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Apple @ MacWorld Tokyo

rschroeder writes "Apple updated several products at MacWorld Tokyo tonight (or tomorrow morning). A $499 10-gig iPod, with, get this, custom laser engraving on the back, ($49 extra) and vCard support. They also announced a $49 USB bluetooth module, shipping in April, with beta drivers availble today. Among other tricks, Jobs synced a Clie with a mac via bluetooth. Also a new 23" (1920x1200 )Cinema Display. Jobs also said they're raising the price of the iMac due to LCD and RAM cost increases. All this courtesy MacMinute.com's live coverage." Maccentral has several stories about Jobs' keynote at the convention.

454 comments

  1. Name change! by willybur · · Score: 1

    Hey! They could rename it to the iiPod! :)

    --

    --
    "Everybody wants a rock to wind a piece of string around." - They Might Be Giants, "We Want a Rock"
    1. Re:Name change! by cheese_wallet · · Score: 1

      Or better yet, how about the iPeed!

    2. Re:Name change! by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 1

      Or as Jeff Goldblum might say in one of those cheesy Apple ads...

      "The i -ahh -pod"

      --
      "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
  2. Monitor envy by faust2097 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was waiting for someone to outdo the 22" Cinema Display, funny it was Apple that ended up doing it themselves.

    1. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously tho, who really needs a 23-inch LCD monitor when the 22-inch will be cheaper anyway? This item is purely a stylish accessory for Mac-users with too much money.

      Still, nice to see Apple outdoing themselves!

    2. Re:Monitor envy by jimbolaya · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sun has a 24.1" LCD display, which offers the same resolution of the new Apple display, though about $1000 more (from what I've read from other sources). Still, I drool over the Apple display.

      --

      There ain't no rules here; we're trying to accomplish something.

    3. Re:Monitor envy by frinkster · · Score: 4, Informative

      This new monitor has a much higher pixel density than the 22" LCD. The old 22" LCD had a density of about 85 pixels per inch while this new 23" LCD has a pixel density of about 100 pixels per inch. Nice!

    4. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      [b] This item is purely a stylish accessory for Mac-users with too much money.[/b]

      I like people with too much money. Both Apple and myself are targetting Hollywood. It's one of the few demographics where riches and low education meet.(the others are lottery winners, but they tend to bankrupt themselves on gold plated trailers).

      Hugs and kisses,

      L. Ron Hubbard

    5. Re:Monitor envy by doorbot.com · · Score: 2

      Samsung has a SyncMaster 240T, which has, among other things, multiple inputs (DVI/Analog D-Sub), picture by picture, picture in picture, etc.

      If you're a HD freak, check out Samsung's upcoming 241MP, which will support composite inputs as well, and includes a TV tuner. It's HDTV compatible. Pricing will be around $7000.

    6. Re:Monitor envy by bmetz · · Score: 2

      Viewsonic's got a 23.1" lcd for $3358 on pricewatch. Of course since it doesn't have apple's proprietary USB+DVI+Power plugs you also
      save $150 on not having to buy a converter to use
      with your PC.

      Note: You can get the Apple 23" for $3,289 if you're a student.

      --
      What did you eat today? http://www.atetoday.com/
    7. Re:Monitor envy by Bilestoad · · Score: 1

      Who's going to be brave and buy one to see if it works with the DVIator and a GeForce card for x86?

    8. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Finally - a Cinema Display where the keyboard will slide in underneath the feet.

    9. Re:Monitor envy by daviddennis · · Score: 4, Informative

      If I had the money, I'd be in line at the Apple Store to buy it the second it opened tomorrow (or whenever it actually became available).

      As it is, I'll be saving my pennies, and I wouldn't be at all surprised if I buy one with my next Mac, later this year.

      That's how much I love using high-resolution displays.

      I currently have a SGI 1600SW display, which is the same resolution as the Cinema Display, but smaller. Even with this 1600x1024 display, I run out of screen real estate with painful ease. Increasing it to 1900x1200 would really help me. A lot.

      I think almost anyone involved in video, especially with Final Cut Pro's screen-gobbling new features, would feel the same.

      D

    10. Re:Monitor envy by FFFish · · Score: 2

      So what you're saying is that the Sun LCD has a lower effective resolution (dot pitch) and higher cost...

      Little wonder you're drooling at the Apple display!

      --

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      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    11. Re:Monitor envy by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 2

      Too bad the SyncMaster 240T doesn't support 1920x1200 in DVI mode.

    12. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Naw.

      Gold plated Nascar cars.

    13. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Students shouldn't be buying 23" flat screen monitors.

      There are probably some 'tax breaks' for Apple in selling kit like that to students. Those tax loopholes should be closed. That's a luxury item, not something that should be promoted with a student discount.

    14. Re:Monitor envy by Perdo · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      22 inch DP2040u max resolution 2048 by 1536. Perfect flat CRT. Less than $1000. You sir, are a fool. You paid 3 times too much for a product with inferior visual quality.

      Flat panels have not yet surpassed CRTs for visual quality. The best of them have pixel response times of 25ms. At 45ms, The SGI 1600SW display is not in that category. Ghosting while playing video is noticable and distracting. The SGI is a Thin Film Transistor (TFT) Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Display (AMLCD). An inferior technology they used because it is cheaper and has better yields when producing larger displays. Max Gamma is 7000 kelvin so the picture washes out at daylight brightness. Additionally, the display can only produce 24 bit color. So, despite SGI's marketing bullshit, this is one of the worst displays for video editing.

      The new apple display has the same drawbacks only it is bigger and costs more.

      For now a CRT is the best way to go unless you have no desktop space (get a bigger desk) or, like most apple owners, prefer style over substance (get a life).

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    15. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I assume you're referring to the VP230mb. The maximum resolution on that 23.1" LCD is 1600x1200.
      Contrast that with Apple's 1920x1200. Bit of a difference there.

      Then again, both beat a CRT...... IMHO.

      Tom

    16. Re:Monitor envy by pangloss · · Score: 2

      actually that's not correct. it didn't support it prior to late last year, but any newly mfg'ed 240T will. i've even read a report of one user sending his earlier rev monitor back to samsung who replaced the board for free.

      really, the issue is finding a card that supports better than 1600x1200 via dvi.

      there's another korean company which makes a monitor very similar to the 240T (same glass, different electronics, pivot but no remote) from a company called wide.

      this also is a 1900x1200 native lcd with multiple inputs. i think they still bundle a geforce2mx that does 1900x1200 via dvi.

    17. Re:Monitor envy by jonbrewer · · Score: 2

      Converter? Can you please post details? I am in love with the 17" Apple panel on my Mac at work, and am about to spend 6k on IBM's 21" panel for my Windows box. If I can use one of the new Apple panels for my PC I'll save a few grand. (though their resolution doesn't equal the IBM's 2048 x 1536)

      BTW, the ViewSonic's 1600*1200 resolution doesn't stack up to the apple. That 300*1200 extra pixels is another 20% more resolution.

