33. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by TheAJofOZ · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I heard from a co-worker late last week that Apple was laying off quite a few employees. Can anyone confirm this? It seems rather odd that a company that (according to some Mac/iMac users that I know) releases "such a great product" would be cutting their work force by so much.

    I tend to go to a lot of Apple seminars and follow the Mac world pretty well and I would be exceptionally surprised if Apple was laying off employees at this stage. They are really working hard to get OS 10.1 out the door on time and make sure it's really polished. I have certainly seen no indication that they are slowing down at all. I would say if there are any lay offs they'd be in marketing/management positions rather than the research and development areas.

    I can't understand is how Apple can stay in business when their computers cost a hell of a lot more than the Intel based PCs?

    There have been a large number of studies which suggest that the total cost of ownership of owning a Mac is significantly less than owning a Windows based PC. Admitedly, people and business' don't tend to notice these things, and go for the immediate lower price. Apple stay in business by actually making a profit on their systems rather than trying to continuously undercut the competition - note how many PC manufacturers are going out of business.

    The number of units you ship is far less important than whether or not you make enough profit to cover your development, production, management and other costs. Apple's pricing does this, Gateway Australia's pricing didn't (hence they've gone out of business). Apple has made a profit for something like 11 out of the last 12 quarters which is better than most PC manufacturers.

    Apple also has a very dedicated (fanatic) installed user base which helps a lot. Mostly though they have innovation. They put firewire and USB in their computers, they popularise wireless networking and "Apple ignited the desktop publishing revolution" (to take their marketing speel).

    was pricing laptops a couple weeks ago, and for the money it would have cost me to buy a moderately loaded iMac, I could have gotten a Thinkpad for roughly half the cost, comparably equipped.

    This surprises me, though it obviously depends largely on what you want from your laptop. I went out pricing laptops about 6 months ago (long time in IT I know) and found that Apple's laptops were far and away better value than the PCs. Not that they were cheaper, but they were clearly sturdier, more feature packed and most significantly had better screens and battery life. The cheap PC laptop world makes a lot of sacrifices in functionality. Either they have ridiculously small screens or poor quality screens and two or three hour battery life was normal. Then you tended to give up a CDROM to make the laptop smaller and many PC laptops (nowhere near as many these days though) don't have ethernet as standard. Then there's the lact of dual head ability (most do video mirroring) or a lack of video output options (note that the iBook does not do dual head either, which is why I type this on a Titanium PowerBook). Now, for some people these trade offs are worth the cost savings - for some people they aren't even trade offs, but just remove unwanted features. For many people (including me) these features are invaluable.

    The final big advantage that I find with Apple is the OS. Mac OS X is a joy to use (I look forward to the reported responsiveness improvements of 10.1 naturally), there are rough edges and it is not perfect but the combination of UNIX and a solid, simple, clean, user friendly GUI is an absolute God send. I can happily use vim to hack away my perl scripts, test them with apache and postgresql and follow the design document which was written in Word. The lack of responsiveness that is currently in OS X is more than made up for by the fact that I don't have to reboot between Linux and MacOS anymore (for the record I don't remember the last time I booted into OS 9).

    The morale: sometimes paying more in the short term is worthwhile in the long run, but it all depends on what you want to do.

  34. FireFire? by xant · · Score: 1

    I kind of like that. Double-fast FireWire=FireFire.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
  35. Re:I Agree, iBooks Are Good Value by billvinson · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, that comparison is not accurate...

    Your PC-laptop will far outweigh my iBook and when you find the lighter PC-laptops they both cost more and usually for an external optical drive on you. Mine has built-in DVD-ROM and a firewire port which is very useful for video editing (Something important if you are interested in it). Also, if you want Mac OS X (which I am very impressed with), then there is only one choice :)

    Plus it has built in ethernet and an internal antenna for an internal wireless add-on card.

    There is no definitive winner, it is all about what is important to you. I wanted a light laptop that could handle video editing, games, and one that would just work. Apple has done that while besting the equivalent sized PC-laptop in terms of price and features...

    Bill

  36. Plugging and cabling. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2

    It should also be mentioned that your average non-techie computer user is likely to feel more comfortable plugging in cable than a card. As the computer becomes a comodity item, then more and more of your stuff will be plugging in from the outside, unless you are a techie and then you will insist on putting everything inside because it takes less room and because there are less wires.

    Actually, I'd suspect integration would be the order of the day. Joe User neither knows nor cares what a hard drive is, or a graphics card. The more things that are "just *there*", the more comfortable the average user will likely feel.

    The average user probably won't ever upgrade any one part of the machine; they'll just dump the old machine and buy a new one, especially when computers come closer to being commodity items. The only cables needed would likely be for things that the user doesn't consider part of the computer.

  37. And no one will like them for it. by supabeast! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "It may seem a minor point, but the more and faster connections are built in, the less frequently the upgrade gremlins have to strike."

    Yet another reason the industry hates Apple. They build their computers to last, even moreso than other manufacturers.

    1. Re:And no one will like them for it. by Howie · · Score: 2, Funny

      They build their computers to last

      Good troll! I nearly ended up exhaling 7-up.

      --
      "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
  38. do they have a 64 ppc linux ? by w4z4bee · · Score: 1

    I know there's an itanium version and one for 64bit power4 or whatever the big ibm's are running, but would there be a g5 64 bit linux in january?

    1. Re:do they have a 64 ppc linux ? by Compulawyer · · Score: 2

      Well, the source code is available for PPC Linux, so I would think in the worst case scenario, you could compile your own.

      --

      Laws affecting technology will always be bad until enough techies become lawyers.

  39. Re:I Agree, iBooks Are Good Value by tim_bissell · · Score: 1

    Howls of derisive laughter, Bruce! Read his message - AUD $3500 is _Australian_ dollars. The Basic iBook is US $1300 for 64MB/10GB/DVD-ROM/2xUSB/100Mbps-Ethernet, so it is much closer to the Compaq price range, but the hardware is sooooooo much nicer.

  40. Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He doesn't ALWAYS get it right (no cursor keys on the original Mac; REALLY REALLY slow on built-in hard drives) but he does have opinions, and they're often sound opinions, and he ACTS on them. Macs have a lot of good ideas in them and some bad ideas in them, but at least they have IDEAS.

    "They all laughed" at 3-1/2" diskettes (yes, HP was the first to use them but it was Apple's adoption that was the breakthrough). Apple was the first MAINSTREAM adopter of SCSI. I don't remember for sure, but I think Apple beat most PC vendors by about six months with affordable built-in CD-ROM drives.

    Apple had built-in audio support in 1984 when most PC's couldn't do anything but beep (or make joke noises, like the "drain.exe" application).

    Apple started out without color support at all, and by 1988 had actually pulled far ahead of the mainstream PC display hardware.

    Firewire is a Good Thing. Its adoption by Apple was no surprise, since Apple had so much to do with its creation; actually the surprise was that it was delayed so long.

    Probably the biggest surprise to me was to see Apple lead the way in USB.

    1. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by DrXym · · Score: 2
      He (or his UI design team) have made good decisions and some absolutely fucking stupid decisions.


      The biggest and most annoying thing they've done is to persist in promoting the 1-button mouse. This is no longer a usability feature but a millstone around the Mac's neck.

    2. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The one button mouse works fine for most mac users. If you want a three button wheel mouse, you can buy one, cheap, and program it to do whatever you want. For less than $100 you can get a Wacom Graphire pad, groovy pen, and a two button wheel mouse. However, the single button optical mouse included with every mac is one of the best I have ever used.

    3. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love my dual proc G4 and my USB Explorer IntelliMouse... You'd never be able to pry either from my hands, even in death! (Yes MacOS X 10.1 fully supports wheel mice, soon I'm sure Apple will be including 2 button wheel mice with their new systems)

    4. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by Phroggy · · Score: 2

      He (or his UI design team) have made good decisions and some absolutely fucking stupid decisions.

      Couldn't agree more.

      The biggest and most annoying thing they've done is to persist in promoting the 1-button mouse. This is no longer a usability feature but a millstone around the Mac's neck.

      The only thing they could possibly do better here is offer a multi-button mouse as an OPTION from their online store, and support it better in their OS*. I would be rather upset if they started shipping multi-button mice by default. You have no idea how many computer users are idiots - I've spent too many years in tech support to be able to recommend multi-button mice to anyone who isn't willing to go out of their way to get one.

      Remember that the Mac OS is specifically designed to only require a single mouse button. Windows is designed for two, and X is designed for three. The Mac OS emulates a right-click with a control-click, so even with a single button, you can still get the same functionality, just not quite the same convenience.

      Apple's Human Interface Guidelines (which the vast majority of Mac developers actually follow) specifically state that everything that can be done with a control-click should be doable another way - you should never be required to control-click (or right-click). This philosophy does not hold true for any other OS.

      By the way, shortly after buying my iMac, I bought a Logitech Wingman Gaming Mouse, which has three buttons. I bought it for Unreal Tournament, but use it for everything. The original Apple mouse is in a drawer somewhere. I should probably sell it on eBay; I'm sure there's someone out there with a hockey puck mouse that would prefer the Apple Pro optical mouse.

      * Apple's OS needs to recognize that some of us have multiple mouse buttons. Applications should be able to check for a right-click, instead of checking for a control-click. The OS should take a control-click and make it behave as a right-click as far as the app is concerned, instead of taking a right-click and making it emulate a control-click.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    5. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Remember that the Mac OS is specifically designed to only require a single mouse button.


      Not anymore. Have you used Mac OS X? In OS X, you *need* to either use a multi-button mouse or control-click, because contextual menus are an indispensible part of the UI. Even the dimmest users are going to find using extra mouse buttons easier than key-button combinations. Now that they're shipping machines with OS X, they need to start shipping with multiple mouse buttons too.

      Besides, every piece of modern technology has a multi-button interface. The average car today has dozens of buttons for various purposes, microwave ovens have multiple buttons, televisions, radios, etc. If somebody can figure out how to shift their transmission or operate their TV, they can certainly handle having multiple mouse buttons. And look at the keyboard sitting next to your mouse. If somebody can manipulate 100+ keys, there is no excuse for not learning what the right mouse button does.

    6. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Not anymore. Have you used Mac OS X? In OS X, you *need* to either use a multi-button mouse or control-click, because contextual menus are an indispensible part of the UI.

      I have used Mac OS X, and I have not noticed this to be true. Can you give me a specific example?

      Even the dimmest users are going to find using extra mouse buttons easier than key-button combinations.

      This is arguable, but you may be right. Obviously, users with previous experience will find the control-click to be awkward and strange.

      Besides, every piece of modern technology has a multi-button interface. The average car today has dozens of buttons for various purposes, microwave ovens have multiple buttons, televisions, radios, etc.

      Absolutely not the same thing at all. A microwave or remote control uses multiple buttons like a keyboard, not like a mouse. Apple's usability testing from the early 80s showed that the brain considers the mouse to be an extension of your arm - you're not positioning the mouse and pressing a button, you're just pointing to something, as far as the brain is concerned. It takes a few minutes of getting used to, but once you've mastered it, that's how the brain deals with it - and expecting people to point to something with different fingers to mean different things is unnatural. The original Mac philosophy was that the computer should adjust to fit the way people work, not make people adjust to fit the way computers work.

      Obviously, people can adjust, and have. For these people, a multi-button mouse is acceptible, and can indeed be very convenient and time-saving. However, it should not be a requirement for new users.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    7. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I have used Mac OS X, and I have not noticed this to be true. Can you give me a specific example?

      Well, the Dock in particular is nearly unusable without contextual menus. I rely on contextual menus constantly for the following:

      - Browsing the heirarchical file structure from folder & disk icons
      - Hiding/unhiding the dock
      - Quitting programs
      - Emptying the trash
      - Switching between multiple windows of the same app

      In addition to the Dock, it's almost impossible to use a browser without contextual menus. And in the Finder, contextual menus are not strictly necessary, but I can't imagine using it without them.

      Absolutely not the same thing at all. A microwave or remote control uses multiple buttons like a keyboard, not like a mouse. Apple's usability testing from the early 80s showed that the brain considers the mouse to be an extension of your arm - you're not positioning the mouse and pressing a button, you're just pointing to something, as far as the brain is concerned.