    18. Re:Monitor envy by Surlyboi · · Score: 0

      Who said anything about using it with a PC?

      I'm pluggin' this baby into my dual Ghz.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
    19. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative


      There are other reasons to go LCD over CRT - one is EMI. For example, if you do audio production the EMI from CRTs bleeds in through electric guitar pickups resulting in nasty buzz. EMI could be a concern in other environments as well - such as lab settings when in the range of sensitive test equipment. Also, I have heard that it is easier for your eyes to focus on an LCD than a CRT.

    20. Re:Monitor envy by PaxTech · · Score: 2
      I think almost anyone involved in video... would feel the same.

      It's not just video editing.. I do website development and recently got a Mac with a 22" Cinema Display and I know I'm way more productive with it. I have a 17" LCD plugged into the secondary VGA port running at 1280x1024 so I have an effective 2880x1024 desktop.

      Nothing will enhance your computing experience more than a SHITLOAD of screen real estate.

      --
      All movements for social change begin as missions, evolve into businesses, and end up as rackets.
    21. Re:Monitor envy by plastik55 · · Score: 1

      Google for "ADC DVI adapter."

      --

      I have a positive modifier on Troll. When I mod someone Troll their karma should go UP!

    22. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Apple just has education discounts so that they can increase their marketshare in education. Keep in mind that those prices apply to schools buying machines as well.

      IMHO, there should be one giant tax loophole that covers everything, but that's another story...:)

    23. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The old Apple USB keyboard slid under the feet of the Cinema Display. It was nice. :)

    24. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gefen makes a DVI to ADC converter (there are also converter boxes to go the other way). But this should allow your PC to hook up to any Apple cinema display.

      http://www.gefen.com/products/extendit/new_kvm_u sb _extenders_switches/dvi_to_adc/

      Tom

    25. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also does 1920x1440 in analog.

      Is digital really better?

      Too bad they will be selling M$ phones... *plonk*

    26. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God. Mac users really are wankers.

    27. Re:Monitor envy by kyrre · · Score: 1

      Apple has a no return policy on dead pixel problems with their laptops. Is dead pixels an issue with desktop flatpanels?

      If so, i don't envy the feeling you end up with if your $32000 23" flatpanel ends up having a nice blue pixel just above the center that never goes dark. My iBook does, and Apple couldn't care less. Kinda ruins the mood when watching Bladrunner.

    28. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes, admittedly.

      But not as often as ACs.

    29. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Photograph is truth.

      Dead pixel is fuck you. Dead pixel while watching movie is fuck you 24 times per second.

    30. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wanker

    31. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can get the Apple 23" for $3,289 if you're a student.

      This made me laugh :)

    32. Re:Monitor envy by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Informative

      Perdo, I don't think you understand HOW video editors use their monitors. The absolute picture quality is not at issue because you always use a real D1 monitor for looking at your actual output (interlaced video and strict video phosphor primary specs makes this essential). What editors DO require is tons and tons of real estate, low heat output and the low flicker doesn't hurt. These Apple Cinema displays are absolutely spot-on for Avid or FCP work, it's just a shame that they cost so damn much. I would LOVE to have one.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    33. Re:Monitor envy by mstrjon32 · · Score: 1

      I too have a 1600SW, and while it is a nice display, when used under OS X, it is the desktop equivalent of a 15" LCD. Anyone who has used OS X knows that it is has a very heavy visual interface, and displays that seemed gigantic under OS 9 seem cramped under 10. I could hardly afford the 1600SW, and I only paid $1000 for mine, but I could not live with anything less. I am sure the new Cinema HD is going to be beautiful. Can't wait to see one.

    34. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have both on my desk right now - the keyboard is wider than the gap between the feet of the monitor. You have to tilt it sideways to push it through - for $2499, that isn't nice.

    35. Re:Monitor envy by Jordy · · Score: 2

      Of course the ultimate LCD monitor is the IBM T221.

      At 22.3" it has a 16x10 aspect ratio and native resolution of 3840x2400. Of course it is also $9000, but that's beside the point now isn't it?

      --
      The world is neither black nor white nor good nor evil, only many shades of CowboyNeal.
    36. Re:Monitor envy by daviddennis · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't think there's any call for "you are a fool" style insults here. We're just having a friendly discussion. Or so I would hope.

      I've been editing video for months now on my 1600SW and haven't had any problems with it at all. It works great for me.

      What's wonderful about LCDs is that they have much sharper text, and it remains sharp throughout the life of the unit. CRTs start reasonably sharp, but degrade over time.

      When I replaced my 19" Sony with the 1600SW, I couldn't believe how much crisper and sharper it was.

      Since most of us spend a ton of time entering and editing text, that's a huge advantage for the LCD. The lack of flicker is also great for the eyes.

      If you got the bucks, buy a LCD. That's still my advice.

      D

    37. Re:Monitor envy by daviddennis · · Score: 2

      It's not quite that bad because of the extra width. But you are right that there is a problem.

      When I switched to MacOS X, I had a 19" Sony which I always ran at 1152x864 as the most comfortable resolution. As soon as I got X, the I switched it to 1280x1024 and got roughly the same experience.

      Anti-aliased text definitely looks best at higher screen DPI. If you go to the Apple Store and look at the original Cinema Display, you'll see the anti aliasing looks a little rough. It actually looks better on the 1600SW due to the higher DPI. But the Cinema Display is a lot brighter.

      It's too bad the best MacOS X experience is restricted to the select few who can afford a $3,500 monitor, and I say that even as someone who's quite likely to join that elite group.

      D

    38. Re:Monitor envy by pangloss · · Score: 2

      visit the WideScreen Wiki

      You'll have to navigate around a bit, but you'll find pretty much everything about hooking up apple lcd's to pc's there.

    39. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      too bad it had to be sun uh?http://www.sun.com/products-n-solutions/hw/peri pherals/monitors.html

    40. Re:Monitor envy by jcr · · Score: 2

      Flat panels have not yet surpassed CRTs for visual quality

      I beg to differ.. You can't beat discrete pixels for clarity.

      Incidentally, Apple's panels are considerably better than SGI's for color gamut, contrast, and viewing angle.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    41. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody takes back displays, desktop or notebook, because of one bad pixel. If they did, LCD panels would cost twice as much or more, because there would be a billion more rejects. I have a friend who had about 8 or 9 dead pixels on his Cinema Display and Apple replaced it. Their policy is a certain number overall, or a smaller number if they're all next to each other. It's rare to see a 15" display without one bad pixel somewhere, no matter what the manufacturer. Apple's displays are top-quality, as good as any.

      Massaging the bad pixel sometimes fixes it. Sometimes they start working properly by themselves. Depends on what's wrong with it.

    42. Re:Monitor envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just whining from a guy with a CRT. I've been using an Apple Cinema Display for about a year, and using LCD panels for three years, and I have never regretted it or looked back. No flicker, no headaches, no heat, no radiation, just a clean, clear, digital picture. It has also saved on electricity.