      Well, we're not going to agree on this one. That research is around 20 years old, and it was conducted with people who had no idea what a graphical user interface or mouse was. Even the most technologically illiterate user today is far more familiar with computing concepts than the test sample from 20 years ago.

      Further, the tasks that a typical user performs on a computer these days are far more complex than 20 years ago, requiring increasing interface sophistication to manage the added complexity. One of my biggest complaints about Apple and most Mac users is that they often stubbornly stick to old ideas & notions that have been rendered obsolete by time and fail to recognize progress. And often, the almost religious zeal that the Mac community displays over certain UI features prevents Apple from innovating. The best approach in 1984 is not necessarily the best approach now, and nowhere is that more true than in the computer industry.

      Obviously, people can adjust, and have. For these people, a multi-button mouse is acceptible, and can indeed be very convenient and time-saving. However, it should not be a requirement for new users.

      Well, I think this is silly for a couple reasons. First of all, having 2 mouse buttons is a trivially minor source of complexity compared to most other elements of the human-computer interface a new user has to adapt to. And if it's an obstable at all, it's only an obstacle temporarily; for the most part it's a productivity enhancer. Finally, if Apple insists on shipping computers with single button mice, they damn well better stop putting functionality in contextual menus, because all the alternative ways of accessing contextual menus are less intuitive and less convenient.

    8. Re:Jobs does have pretty good taste in technology. by ZigMonty · · Score: 1
      This argument is getting very old. Apple ships single button mice because they are easier for first timers. Have taught people to use computers, and watched as they try to press both mouse buttons on a PC at once, I see the truth in this.

      For experienced users like myself I agree: two button mice are great. That's why I went to a computer fair and bought a cheap, optical, two button mouse with scroll wheel. I took off the PS/2 adapter and plugged it into a USB port. And you know what? MacOSX, from the moment I plugged it in, supported both mouse buttons and the scroll wheel. No driver installation. The idea that Macs don't support more than one mouse button is just plain wrong. So drop it already.

  41. 1394b Implementation by darkov · · Score: 1

    Some people are pointing out that the revised Firewire spec only supports 800mbps over the existing twisted pair cables, but does anyone know of how the rev can be implemented? Is there the possibiliy of a backwards compatible combination twisted pair/optical plug, or can two plugs service the same port? This might mean that new macs might have an optical plug in addition, which would be very cool (and fast).

    1. Re:1394b Implementation by ahknight · · Score: 2

      No optical, not this time; same old port with backwards compatability a la USB 2.0. Two plugs can be on the same channel, if that's what you mean, but it seems like you're asking for a dual-mode plug/port which there will be none (nor can there be; copper != fiber).

    2. Re:1394b Implementation by larkost · · Score: 2

      The 800mBps connectors will be exactly the same as the current ones found on desktop computers. In fact you will can plug existing 100, 200, or 400 connectors in to them (assuming you are not going from Sony's iLink connector, then you need the cheap adaptor cord). There will be no optical cabling involved. The 3.2 version however requires an optical connection (rf gets nasty at that speed), and uses a connector similar (identical?) to a g-bic interface (why re-invent a perfectly good wheel... especially when it is already running a SCSI family protocol).

    3. Re:1394b Implementation by teener · · Score: 1
      Nope. 1394b supports shielded twisted pair at 3.2Gbit/sec at 4.5 m. The connector is different, however. There is a special "bilngual" port design (used by Apple) that allows either "a" or "b" operation, but the connector itself is new and not compatible with the old 6- or 4- pin versions. Sorry. You'll need a new cable ...

      The optical version is only needed when you want to go beyond 4.5 m. Glass optical fiber gets 1394b to 100 m at 3.2 Gbit/sec.

  42. P1394b standard by rakerman · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.zayante.com/p1394b/
    As I read it, the new spec provides for speeds up to 1.6 Gbps (with room to grow to 3.2 Gbps), 100 Mbps on UTP out to 100m, 200 Mbps on Plastic Optical Fibre (POF) to 50m, 1.6 Gbps on MultiMode Fibre (MMF) out to 100 m.
    So I don't know where they got this "room to drive data at up to 3.2Gbps over copper cabling" thing.

    1. Re:P1394b standard by Sigh+Phi · · Score: 1

      They're probably considering the *two* Firewire busses and summing the bandwidth.

      1.6Gbps + 1.6Gbps = 3.2Gbps

    2. Re:P1394b standard by Dahan · · Score: 1
      So I don't know where they got this "room to drive data at up to 3.2Gbps over copper cabling" thing.

      Probably from the spec... Look at the draft again, and note the first sentence of Section 4.4.1:

      4.4.1 Short haul shielded twisted pair cabling

      This standard defines a new connector and its associated cable providing a roadmap to S3200.

      Also, Section 6, which talks about short haul STP cabling, says 1.6Gbps over cables up to 4.5m long.

      The numbers you're quoting are from the long-distance versions.

    3. Re:P1394b standard by teener · · Score: 1

      The standard doc (at draft 1.2) calls for up to 1.6 Gbit/sec over shielded twisted pair (same construction as current cable) with full specs. The new cable and connector have been tested at 3.2 Gbit/sec at 4.5 m, but none of the Si vendors are ready to sign up for a performance spec for the required signal yet. Maybe in a year or so ... 3.2 Gbit/sec has also been tested at 100 m over 50 um multimode glass fiber (same as used by Gbit Ethernet and Fibre Channel).

  43. Networking over FireFireWire? by BroadbandBradley · · Score: 2

    anyone know if this will/already supports networking over firewire?
    and if so...Imagine a beow...

    1. Re:Networking over FireFireWire? by znu · · Score: 2

      The current Firewire spec only supports cables of about 15ft between devices, which isn't exactly ideal for networking. And anyway, why would you use 400Mbps Firewire (or 800, which is what the first implementations of 1394b will actually be) for this when the G4 towers have Gb ethernet on the logicboard?

      --
      This space unintentionally left unblank.
    2. Re:Networking over FireFireWire? by BroadbandBradley · · Score: 1

      good point.