      Since we're talking Apple, it's worth noting that all of Apple's LCD's have been top quality, and they all hook up digitally, so there's no ghosting like you see with VGA (analog connection) flat panels.

      The Cinema Display also has amazing contrast. It's so deep it looks real. People always want to touch it because they can't believe it's a computer display, the picture is GOOD.

    43. Re:Monitor envy by daviddennis · · Score: 2

      No argument there. I bought my 1600SW as a $695 closeout, so it was a major, major bargain compared to the old Cinema Display. It would be nicer if it were brighter, but that's hardly worth the major price difference from what I paid for the SGI.

      The new Cinema Display, though, is, because it brings higher resolution to the table, too.

      D

  3. MacWorld Tokyo by Asterax · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Will they be releasing information on the new and incredibly cool 23 inch 1920 by 1200 pixel flat screens?

    1. Re:MacWorld Tokyo by frinkster · · Score: 2

      There is a small amount of infoon the Apple website.

  4. Info on the new iPod software by MotownAvi · · Score: 5, Informative
    I just installed the new 1.1 software on my 5gb iPod with no difficulty. Comments:

    Contacts: The way this works is that when you upgrade to 1.1, you get a top-level folder on the iPod named "Contacts". Drop .vcf files in there, and you're off. Cute, but since I have my Palm all the time, it's less useful to me.

    Equalizer: Can't comment since I haven't set it for any songs.

    Now Playing: Pressing the center button when playing a song no longer switches between elapsed time and time remaining. The normal display now shows both. If you press the button, you get the diamond-in-the-rectangle of iTunes, and you can use the dial to shuttle backwards and forwards. Trés cool.

    Shuffle: You can now choose between shuffling between songs or between albums. I'm not quite sure what that means.

    Bugs fixed: The bug where pausing and then unpausing would land you somewhere totally else appears to be fixed. Another bug where the iPod would cut songs off at the end is also fixed. Alas, the one that prevents "Dvorak" (with the accent over the r) from displaying properly is still present.

    Easter Egg: It's still there, in the Legal section off the Settings main item.

    And of course, more languages that I don't understand.

    Avi

    1. Re:Info on the new iPod software by flynt · · Score: 5, Funny

      Shuffle: You can now choose between shuffling between songs or between albums. I'm not quite sure what that means.

      Allow me to clarify. Shuffling between songs would take all your songs and play them in random order.

      Shuffling albums would take all your albums and play them in random order. So, Album2, Album4,Alubum3..etc...

    2. Re:Info on the new iPod software by MotownAvi · · Score: 1

      Ah. I am enlightened. Thank you.

      Avi

    3. Re:Info on the new iPod software by plastik55 · · Score: 2
      Equalizer: Can't comment since I haven't set it for any songs.


      Look in Settings->EQ. It now allows you to change the setting on the fly, whereas with the old firmware you had to set the EQ for songs with iTunes. You get to choose from a menu with such names as "Bass Booster," "Latin," "Deep," and "Pop." OK, but I would have liked a little graphic showing me what each setting did


      Another change: the backlight timer can be set for 10 sec (previous max was 5 sec.)

      --

      I have a positive modifier on Troll. When I mod someone Troll their karma should go UP!

    4. Re:Info on the new iPod software by malcolm2r · · Score: 1

      Nice to see Apple have doubled the capacity of there WarezPod.

    5. Re:Info on the new iPod software by happystink · · Score: 2

      no, shuffling in one album means you hear random songs from one album. the other oen means you hear random songs from ANY album.

      --

      sig:
      See the "..for smart people" banners Wired runs here? Look elsewhere guys.

    6. Re:Info on the new iPod software by krugdm · · Score: 2

      Sigh. Still waiting for View by Album in addition to playlist and artist. Not a show-killer by any means, but it still would be convienient.

    7. Re:Info on the new iPod software by Kip · · Score: 1

      If you want to view by album, why not go to Artists and pick All, that should list all the albums.

    8. Re:Info on the new iPod software by krugdm · · Score: 2

      Here's my problem: Suppose I have a compilation CD, like the Movie X soundtrack for instance. When I rip the CD in iTunes, it goes to CDDB to fill in all the album info. Movie X gets filled in for the album name, and the artist fields are filled in by the artist who did each song.

      Now, after I sync with my iPod, how do I play the Movie X soundtrack? Can't go under Artists, because the album has been split up amongst the 12 different artists who did songs for the soundtrack. The only workaround is to make a playlist for each album I have and go that way, but then you've lost one of the reasons for having that data there in the first place.

      Now I'm not saying that you need to be able to sort your collection by every ID3 field available, but it would seem that Album would be an obvious one to have stuck in there.

      Although, come to think of it, why not? If I feel that it is important that I have set my iTunes view to show Title, Album, Artist, and Genre, then why couldn't iTunes pass that along to the iPod so that the Main Menu showed those four?

    9. Re:Info on the new iPod software by SirRichardPumpaloaf · · Score: 1

      Reread the parent post, it contains the answer. Under Artists, choose All. You'll then be presented with a list of all albums. Choose Movie X soundtrack and away you go.

  5. sounds fair by chabegger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    raising the price of the iMac sounds like a fair deal to me... any other computer manufacturer would raise the price of their stuff if supply was low... just simple economics. i think this is a good move to apple, although it might make some people mad (minus those with pre-orders)

    1. Re:sounds fair by ostiguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Any other manufacturor might not have done such a foolish thing as integrating the display. Seriously, I am not trolling here - just look at the attempted consolidation in the ram market right now. I think every area of the it industry had hardware surplus based on skyrocking demand for 5 straight years, and then stopped. Apple probably viewed the cheap lcd prices as a natural parallel to the hard drive and cpu performance inc. vs price metrics, whereas the lcd prices were probably very depressed by massive overproduction.

      Having to raise prices is truly ridiculous. It just hurts apple even more in the last 9 months of this year as the x86 folks keep pushing the mhz gap higher, and thus the apple/x86 price comparison keep getting worse for apple.

    2. Re:sounds fair by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 4, Insightful

      yeah, being one of 2 PC makers in the Black this year,having 60 million in the bank and having no debt can realy Hurt, it hurts realy realy realy bad.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    3. Re:sounds fair by Matty_ · · Score: 1

      I thought Apple had a few billion in the bank.

    4. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 'cost of entry' to the Macintosh world must be kept high enough, or it won't have that Country Club appeal any longer.

      Has anybody else seen one of thost 'boutique mirror' iMacs? They look cool in the ad on the back cover of the New Yorker, until you realize they're four times the size of the tabletop makeup mirror they resemble. A big hulking monster taking up half your desk.

    5. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, technically PC stands for "personal computer", not "box of cheap cloned x86 parts".