    3. Re:Networking over FireFireWire? by Pfhor · · Score: 1

      There is firenet here:
      http://www.unibrain.com/products/ieee-1394/firen et .htm

      They also make a "fireserver" which is a hardware box you can plug a bunch of machines into over firewire to share it's volumes. I am guessing in the AV world, where lots of people are working on huge image / data files, the speed of data access is crucial. I know that Apple's towers really won't be able to push the gigabit ether's speed limit till OS X, so AFP over firewire may be the only solution for shared video editing on the cheap. (If you consider the price of a fast server with a raid, gigabit ethernet, and the routing hardware).

      And firewire is damn spiffy also.

    4. Re:Networking over FireFireWire? by rakerman · · Score: 1

      In terms of MacOS 9 or MacOS X built-in, RFC2734 standard IP1394 networking, Apple has no plans to build this capability into the OS (as reported to me by Apple development).
      You can visit my grad project page for more information on IP1394 and related IEEE-1394 (FireWire) information.

    5. Re:Networking over FireFireWire? by anti-drew · · Score: 1

      anyone know if this will/already supports networking over firewire?
      and if so...Imagine a beow...


      There is a networking standard for FireWire, IP-1394, but it sucks. DMA a single packet of up to 2K in size - trigger an interrupt on the host CPU to copy the packet - DMA another packet - etc.

      The reason why the IP-1394 protocol sucks is that all of this is being done by your (already overworked) CPU, not a dedicated hardware component. It's like having Gb ethernet capability, but only being able to receive one small packet at a time ... and using a software NIC to boot!

      I don't remember the expected thruput but I believe it was in the single-digit Mbps ... pretty pitiful when 1394a is capable of 400Mbps! It was designed for embedded systems use, eg TV and stereo components.
    6. Re:Networking over FireFireWire? by teener · · Score: 1

      Windows ME and Windows XP supports IP 1394 (try it!). The data rate isn't cool (only about 70 Mbit/sec) for all the reasons outlined earlier (crappy DMA design by Ethernet bigots that had no idea how 1394 really worked). The Unibrain people have shown how to do it right using a better (and simpler, BTW) DMA structure, and they get about 320 Mbit/sec.

  44. Re:Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you're the one who needs to get a life, grow up and get over it.

    Life goes on....

  45. We don't need your steenkin' buttons! by iNik · · Score: 3, Funny
    One button?! ONE BUTTON! The new mice are NO BUTTON mice!

    Geez, get it right if you're going to bait Macolytes.

    --
    --Nik
    1. Re:We don't need your steenkin' buttons! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its one big button, that you try avoid applying too much pressure on, as you move it about. I have one right next to me.

      Also, if its a no-button mouse, what kind of messages would you suggest for future dialog boxes and requests?

      "Press mouse", "Apply pressure to mouse"?,
      Future interactive MacOs tutorial ("Move mouse carefully without applying too much pressure.. no, that was too much, now I am forced to interpret that as a request for me to move on to the next part of the tutorial" ).

    2. Re:We don't need your steenkin' buttons! by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Flip the mouse over, and see the knob with the + and -? Adjust how sensitive you want the button.

  46. Look another /. drone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey look kids another /. drone that doesn't know shit about apple.

  47. USB 2.0 devices ARE compatible with USB 1.x ports by sjonke · · Score: 1

    Firewire is better, but the USB 2.0 devices I've looked at say that they also work on a USB 1.x connection, albeit at a slower speed (obviously). It would appear not be the case that "2.0 devices will not work on 1.x buses". Maxtor, for example, has USB 2.0 products that say they are backwardly compatible with 1.x USB ports.

    --
    --- What?
  48. Wheee! Yay Apple! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish I could buy a whole new computer every time Apple made an improvement!

  49. iBook con Linux by iNik · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Linux-PPC and iBook are two great tastes that go great together. You get a snappy looking laptop (a matching ice-type Enlightenment skin completes the GUI-goodness) which is light as can be, and the power of Linux at your disposal. (Naturally, all typical problems with Linux-PPC are evident in this model -- namely a slight lag time in releases.)

    At the same time, you can also play around with MacOS X, which is honestly the one OS which has made me ditch Linux entirely. I get the same robust server applications (Samba, Apache, MySQL and PHP, namely), a much better integrated GUI than any window manager has managed (pun intended) to build, and access to thousands of useful day-to-day applications.

    Really, as a part-time Linux geek (and platform agnostic -- which means I like Macs because they're better **grin**), MacOS X is the best OS since sliced bread, and if you want a Linuxy laptop, get an iBook just for the chance to try it out!

    In all other regards, an iBook is going to be comparable to a PC laptop when running Linux, but for standard configuration differences. Linux-PPC runs lightning quick on it, though.

    Author's note: I'm experienced with running Linux on an original iBook, but I'm assuming device support for the latest models. Let the buyer beware and check the documentation.

    --
    --Nik
    1. Re:iBook con Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't think I would be saying this, because I have a long history of deriding the Mac platform, but I agree. I recently purchased my first Apple (a new iBook) and initially installed OS 9, OS X, and YDL 2.0 on it, thinking I was going to spend the majority of my time in Linux.

      But then I installed XFree86 4.1 and found Fink (a Debian-style distribution/packaging system supporting the usual stuff you'll find in a Linux distro). A couple weeks later I wiped the YLD partition entirely. There are some differences between Darwin/BSD and Linux to learn (mostly system administration stuff), and Linux is a bit faster, but really there wasn't much point in booting into Linux anymore when OS X could run all the same stuff.

  50. And the harddrive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Harddrives are limiting the computer even more than the Bus.

  51. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by firewort · · Score: 2

    Well, there's the benefits of PPC architecture- consider that IBM uses a similar chip for their RS/6000 servers that run AIX. The chip in the iBook is a mobile IBM PPC. You could do a LOT worse than to get the iBook and dual boot Linux (one of the many PPC distros) and OS X (which is a mach kernel with FreeBSD around it, wrapped in a pretty and responsive GUI.)

    --

  52. Movie Memories by DrPascal · · Score: 1

    > 3.2Gbps!

    One point twenty one jiggawats?! What the hell is a jiggawatt?!