    6. Re:sounds fair by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 3, Funny

      An AC wrote:

      > I love you apple zealots. Apple addicts is the closest thing to a secular
      > cult I have ever seen.
      >
      > Um wait I take that back, apple addicts think Steve Jobs is god.

      The beautiful, protecting, heroic, wonder-working deity Mothra is the great Goddess that resurrected Apple from the dead (and parted the Pacific for good measure).

      Toho is her prophet.

      Steve Jobs is her servant and messenger.

      Apple is her champion to put right the wrongs of Microsoft, the RIAA, and the MPAA.

      Homage to King Shisa (mistranslated as Seesar or Caesar),
      Guardian of Okinawa and Friend of the Mac,
      on the occasion of his 38th birthday.
      ("Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla" 1974, "Mothra 2" 1997)

    7. Re:sounds fair by Perdo · · Score: 3

      Build a Mac yourself for $500...

      Build a PC yourself for $500...

      See the difference now?

      I'm in the black. And I didn't raise the barrier to entry on my product more than the cost of a new computer.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    8. Re:sounds fair by johnrengler · · Score: 1

      in my opinion, another manufacturer wouldn't raise the price of their PC if supply was low, they'd EOL that particluar model and release a new model (actually just a new model number) at a slightly higher price with a new bundle of applications or something, so that they could justify the raise without saying that the PC just costs more...

      kudos to Apple for being honest... hope it doesn't hurt their sales, they just need to start producing the iMacs already...

    9. Re:sounds fair by dadragon · · Score: 1

      Build a Mac yourself for $500...

      Does this mean that there are clone parts available? How do I go about building my own Mac.

      Really.. I want to know. I like OS X.

      --
      God save our Queen, and Heaven bless The Maple Leaf Forever!
    10. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it were not for the anti Anon Coward bigotry here this would be modded up (+4 funny)

    11. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, about $4.3 Billion, to be exact. (Heh..."about" "to be exact". I'm such a dumbass.)

    12. Re:sounds fair by Perdo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Exactly. You can not build a Mac from parts. You have to pay Apple's premium price for inferior hardware.

      Apple is "in the black" on the backs of their sucker die hard fanboys.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    13. Re:sounds fair by netsharc · · Score: 2, Funny

      Come on, Apple bashing is no longer cool, they're a Unix now! A good GUI on top of a good-functioning OS internals make for a fine computer, and if it doesn't have the software you want, you can always compile *free* Unix software or install Linux on it. What, you don't like Linux?

      :)

      --
      What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
    14. Re:sounds fair by maggard · · Score: 2
      Exactly. You can not build a Mac from parts. You have to pay Apple's premium price for inferior hardware.

      Really?

      Interestingly when the new iMacs came out every journalist thought to get clever and actually went out and compared it with other similar machines from Dell, Gateway, etc (your $500 special comes with crap components, no integration, no OS or software & no support.) The universal result? The new iMac was about spot on for price. It had FireWire where PCs might have USB2, other little differences, but for each reviewer it was about a hundred bucks up or down in price with an equivalent PC.

      Apple is "in the black" on the backs of their sucker die hard fanboys.

      Oh, so you're just some trolling wacko yearning for the old my-OS-is-bigger-then-your-OS days. What, the Viagra give out so now you gotta get your jollies baiting Macolytes? Go try and twiddle your BIOS again.

      --
      I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
    15. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you a moron? all that shit is PC shit cuz PC stands for Personal Computer. PERSONAL COMPUTER. not x86-based Personal Computer.

    16. Re:sounds fair by Pussy+Is+Money · · Score: 1

      x86 machines are personal computers. Apples and Ataris and Commodores are home computers.

      --
      Pushin' 'n dealin', shovin' 'n stealin'
    17. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wow, looking at your post history you seem to be a *very* busy anti-Apple troll don't you?

      How many Macs do you own? Many? Do you use them often?

      If not, then why are you filling this page up with uninformed BS?

    18. Re:sounds fair by Perdo · · Score: 2

      Similar Machine:

      Duron 1 Ghz (the G4,PIII and Duron Perform the same clock for clock)
      Abit NV7m GeForce 2 graphics, everything built in. Micro ATX for small footprint like the iMac.
      128mb DDR ram, better memory but cheaper than crippled 100fsb SDRAM
      40mb hard drive.
      24x disk burner.
      micro ATX case.
      Keyboard, optical mouse.
      Firewire Card.
      $401 for a pc computer, as fast if not faster than the iMac.
      $300 for a 15 inch TFT active-matrix liquid crystal display

      EXACTLY HALF THE PRICE.

      Now, with the $1400 budget:

      XP 1800, about as fast as a 1.5 Ghz G4 (HA!)
      ASUS A7V333 Motherboard.
      1 GB DDR333 ram
      TWO 160 GB drives mirrored or striped depending on your pleasure (does the mac support drive sizes this large? ;)
      GeForce 3
      DVD drive
      40x burner
      Case, Wireless Keyboard, Wireless Optical Mouse
      Firewire Card, Gigabit Ethernet.
      19" perfect flat usb monitor

      Certainly a system comparable with a high end G4

      For the Price of a dual 1 Ghz G4 "Ultimate":

      Dual AMD MP 2000+ @ 1666mhz each
      Asus A7M266D AMD 760MPX
      1.5 GB DDR ram
      1/2 TERABYTE OF DRIVE SPACE.
      Geforce 4 Ti 4600/128MB ram
      DVD Burner
      40x CD burner
      Firewire Card
      8 channel IDE raid (hardware not software)
      22" perfect flat usb monitor.

      Plain and simple. Apple hardware is inferior and over priced.

      To hell with Dell, Gateway, etc. They don't get my dollars either.

      Alpha-Techie, my ass. You better get with the program, I'd never hire you with the emotional bias you place on hardware. Computers are Tools. I want the best tools at the best price. I do not want some Mac zealot who will break my budget on shiny glossy pretty slow boxes.

      That's like putting pom-poms and rhinestones on a Hole-Hawg... actually macs are more like 3.3v cordless drils in comparison so maybe pop-poms are the right idea.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    19. Re:sounds fair by d0n+quix0te · · Score: 2, Informative

      Corrections:

      They were profitable in the 1st qtr (a good achievement given the circumstances), 2nd qtr may be a different issue.

      Also they have > $4 billion in the bank.

    20. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alpha-Techie, my ass. You better get with the program, I'd never hire you with the emotional bias you place on hardware. Computers are Tools. I want the best tools at the best price. I do not want some Mac zealot who will break my budget on shiny glossy pretty slow boxes.

      That's true computers - are tools. However you fail to understand that for a number of jobs (content creation being one of them) they're the best tool for the job.
    21. Re:sounds fair by gamgee5273 · · Score: 3, Funny
      Looking over your post, son, I would say that you're the one being a touch emotional. He makes a point andthen you spend how long trying to disprove it in a "mine's bigger than yours" type of pissing contest.

      I wouldn't hire you to work help desk phones.

    22. Re:sounds fair by cplater · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked PC meant Personal Computer. A market in which Apple was a pioneer. You may remeber a very popular personal computer named Apple ][ that was widely used in schools and homes in the early 80's, and in fact was around until the early 90's when the company that produced it created a personal computer named Macintosh. They were the first to offer an affordable GUI (the Apple II had a Macintosh like GUI, and it was in color, unlike the Macintoshes available at the time.)
      Also keep in mind that if IBM had their way, the IBM PC would not have been cloneable. If they could have found a way to legally shut down the cloners, they would have.
      Apple hase one very large advantage, they make the whole widget. They can make sure that their OS runs very well on their boxen, and they can make sure that all the bits work. I know that there are a few things that need to be done to OS X to make this 100% true, but it's getting there.
      Anyway, I'm rambling now......time for more coffee.....

      --
      -- Charles A. Plater
    23. Re:sounds fair by mattreilly · · Score: 1
      $300 for a 15 inch TFT active-matrix liquid crystal display

      $300 for a POS ANALOG LCD display is what you should say. If you're going to pretend like you know something try to be fair. The iMac comes with a top of the line DIGITAL model. What's the difference? Quality, junior.

      matt

    24. Re:sounds fair by Type-IIa · · Score: 1

      Umm. 4 BILLION in the bank, you mean. Yeah, that US Dollar, Yankee-Boy.

    25. Re:sounds fair by znu · · Score: 2

      It seems to me that if you're selling more of something that you can make, at your current prices, you'd be stupid to cut them in order to make them more competitive.

      --
      This space unintentionally left unblank.
    26. Re:sounds fair by Vagary · · Score: 1

      A lot of us would like to know. But I've asked around, it isn't really a viable option.

    27. Re:sounds fair by inkswamp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Build a Mac yourself for $500...

      Build a PC yourself for $500...

      See the difference now?


      No, but yet again I see the standard PC-centric attitude applied to the Mac side of the computing world and yet again I wonder what this is supposed to prove. Let's go over this one more time, and this time I'll try to avoid polysyllables so it will be easier to understand.

      Okay, sitting comfy? Let's begin...

      People who buy Macs do not want to build the machine themselves. They want it to work out of the box and are willing to pay for that.

      Criticizing Macs on the basis that you can't build one cheap is nothing short of a non sequitur. It make sense only to someone who doesn't use Macs. To us Mac users, it makes no sense and says more about the person doing the criticism than it does about Apple.

      --Rick

      --
      --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
    28. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also keep in mind that if IBM had their way, the IBM PC would not have been cloneable. If they could have found a way to legally shut down the cloners, they would have.

      You mean kinda like apple shut down it's cloners?

    29. Re:sounds fair by Perdo · · Score: 2

      "They want it to work out of the box and are willing to pay for that"

      Work out of the box...

      Like when a new Mac randomly chooses the startup disk and operating system because it has never been started before, even just to do a system check? Just a miniscule ammount of quality control and uniform user experience would be nice.

      Is it the free year of CompuServe 2000 you can get as a buying incentive that has no OS X client and runs as an application that breaks your connection when you run software update because Macs have to shut down all running applications to do installs?

      Is it the message "Mac OS is trying to shut down, please wait for mac os to shut down before trying to shut down."

      Is it when AppleTalk grabs the printer port because it cannot see a connection on the Ethernet, preventing you from file sharing or printing?

      Is it when Apple issues a firmware update that disables any ram that is not cas latency 322, even if it is better than cas 322, and to disable the check for "inferior ram" (you didn't pay apples 200% markup on ram) there is an easter egg hunt involving holding down secret keys while opening the memory control panel?

      Is it having to use guesswork to manage each individual application's memory usage because the operating system will not take care of it for you?

      Is it the hidden cost of OS X of running extremely poorly on the stock memory provided with apples requiring you to "purchase" a smooth running OS X for the price that apple sells their 200% markup memory for?

      Is it the chipping paint on the TiBook, cracks in the Cube, useless handles and front foot of the iMac, misaligned hinges on the clamshell iBook, soft, easily scratched surface of the new ibook or flimsy plastic catch mechanism on the G4 Tower, that requires so much force to close that it is likely to break?

      Is it the recalled power supplies, out of focus iMac CRTs, chronically bad G4 motherboards, temperamental slot load drives, incomplete software automatic software updates, type -43925 errors with no explanation or documentation or the inability to use USB printer sharing with dynamic addresses and again no documentation telling you why it is not working?

      USB keyboards hubs constantly complaining of "not enough power" and going bad crashing the system. Absolutely no spill protection in any mac keyboard even though they were able to totally prevent a spill causing any damage to a Apple IIc twenty years ago? Designed in fragility so they can generate sales of a high margin item. A keyboard with USB hub is 30 bucks. Apple's is $80.

      Bet also that the corrupted preferences adds to ease of use too. Infinitely tall launcher just because you changed screen resolution, inability to send mail and having to install an entirely new client to let you setup an account again. Applications constantly reporting "I see you are running 'blah-bah' for the first time" No OS provisions to do a clean uninstall resulting in the machine accumulating more and more stray files, forcing a clean OS install to get a measure of sanity back. Rebuilding the desktop corrupting all your aliases, and all the apple scripts you wrote to automate the bug fixes you have to do on a daily basis because Apple will not fix them.

      Mac OS never enforcing any application privlages and no third party software vender even vaguely willing to undertake that momentous task because if Apple can't get something that fundamental right, how is anyone going to fix it for them?

      Lack of documentation on extensions that would allow you to get rid of the parasites that provide no benefit but rob an already slow machine of resources?

      Is it getting a brand new Mac with a burner just to find you have to download the disk burning software and extension from apple, instead of it coming pre-installed?

      Is it the 20+ hours you have to put into a brand new machine because it is not even close to being able to perform as advertised when you pull it out of the box?

      Is it the favorites menu filled to the brim already that you must empty before you can even use it as your favorites instead of what apple's marketing department thinks your favorites ought to be?

      Is it the hidden spell check button that you must move to a usable location in both apple works and Office 2001?

      Is it the crappy TCP/IP interface and application memory manager interface that will not let you make changes out of order?

      Is it the horrible window management that will not let you properly maximize a window to use ALL available desktop space, forcing you to give up screen real estate to "important" things like the taskbar, dock, blank desktop, apple menu, and the inert top of the window?

      I can build a PC out of parts and fully configure it in less man hours than it took to write this post including the time it takes to sit with my credit card and order the parts.

      Pay extra to work out of the box. Bullshit. Pay extra for nothing but image. I'll bet you own a 4×4 that has never been off the highway and a Mac that sits on your desk looking pretty because if you EVER use it you would run into the same troubles that I have had with Macs.

      Macs are fragile, slow, pretty and overpriced.

      "PC-centric" Hell, I ran kicking and screaming to PCs. Macs forced me to. Do I have an ax to grind? hell yes! An ax of thousands of wasted man hours and endless late night sessions praying that this fix or that fix might work.