    --
    DrPascal: Not the language, the mathematician.
    1. Re:Movie Memories by quannump · · Score: 1

      the part that always make me lmao is when Biff's goons call the band all reefer addicts

      --

  53. Re:USB 2.0 devices ARE compatible with USB 1.x por by LenE · · Score: 1

    When I said that they wouldn't work, I meant to say that they wouldn't work well. My understanding is that USB 2.0 adds peer-to-peer connection ability that was not in 1.x. 1.x requires a master computer.

    Additionally, 1.x has the embarrassing problem of the differing protocol implementations for the host controller, UHCI vs. OHCI. Embarrassing because the "founding members" of the USB consortium used differing (not 100% compatible) host controller interfaces, the real reason that USB was doomed from the start on the PC. USB 2.0 having peering ability would certainly conflict with both of these controllers.

    Microsoft wrote their drivers to the OHCI standard, while Intel flooded the world with their UHCI based chipsets. Great cooperation.

    Anyway, I stand by my previous statement, as most USB 2.0 marketers are going to want to trumpet their new features, which will be lacking when their devices are connected to USB 1.x buses. Peer-to-Peer was in FireWire from the beginning.

    -- Len

  54. KDE slaughters OSX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm running off of KDE 2.2.1 and it slaughters the currently OSX, i dont know if its better than OSX 10.1 or whatever its called, but I'm sure KDE and Enlightenment will kick its ass before its even released.

    1. Re:KDE slaughters OSX by SeanAhern · · Score: 1

      Um...you can run KDE and Enlightenment on OS X. Why is it that you think that windowing environments have anything to do with the operating system?

      Once the XFree86 people get hardware-accelerated rendering on OS X, you're going to find that all of the normally Linux-based windowing environments work just as well on OS X as they do on any distribution of Linux.

    2. Re:KDE slaughters OSX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and I hear that Final Cut Pro and Photoshop are scheduled to be released for KDE. Why would anyone want to run OS X anyway!?!

    3. Re:KDE slaughters OSX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is already support for 2D acceleration in the XFree86 4.1 release. I'm running it right now on a new iBook and performance under X is pretty snappy regardless of whether I'm running X rootless or on it's own desktop. OS and filesystem level performance is a bit pokier on Darwin/OS X than Linux though, and XFree86 DRI support isn't there yet, but it's good enough that I removed my Linux partition from this machine.

    4. Re:KDE slaughters OSX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slaughters it exactly how?

    5. Re:KDE slaughters OSX by foyle · · Score: 1

      Define "slaughters".

      Slaughters by being easier to use? No.

      Slaughters by being easier to initially configure? I doubt it.

      Slaughters by being easier to maintain? Unlikely.

      Slaughters by having more applications available? Doubtful.

      Besides, why are you comparing a window manager to an operating system?

  55. A (sexist) parable by hey! · · Score: 3, Funny

    I know a lot of Apple users, and I know a lot of Windows/Linux users, and each of them love their own systems, but the other thing that I can't understand is how Apple can stay in business when their computers cost a hell of a lot more than the Intel based PCs?

    <disclaimer> I hardly use Macs any more because I have to work with and support Windows users </disclaimer>

    If you actually worked for a while on a Macintosh you would probably be willing to pay a premium.

    Neal Stephenson once compared OS vendors to car dealerships. He was concerned with the marketing of OSs rather than the user experience. Imagine instead a business where you go to have an experience -- say a dance hall which provided guests with professional dance partners.

    The Apple-land dance hall had beautiful hostesses who danced so gracefully they made an ordinary jerk feel like Fred Astaire. The Microsoft-land dance hall had ugly hostesses who stepped on your feet unless you shouted directions to them for where to put their feet. The owners of the Microsoft-land had managed to prosper in business by convincing its customers that real men had loud voices, but they knew this couldn't last forever. So they replaced the ugly hostesses with prettier ones that also stepped on your feet. And it didn't matter, because in time people got so accustomed to this that they think it's normal to buy throat lozenges when you go dancing.

    The Unix-land dance hall? It is chock full of ugly but muscular hostesses that will have sex with you if you know the right way to ask. The ones in the Linux and the BSD rooms will even do it for free (in the Solaris room, you have to pay if you want more than eight girls at once). The fact is that Unix started out as bordello and added dancing as a gimmick. As a result the dancing is a bit awkward, but you can get any kind of sex you can imagine, provided you can master the technique. As you might imagine, this has attracted a loyal customer base.

    But the management's been trying bring in new business by dolling up the girls and teaching them a few new steps.

    The Apple-land customers who wander in to the "new" Unix-land are dance snobs who look around, decide the dancing isn't up to snuff, and go back to Apple-land to cut a rug. This mystifies the regulars, who say, "Some of our hostesses look just as good as the Apple ones, maybe better! They'll even let you dress them up any way you like!" (This last point is a common fetish with the Unix crowd). Of course the Unix-land regulars really only come for the sex. These days most Unix-land customers spend a little time dancing, but they aren't very demanding about that and don't let it distract them from their real interests for long. For that reason they don't understand that for the Apple market segment, the core experience isn't about sex. The Apple experience is about gliding over an expanse of mirror polished bakelite floor with a responsive partner who can almost read your thoughts. It's a wonderful thing -- almost as good as sex (OK I'm a Unix guy). For the Apple-lander, it's nice that the girls are pretty, maybe even essential, but it is not enough.

    Having good looking hostesses is not core to the Unix-land experience either -- it's more of a competitive bullet-mark. The Unix-land crowd's a pretty relaxed judge of pulchritude. For years the standard management trick was to stick a polka dot dress and yellow bow on a one-eyed bull dog. Many of the customers judged the results to be "real purty.."

    Of course, those days are over (except for a few incorigble retrograde types who cannot be persuaded to give up their dogs). Now when the Microsoft customer wanders in,he looks around and is maybe impressed by how much better the hostesses look than he expected. But he also sees that by in large his usual crowd isn't there, and usually heads out. The Unix-land regulars are puzzled by this. Why would anyone walk out on sex, especially when you can get fairly sophisticated sex for free? Again, it is because the core experience for the Windows-land market segment is not about sex; nor is it about dancing. It is akin to the schooling instincts of fish. There is safety in numbers -- the sharks won't be able to eat all of us at once etc. Everyone has a little bit of this instinct in them. This is why the Microsoft-land dominated press likes to spread rumors about the imminent closing of Apple-land. But by now the remaining Apple-land regulars have heard this story so much they're pretty much immune. In fact the clever ones probably start buying Apple stock when the rumors reach fever pitch.