      Find me some non-marketoid documentation for macs. Give me a troubleshooting procedure where the first option is not "Swap ot the motherboard". With what for god's sake? Shove a banana in the damn machine and fire her up?

      God, I could go on and on. Do you believe I work with macs? Do you belive that every PC I have built, weather running Linux or Windows 2000 is bullet proof only a few hours after recieving parts in the mail while a Mac NEVER becomes bullet proof after insane amounts of work?

      Macs sure are pretty but never talk about ease of use or digital hub with me. Digital hub is their way of saying, buy this overpriced computer, then buy software equil in value to the computer, then buy periferals equil to twice the value of the computer. Now you have a digital hub that costs as much as an economy car. Welcome to setup hell, nothing is going to work as advertised. Out of the box, can't print, burn, communicate, import images, edit movies, play video. Upgrade to quiktime ten!

      They want to help get you on the internet. asks you nicly twice, scoldingly once and threateningly once. They want you to register. "we want you to become part of the happy consumer collective. we want to sell you out to every direct marketing mass mailer on the planet with no opt out provisions." With over 180 Macs happily registered to me, Entire trees die every week just to get my attention. "Buy more mac crap! you were a sucker once, be a sucker again!"

      THIS IS THE MAC USER EXPERIENCE!

      I didn't even address speed. Save that for a later post.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    30. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The PIII, Duron, and G4 are not equivalent performers clock-for-clock if you are running actual software on them. Put the systems side-by-side and run applications (especially graphical applications) and see for yourself. You just look like a fool when you grab onto flamebait like spec benchmarks and try to teach something to people who actually use the systems. It's dumb. The benchmarks were done on a Mac with one of its CPU's disabled, and the code did not use Altivec at all. It's not real-world in any way. In the real world, both CPU's are utilized, all Mac software that needs it uses Altivec, and the design efficiencies throughout the system enable better performance from graphical apps and the interface makes the user more productive.

      We Mac users have all SEEN PC's ... we're not at the South Pole with Macs congratulating each other on 1GHz clock speeds. P4's at 2.2GHz running Windows simply are not better machines than G4's at 2x1GHz running Mac OS X. Sorry, they're not. The more graphics and DSP you do (video, audio, graphics) then that stacks things even more in the Mac's favor, with Altivec and the PPC's graphics-optimized functions, as well as Mac OS X being designed for modern tasks like these.

    31. Re:sounds fair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perdo, I've been using Macs for a few years, and you are just spitting out bullshit. One or two of your points almost come close to truth, but even then they are referring to operating system versions that are over a year out of date.

      You need to get some help, man. I think you protest too much. Why does it bother you so much that there is a company who makes computer systems for creative industries, schools, and home users? I wouldn't trade my Mac for two free top-of-the-line PC's, because I can't do my work on a PC. It doesn't have the tools. If my Macs cost twice what they do, I would still consider them a bargain.

      If a PC is better for you, then that's great. If you can build your own stable Windows system, then great. If you can distill your own water in the wild, then great ... for most people, bottled water is better, though.

    32. Re:sounds fair by dukeofurl01 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, funny, I did.

    33. Re:sounds fair by Onan · · Score: 1

      >Like when a new Mac randomly chooses the startup disk and operating
      >system because it has never been started before, even just to do a
      >system check? Just a miniscule ammount of quality control and uniform
      >user experience would be nice.

      Random? Pre-X macs came with exactly one operating system installed. Post-X macs from last year had two, and defaulted to 9; those from this year have two and default to X. What's random about this?

      >Is it when AppleTalk grabs the printer port because it cannot see a
      >connection on the Ethernet, preventing you from file sharing or
      >printing?

      Why would this prevent filesharing and printing? That's what appletalk did.

      (Not to mention the outdatedness of this comment. Macs haven't had serial ports for what, three or four years now?)

      >Is it having to use guesswork to manage each individual application's
      >memory usage because the operating system will not take care of it for
      >you?

      This is basically the one complaint in this list which I will wholehearted grant you. Oldschool macos's manual, fixed memory management was unspeakably lame. A bigger problem than unprotected memory and cooperative multitasking, if you ask me.

      Fortunately, as with nearly all the complaints in your list, it's not relevant any more. X deals with memory in the ways one would expect from any civilized unix implementation.

      >Is it the hidden cost of OS X of running extremely poorly on the stock
      >memory provided with apples requiring you to "purchase" a smooth
      >running OS X for the price that apple sells their 200% markup memory
      >for?

      More memory certainly helps, but there's no need whatsoever to purchase it from Apple, or to pay any unusual price for it.

      >Is it the chipping paint on the TiBook, cracks in the Cube, useless
      >handles and front foot of the iMac, misaligned hinges on the clamshell
      >iBook, soft, easily scratched surface of the new ibook or flimsy
      >plastic catch mechanism on the G4 Tower, that requires so much force
      >to close that it is likely to break?

      I've never owned a TiBook or cube, so I won't speak to those. I have, however, owned, used, or had occasion to open at least a dozen g3 and g4 towers, and have never found the latch mechanism to be anything other than smooth and convenient. Never yet seen or heard of one breaking.

      And what do you find useless about the handle and foot on the old imac? Most imac owners I know regularly use one or both. And even if you don't use them, why are you offended by their presence?

      >Is it the recalled power supplies, out of focus iMac CRTs, chronically
      >bad G4 motherboards, temperamental slot load drives, incomplete
      >software automatic software updates, type -43925 errors with no
      >explanation or documentation or the inability to use USB printer
      >sharing with dynamic addresses and again no documentation telling you
      >why it is not working?

      The only one of these which I've ever known to be the case was the recalled powerbook power supplies. I actually had a wallstreet powerbook, so I got a new supply from apple for free. I never had an actual problem with my old supply, but I put its serial number into a web page somehwere, and they sent me a new one. I still use the old one and the new one to this day. I have a hard time being offended by this convenience.

      >USB keyboards hubs constantly complaining of "not enough power" and
      >going bad crashing the system. Absolutely no spill protection in any
      >mac keyboard even though they were able to totally prevent a spill
      >causing any damage to a Apple IIc twenty years ago? Designed in
      >fragility so they can generate sales of a high margin item. A keyboard
      >with USB hub is 30 bucks. Apple's is $80.

      Firstly, I've never run into "not enough power" or crashing issues, and I currently have eight usb devices connected at home.

      Secondly, the response to your complaint about the keyboard prices is the same as your complaint about their ram prices: if it chafes you, don't use them. There's nothing nonstandard about them other looking nifty, so you can happily use that $30 keyboard. I personally use a kinesis.

      >Bet also that the corrupted preferences adds to ease of use too.
      >Infinitely tall launcher just because you changed screen resolution,
      >inability to send mail and having to install an entirely new client to
      >let you setup an account again. Applications constantly reporting "I
      >see you are running 'blah-bah' for the first time" No OS provisions to
      >do a clean uninstall resulting in the machine accumulating more and
      >more stray files, forcing a clean OS install to get a measure of
      >sanity back. Rebuilding the desktop corrupting all your aliases, and
      >all the apple scripts you wrote to automate the bug fixes you have to
      >do on a daily basis because Apple will not fix them.

      I could respond at length about never having experienced these problems, or having run into them only very minimally. But the shorter and more relevant answer is to point out that none of them are currently relevant, with the advent of X.

      >Mac OS never enforcing any application privlages and no third party
      >software vender even vaguely willing to undertake that momentous task
      >because if Apple can't get something that fundamental right, how is
      >anyone going to fix it for them?

      I'm not even sure what you mean by application privileges; do you mean protected memory? File permissions? More relevantly, do you mean anything which isn't now provided by X?

      >Is it the crappy TCP/IP interface and application memory manager
      >interface that will not let you make changes out of order?

      Yep, that was annoying. Good thing it was fixed a couple years ago.

      >Is it the horrible window management that will not let you properly
      >maximize a window to use ALL available desktop space, forcing you to
      >give up screen real estate to "important" things like the taskbar,
      >dock, blank desktop, apple menu, and the inert top of the window?

      (Without trying to figure out where you found a taskbar on your mac...)

      What, so you want to be able to open a window to the exclusion of menubar, titlebar, and basic windowing interfaces? How would you ever expect to, say, close this window?

      >I can build a PC out of parts and fully configure it in less man hours
      >than it took to write this post including the time it takes to sit
      >with my credit card and order the parts.

      Great, congratulations; that probably means that's the right choice for you. Most people don't have this ability, nor want to spend a few unpleasant years and lots of money acquiring it.

      >Pay extra to work out of the box. Bullshit. Pay extra for nothing but
      >image. I'll bet you own a 4? that has never beentoff the highwaytandra
      >Mac that sits on your desk looking pretty because if you EVER use it
      >you would run into the same troubles that I have had with Macs.

      I've been a mac user and professional unix sysdamin for eight years now, mostly using the former to accomplish the latter. In that time, it's been common for me to use macs fourteen hours a day; these machines have run, at various points, macoses 7 through X, three different linux distributions, and openbsd. When I was running os9, my machines crashed about once a season; running production versions of X, this has dropped below measurability.

      I won't deny that I enjoy the physical appearance of apple's hardware, but I buy it to get work done, and use it thoroughly.

      >Is it the 20+ hours you have to put into a brand new machine because
      >it is not even close to being able to perform as advertised when you
      >pull it out of the box?

      Really?

      Last week, when a few hundred miles from home, I had need to access the serial console of lots of Sun hardware on short notice. So I ran out and bought an ibook, something I'd been meaning to do soon anyway.

      The Windows-using admin with whom I was working started giving me instructions about downloading an ssh client.

      "No need, openssh is part of the standard OS distribution."

      So asks me how long I'll need to charge the battery before I can take it into the cage to get some work done.

      "None at all, they sell them charged for this reason."

      So I walk into the cage, plug into the serial consoles of the servers, and start jumpstarting them. In a while, he sees me starting to connect my ethernet interface directly to one on the machines. He starts to explain to me that this won't work, and that he'll go find me a hub or a flipped cable.

      "It'll work just fine. The port on my machine will notice the flip, and turn itself into a flipped port automatically."

      So in other words, I was able to accomplish what I needed with ten minutes in a store, and exactly zero minutes of setup and prep time afterward. And in fact even managed to save some time by taking advantage of the clever, small features which the platform offers. So tell me again how this is inefficient?

    34. Re:sounds fair by Perdo · · Score: 2

      Suffice to say there are serious flaws in every previous version of mac OS. I have seen every flaw I described many, many times. Apple has a history of not fixing bugs until their next hardware release. Buy the new hardware, fix the bugs. New versions of Mac OS run like a dog on old hardware so, there are are no bug fixes for the hardware you paid too much money for, ever. If you want the bugs fixed, you have to fork over for new hardware. That was their policy and hook for upgrade. You are in that trap now. OS X still has flaws. The flaws will not be fixed. They took a year to fix the most obvious annoyances. The most severe annoyances will be fixed at about 10.6, which will not run on the hardware you have purchased. You will have to purchase new hardware or live with the bugs.

      On another note, the version of "free" ssh included in OS X is not licenced for commercial use, as you already know. But that doesn't matter anyway because no USB to Serial devices currently have drivers for mac OS X. So, you may have downloaded an SSH client for OS 9 or did a BSD God trick of writing drivers on the spot, but I really fucking doubt it.

      You might consider reasearch before you post since you do not seem to have any real experience on the platform and your only anecdotal eveidence is an obvious fabrication. Go back to hacking on your junior high school's iMacs.

      Have a nice Day! :)

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    35. Re:sounds fair by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

      Somebody name a SINGLE tool that this AC is refering too that does not have an equivlent (or superior) on the PC.

      (often times for free. . . .)

    36. Re:sounds fair by Onan · · Score: 1

      > On another note, the version of "free" ssh
      > included in OS X is not licenced for
      > commercial use, as you already know.

      Um, openssh? So far as I know, it's licensed for any use whatsoever. You know differently?

      > But that doesn't matter anyway because no
      > USB to Serial devices currently have drivers
      > for mac OS X.

      You mean other than the Keyspan USB to serial adaptors which have had drivers available since the original release of X?

      http://www.keyspan.com/support/macosx/usa/

      > You might consider reasearch before you post
      > since you do not seem to have any real experience
      > on the platform and your only anecdotal eveidence
      > is an obvious fabrication.

      I'm glad it's obvious to you. From my perspective, it looks as if I've been using the platform regularly since DP3, which I think was some time around mid-2000? Nearly as long as anyone who's not an employee of Apple, though my previous NeXTstep experience was fairly minimal.

    37. Re:sounds fair by Perdo · · Score: 2

      "Last week, when a few hundred miles from home, I had need to access the serial console of lots of Sun hardware on short notice. So I ran out and bought an ibook, something I'd been meaning to do soon anyway."

      http://www.keyspan.com/support/macosx/usa/

      Hardly something you can go down to the local store to buy. So, you are saying that you had your handy-dandy keyspan adapter with you but not your old laptop... uh-huh.

      Which does require you to download drivers for:

      'The Windows-using admin with whom I was working started giving me instructions about downloading an ssh client.

      "No need, open ssh is part of the standard OS distribution."'


      Unless you happened to have your keyspan adapter and the keyspan driver CD with you, but you didn't even bring your laptop. Nice attempt to extricate yourself. But still a flawed fabrication.

      You have no credibility, so I will not take you at your word concerning your experience.

      Additionally, the page you referenced is the number one hit on google for os x usb serial adapter. I can only surmise that you did some research after the fact to support your post because a month ago, the number one google hit for the same query was a press release touting Keyspan's OS X beta drivers, which caused the OS 9 drivers to cease function, which seems to carry over into the production version.