    So, there you have it. Why the typical Apple customer is willing to pay some premium for Apple hardware.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:A (sexist) parable by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      That's weird and rambling, but surprisingly good. I liked it. Too bad no one's selling Batmobiles anymore though, however.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    2. Re:A (sexist) parable by hey! · · Score: 2

      That's weird and rambling, but surprisingly good. I liked it.

      I hear that a lot from the girls at Unix-land...

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    3. Re:A (sexist) parable by Teela+Brown · · Score: 1

      This is the funniest thing I've ever read. Tip o' the hat to Hey!

    4. Re:A (sexist) parable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can backup those words with X inches of hangdown.

  56. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Apple gets more bloated and retro. Retro is the future for Apple. Raskin said Apple is 70's retro.

    BeOS is clean. Apple is dirty. BeOS is elegant. Apple is cruft. BeOS is modern. Apple is yesterday's newspaper. BeOS is lean. Apple is obese. Apple is dying.

  57. how can it hurt? by mblase · · Score: 2

    Apple has something like 5% market saturation. The widespread use of USB means that peripheral makers can FINALLY make the same mouse, keyboard or what have you for Macs and PCs without Mac users getting all irate. FireWire has the same ambitions, and while it has a little ways to go, the growing popularity of 1394-enabled digital video cameras bodes VERY well for this interface. That's really what it was meant to accomplish; hard drive connectivity is an added bonus.

    And now competitors are looking to release USB 2.0. If, and that's still an IF, other manufacturers decide to move to it, then Apple stands to lose royalties from FireWire. But if they do, it makes sense for Apple to already have it installed on their popular machines. It makes the Mac more marketable, because they can say it will connect with any USB 2.0 peripherals no matter when they arrive. If PCs have these additional ports and Apple doesn't, it's one more strike against the Mac market.

    Yes, Apple will lose royalties from FireWire if developers move to it. But do you seriously think that Apple refusing to support USB 2.0 will stop developers from wanting it? "Oh no, a tiny sliver of the peripheral-buying public won't be able to use our stuff! Whatever shall we do?" Exactly what they usually do, which is not care about Apple users one way or the other.

    FireWire has a huge head start on USB 2.0, especially in the digi-vidicam market. And while that doesn't guarantee anything, it does mean that USB has to promise a lot more to beat it out. Meanwhile, Apple stands to lose more in lost hardware sales by NOT supporting USB 2.0 than it stands to gain in royalties. Economically, it's a sound and sensible move.

    1. Re:how can it hurt? by teener · · Score: 1
      Yes, Apple will lose royalties from FireWire if developers move to it.

      Uh, Apple doesn't make but a few cents from the FW "royalties" ... it is just one firm (among about 10) that is part of the "1394 Licensing Authority" that gets $0.25 per end user system. ("end user system" means something sold at retail as a single package ... like a car, a PC, or an airplane ... no matter how many 1394 ports/ICs/devices are in the "end user system").

  58. douchebag troll whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "
    Why wreck a perfectly excellent machine by installing Linux on it when you can run OS X?
    "
    you are a douchebag troll whore.

    1. Re:douchebag troll whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd say that in comparison with OS X, linux looks a whole lot like a douchebag.

  59. this was not funny to me... by kuma · · Score: 1

    just bought my sister an imac to replace a centris 650 i bought in 1992.

    the centris is running, but it's down to one internal hard drive and rather than wasting gigabytes of storage on a machine with limited capabilities, i got a flower power on the cheap. add one gig and it will last into the next decade.

    guess the standard slashdotter will sustain half a dozen motherboard gashes in that time, but i have enough scars.

    1. Re:this was not funny to me... by Howie · · Score: 1

      I wasn't suggesting that x86 manufacturers were any better, but because the systems you mention are still going (good for you), doesn't mean Apple support them.

      My own experience of Apple is that by the time the thing comes down to a sensible price, it's no longer supported, and will not run current OSes or software.

      --
      "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
    2. Re:this was not funny to me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why on earth would you want to run a current OS (OS X?) on a machine made in 92 (the centris)?

      Ye gods, linux may run fine on any PC made in the 90s, but consumer OS's aren't designed like that. Try running windows 95 on a 486 sometime. Or W2K on a 200Mhz Pentium II. Sure, it will work, but it's hardly usable.

      Apple is no different than MS in this respect.

    3. Re:this was not funny to me... by Howie · · Score: 1

      Which was precisely my point. The original poster (and the story) implied that the life of your mac would be longer than that of an equivalent PC.

      I have, err, fond memories of system 7.1 on an LCII (which was just bearable but not for real work) and of 95 on a 486DX (which wasn't that bad, but mainly with 16-bit apps then). Those are not part of what Apple or MS generally consider the life of the system.

      --
      "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
  60. forget mac kbd, mouse by gqgreg · · Score: 1

    i promptly got rid of my mac keyboard AND mouse when I got my G4: I have a MacAlly keyboard and a MICROSOFT Intellimouse Explorer! can't live without multiple buttons!

    --
    Powerbook G4/1.5GHz 12", Toshiba Satellite 1135-S1554
  61. REALLY fast RAM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why won't PowerMacs use DDR-200 (equiv. SDR-400) or DDR-266 (equiv. SDR-532) MHz? Those kinds have been available for over a year, and achieve 3.2 and 4.2 GHz.

  62. FireNet by cipater · · Score: 1

    FireNet 2.0 is a third party software package that support AFP over TCP/IP through Firewire. So yes, it's been done.

    --
    Guns don't kill people - bullets do!
  63. YAWN by Skeeve+Jawbs · · Score: 1

    Mac VS DOS, Mac VS Windoze, Mac VS Linux/BSD/Solaris/Whatever. Same unoriginal rant, same envious anger.

    1. Re:YAWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Mac VS Linux/BSD/Solaris/Whatever.

      Mac OS X is BSD (kind of)

  64. Exceeding the PCI Bus? by cgleba · · Score: 1

    3.2Gb/s sounds nice. . .it translates to about 400MB/s. . .but with a 32-bit 33Mhz PCI bus that would be restricted to AT MOST 133MB/s.

    Everyone seems focused on reducing the memory, CPU or peripherial bottlenecks, however the biggest bottleneck I keep running accross is the PCI bus -- especially with storage.

    I wish more vendors (especially PC mobo makers) would embrace a faster bus such as 64-bit 66Mhz PCI (which would kick it up to 532MB/s and be able to handle 1394b). Sun and DEC have been using it for years, however since mobo makers don't like it there aren't many cards for it.

    I find it ironic that wires outside of the box are now faster then those hard-wired on the mobo :(.

    1. Re:Exceeding the PCI Bus? by Dahan · · Score: 1

      The current PowerMac G4s already have a 64-bit 33MHz PCI bus. I'm sure these new PowerMacs will have at least that--maybe they'll even have 64-bit 66MHz slots.

    2. Re:Exceeding the PCI Bus? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, you are right only when discussing PC's. PeeCee's (the ones that I'm aware of) can only connect with 1394 via a PCI card. ALL CURRENT MAC'S HAVE FIREWIRE (1394) ON THE MOTHERBOARD. There are no PCI-like limitations on the motherboard.

    3. Re:Exceeding the PCI Bus? by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      You fucking retard. FireWire chips just like all other periphrials are hooked up to the Southbridge of the fucking memory controller. The limits of the SB are the limits of the periphrial interface for the computer. Since the SB is running at 33MHz with either a 32 or 64 bit bus your onboard FW chip isn't going to have any better throughput than a periphrial card.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    4. Re:Exceeding the PCI Bus? by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      As someone else pointed out, Apple doesn't put FireWire on the PCI bus, and the current G4 systems have 64-bit 33MHz PCI slots. This is exactly why Ultra160 SCSI was available for Macs before PCs - Apple had a 64-bit PCI slot, where PCs didn't.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    5. Re:Exceeding the PCI Bus? by richard-parker · · Score: 1

      FireWire chips just like all other periphrials are hooked up to the Southbridge of the fucking memory controller. The limits of the SB are the limits of the periphrial interface for the computer. Since the SB is running at 33MHz with either a 32 or 64 bit bus your onboard FW chip isn't going to have any better throughput than a periphrial card.

      If we are talking about the Macintosh, I disagree. As I mentioned earlier in this discussion, the current line of G4 desktop machines use an Apple custom north and south bridge chipset. The north bridge (called Uni-N) is the memory controller and bridge to the AGP and PCI busses. Unlike the design of PC chip sets, the north bridge also contains an integrated controller for both FireWire and Gigabit Ethernet. Apple has does this specifically to get around the performance limitations of the PCI bus (and to reduce chip count). Less demanding IO hangs off the south bridge.

  65. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by TotallyUseless · · Score: 2

    not only are they just laying off 50 people, but with all the new people they are hiring for the apple stores, they will end up with MORE employees AFTER the layoff. hardly a sign of struggle if you ask me

    --

    Time for some tasty Shiner Bock!
  66. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by TotallyUseless · · Score: 2

    yes, i have a 6220, which was often considered the worst PowerPC machine ever made. It served me just fine for a few years tho, and i occasionally still use it for the tv card, which was quite a big deal back then. When I got my first playstation, I didnt have an adapter i needed to hook it up to my tv, and didnt realize till I got home. Not wanting to go back out that day, I simply plugged it into the tv card and played on the 6220 :)

    --

    Time for some tasty Shiner Bock!
  67. Apple longevity. by saintlupus · · Score: 2

    My own experience of Apple is that by the time the thing comes down to a sensible price, it's no longer supported, and will not run current OSes or software.

    I know, I shouldn't feed the trolls, but --

    I assume by "current OSes" you mean the lickable goodness that is Mac OS X. The oldest supported machine for this, as far as I know, is the desktop model G3 powermac.

    Available from a reseller, macofalltrades.com, this unit costs $499 and includes a USB card. So there's all the legacy ports, USB -- pretty much everything you need except FireWire. 128 megs of RAM and a 4 gig drive, not huge, but definitely usable.

    (And these guys aren't that cheap compared to the Pricewatch fodder people usually post here. I just thought of them because my main machine is a refurbed iMac I bought from them last year and they do splendid work.)

    On ebay, on the other hand, a G3 desktop goes for about half that. (As I write this, there is an auction for the same machine with 64 meg of RAM ending in four hours, currently at 202.50)

    Throw in some standard memory (say, an extra 256 megs for 40 dollars or so) and a bigger drive if you want one, and you've got a machine that runs anything Apple sells.

    Traditionally, things haven't been this way, so I do understand the "Apples are expensive" knee-jerk response. But the pace of speed bumps and upgrades from Apple in the last couple of years has really made items on the used and refurb markets very attractive from a price point of view.

    --saint

    1. Re:Apple longevity. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OS X isn't the first time Apple has stopped supporting their older hardware. Obviously, they had to cut people off at some point after the transition to PPC, like MS eventually cut off 386 owners. But Apple also cut a lot of people off with the release of System 7 and then again in the 8.X series. I don't remember the details, but I think the new OS simply refused to install on machines with older firmware, even though there was no architectural justification for dropping the older hardware.

      Apple makes high quality hardware, which is one aspect of longevity. But they also have a record of screwing over their users by intentionally breaking compatibility with new releases.

  68. Re:USB 2.0 devices ARE compatible with USB 1.x por by cgleba · · Score: 2, Informative

    As a former USB 1.x developer, OHCI vs UHCI has nothing to do with the compatabilty of end devices. A keyboard will work the same for both implementations.

    The difference lies in how the chip handles the USB "packets" in reagrds to DMA. OCHI slapps the "packets" into memory in a different fashion then the UHCI controllers -- much like different ethernet cards handle DMA differently. The main difference is in parsing the data streams.

    BTW UHCI is the "intel" implementation, and ohci was the implementation of a consortium led by Compaq.

    OHCI vs UHCI is much like the DEC 21143 vs the 3com 3c905b for ethernet -- both work with any other ethernet device and the fact that there is more then one ethernet card out there has not doomed ethernet. Same with USB.

  69. yeah adobe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firewire isn't just an interface for DV and drives. Scanners, the heart of my digital photo operation, are moving to Firewire. And, since Macs are so much better for all aspects of the digital photo workflow, most notably the photoshop, having a wicked fast (and much more stable than scsi) connection for scanners is very important. I'd be willing to bet the next generation of Nikon film scanners will utilize the new firewire.

  70. Re:Macs are for loosers by robvasquez · · Score: 0

    I've got a network of Win98 machines, and use 2000 at home. Haven't seen as much as a peep from any of the last 3-4 major virii.

    Not ALL Windows users get them, only those dumb enough to open any email attachment you send them.

  71. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and BeOS is dead. So dead.

    Fish washed up on a beach and dessicated in
    noonday sun dead.
    Horse broken leg shot in the head ground up
    for dogfood dead.

    D-E-D.

  72. Re:I Agree, iBooks Are Good Value by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where did you find a Compaq laptop with those specs for under $1000? I went laptop shopping recently and couldn't find anything with DVD for under $1000.

    Also, the size & weight of the iBook put it in the premium priced sub-notebook class. The discount priced (under $1200) notebooks on the market are all considerably bigger & heavier. The iBook is also the only offering in its class with an internal optical drive, which is a very compelling feature but does make the iBook a bit thicker and heavier than most of the competing sub-notebook models.

    The base iBook is US $1299 with 64MB and a CD drive. The DVD model is $1499 and comes with 128MB. The only competitor in its size/weight class that is priced close to the iBook is the Dell Inspiron 2100. The sub-notebook models from all the other manufacturers (Compaq, Sony, IBM, Toshiba, Gateway) are considerably more expensive. For once, an Apple product is actually a better value than its competition.

  73. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    iBook Linux minuses:

    1. Sound isn't working yet.

    2. The trackpad has only one button. You can map other keys (e.g. function keys) to emulate additional buttons, but it's annoying.

    3. Fewer distributions support PPC.

    4. Competing sub-notebooks are a little thinner and lighter.

    5. It doesn't have an external PCMCIA slot (but few need that).

    iBook plusses:

    1. It's the only sub-notebook I could find with an internal CD/DVD drive.

    2. It's cheaper than competing sub-notebooks.

    3. Battery life is 50% longer than the competition.

    4. You can run Mac OS X on it.

    5. All the connectors you need are in a row on the left side, so there's no need to carry annoying dongles for phone, network, USB, firewire connections.

    6. It's well built and attractively styled.

  74. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by STSeer · · Score: 1

    A friend of mine just got a brand new Sony VAIO for US$999, Apple's got nothing close that in the low end. Some Dell and maybe Toshiba and perhaps some other manufacturers make notebooks with better price performace ratios than the iBook.

  75. Next-Gen Sun To Be Powered by a single Spark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next-Gen Sun To Be Powered by a Spark in California.

  76. MOD THIS UP!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +5 Interesting!

  77. Porn by WiggyWack · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Hey, my other hand is busy while I'm surfing porn sites.

    --
    Macintosh humor! MacComedy.com
  78. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple doesn't compete in the bargain segments of the laptop market. The iBook is aimed at the ultra-portable segment. It starts at $1299, which is the cheapest offering in its size/weight class. The closest competitor is the Dell Inspiron 2100, which starts at $1499, and all the other ultra-portables are well above that. In this market segment, Apple competes very well on price/performance.

    All the offerings around the $1000 price point (like your friend's VAIO) are considerably larger, heavier, and feature poor compared to the iBook and other ultra-portables.

  79. RETARD! In the future 1 mouse button! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you are retarded

    in the future your finger itself on an illuminated flexible mat will be your sole interface.

    The finger can tap, drag, double tap, circle, all sorts of things.

    But the matt cannot feel WHICH digit on your hand you are using and it ia not psychic!!!

    Therefore the Mac is the way computers WILL BE 20 years from now.

    In the mean time I give you a middle finger for your stupidity.

  80. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by gig · · Score: 2

    > 2. The trackpad has only one button. You can map
    > other keys (e.g. function keys) to emulate additional
    > buttons, but it's annoying.

    Note that Macs have more keyboard modifier keys than most PC's. You can map all kinds of Command key shortcuts in Linux without changing the function of Shift and Control and Option (alt). Your standard three-button USB mouse will work fine, of course, even in Mac OS.

    > 3. Battery life is 50% longer than the competition.

    Actually, it's more like 100% longer ... 5 hours on the iBook and 2.5 on most PC notebooks.

  81. Re:I Agree, iBooks Are Good Value by gig · · Score: 2

    > For once, an Apple product is actually a better
    > value than its competition.

    Actually, what's exceptional in this case is that the Apple product has a lower STICKER PRICE than the competition. Their products are often a greater VALUE than the competition for many users (features, TCO, quality, ease of use, support).

  82. not getting any lately? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    judging by your easy trip into abuse you wont be getting any anytime soon either

  83. penguinppc64.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's down sometimes though. 3 or 4 guys from IBM are working on it.

  84. Post to /dev/null by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you read the news lately? What's a BeOS?

    What the heck are you doing here on /. Your comments should be posted to /dev/null.

  85. There's more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..but Apple have just renovated their dance hall.
    They've employed new Swedish dancers who'll happily have sex with their partners - you just have to ask. Needless to say they are absolutely gorgeous - the best looking dancers anywhere. They even dance better than the old ones (although you can, if you wish, still dance with your old partners - even at the same time), but you might have to learn a few new moves.

    The new dance hall is something of a well kept secret, although the word is spreading. Who knows - this time next year the other venues in town might be converted into Bingo halls...

  86. Re:What's Apple's Future Like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, I don't think you can map button-key combos in Linux without changing the function of the modifier keys. At least, I haven't found a way to do it. Right now, I've mapped F10 and F11, but as I said, it's annoying. If you know of a way, please tell me. Regardless, even if you can map them that way, I still consider having one button a disadvantage.

    And in practice, the battery life isn't really that good. I typically get 3.5 hours under OS X, 3 hours under Linux, and 4 under OS 9. That's a hell of a lot better than my wife's Dell though, which in practice doesn't last much over 2 hours.