      So, let's say that hypothetically, you are a hotshot computer wiz. Waltz down to the local CompUSA to purchase a new iBook. That might take an hour. Catch the Hello, Bienvenidos, spin through the registration process, where you get asked four times if you are ready to use the internet, get scolded for not being ready for the internet, and even if you are not ready for the internet can you please hook up to a telephone line so we can connect you to the apple directly so we can register you.

      Wait on fed-ex to deliver your keyspan, or in your case, since you had it and the install disk with you, you install it and get it configured for the Internet.

      But all this time, you have a client that has been waiting on you for something like three hours, while his 2 million dollar sun server farm is sitting idle because you forgot your laptop at home but remembered to bring your keyspan with install disk.

      How heroic of you to run to the store to get the tools that you should have brought with you anyway. You are proud of this? So, are you getting paid or are you getting sued for his downtime?

      Master mechanics carry their own tools. Union carpenters bring their tools to the jobsite. I always have my old laptop in the trunk of my car, currently an MP3 player, but easy to use as a file server to rescue someone's data when their computer dies. It has a serial port built in. I also have a 1400 with newertechnology G3 upgrade in a bag with cds burnt with every utility including drivers for every brand and make of printer/scanner/camera/usb key/external drive/complete set of every update you can get through mac software update and windows update, all the software I ever use while working. I also carry perfect disk images of 7.6 on zip with scsi drive, 8.1, 8.6, 9.0, 9.0.4, 9.1, 9.2 and 10.1 and my latest creation, a micro ATX fileserver with two 80 gb drives mirrored and partitioned with perfect ghost images of the four PC configurations used on my network. In a box in my trunk I also carry an HP wirescope, Punch down with 110 blade, a box of running spares of commonly broken or needed items like CD drives, memory, nubus/ISA/PCI NICs, Phonenet modules and terminating resisters, Mice, mice balls, patch cables, and a ancient analog VGA 640 by 480 flatpanel, because I do not want to lug a monitor to use to troubleshoot a black screen.

      Fully rebuilding any system on or off my network takes me about 5 minutes of my attention, go do something else for a while, then come back for 10 minutes to complete individual configurations and replace the users data back onto the computer.

      You were out buying a glossy new iBook while he had 1000 people Idle at their desks for three hours. Let's say they were $10/hr cube proles. He lost $30,000 plus Three hours of pissed off help desk people lying to customers about the network being down, while you were "out shopping"

      If I have to spend more than 4 hours a YEAR on any one desktop to get it up and running and maintain it, I am behind schedule.

      I would never hire you to do a damn thing for me. Because you are more unprofessional than anyone I have ever worked with in IT. Since you would quickly develop a reputation in the industry for shoddy work, you would not be hired by anyone.

      So again, lets say you are the genuine article. you are, by the nature of having recieved the DP3 (Developer Preview) release of OS X, biased in your opinion of OS X, because your job depends on it. You bet the ranch, or at least your professional life since feb 2000 (that is closer to the correct release date of DP3) on OS X being successfull. We can discount your opinion for obvious bias. But I really think you downloaded it on daddy's cable modem from some annonymous ftp.

      I do not think you are a Net Admin or Developer of any stripe. I think you are a 13 year old mac fanboy that got caught in a fabrication.

      Go ahead and dig yourself deeper. I am waiting with baited breath for your next stunningly obtuse comment.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

  6. Not yet mastered. by guamman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    All the advances are good and fine, but the increase in the iMac category may really hurt. I realize that the increase in necessary becuase of the increased costs, but the iMac is what makes Macinctosh a viable comeptitor. The G4 and soon to be G5 towers are excellent, but only cover a very small demographic and their high cost makes them prohibitive. The lower cost iMac can go head to head with most PCs and in some cases, offer a better value. While I agree that the high end computers are more fun and interesting (from a marketing/sales perspective). The lower cost machines are what is going to make money. Something that I believe Apple is still desprately in need of. It may be a smarter move to swallow the increased costs for the time being and attempt to move more volume.

    1. Re:Not yet mastered. by Publicus · · Score: 3, Informative

      While I agree that the high end computers are more fun and interesting (from a marketing/sales perspective). The lower cost machines are what is going to make money.

      Not sure I agree with you. While I may be wrong, the G4 towers probably make more money for Apple (per unit) than anything. I doubt if they make much of anything on the iMac. It's probably just more of a maintaining market share thing, keeping it a viable platform so software gets released for Macs.

      I could be totally wrong, I haven't looked at any numbers, but my gut tells me that the $3500 dual processor G4 tower and the Cinema Display carries a much larger margin for Apple. Not sure how the total sales of these units factors in.

      Oh well... I can't afford any of it. I wish I could.

      --

      My Karma was at 49, then they switched to words. All that work for nothing!

    2. Re:Not yet mastered. by SPiKe · · Score: 1

      With lower margins you're usually hoping for higher volume.

    3. Re:Not yet mastered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want to say I'm completely disgusted by all the wankers who take slashdot seriously. Did you know that neither cmdrTaco nor anyone else on the slashdot moderation crew knows calculus? That fact alone should deter anyone from slashdot.

    4. Re:Not yet mastered. by blonde+rser · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The lower cost machines are what is going to make money. Something that I believe Apple is still desprately in need of.

      Exactly what aapl are you looking at. Apple may not hold the record for market share but when it comes to making a profit Apple holds her own. One of the great things about Apple is they have so much in the bank that they can afford to take a risk here and there. The reason the price went up: their research suggests people will pay more. This is not a desperate act. And I doubt anybody in the market will interpret this as a desperate act either.

    5. Re:Not yet mastered. by daviddennis · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, the margin on the iMac is 20%, and the margin on the high-end Tower is 30%. They all have to sell pretty well for Apple to make its profit targets.

      I think these price increases was so they could maintain the 20% margin. Otherwise their shareholders get pretty upset.

      I'm not sure what the margin on the new Cinema Display is, but the only people who will buy it are seriously rich hobbyists and seriously professional graphic artists and motion graphics/video editing people. That's a rich audience, but the whole market for that thing is a few thousand people.

      At least they undercut Sun, who is charging $4,500 (versus $3,500) for what looks like almost the same thing.

      Sun beat them to market, though.

      D

    6. Re:Not yet mastered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the derivative of 3x^2 is 6x. And, of course, a common application of second derivatives is 'acceleration'.

      But I am just an A.C. here. I quit having a login awhile ago, because it's not a meritocracy, it's a fucking little boy's game.

    7. Re:Not yet mastered. by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 1

      An AC wrote:

      > Did you know that neither cmdrTaco nor anyone else on the slashdot
      > moderation crew knows calculus?

      Don't know about anyone else, but I have moderator points right now and I have 13 hours of calculus. :b

      > That fact alone should deter anyone from slashdot.

      Calculus knowlege is only useful in threads on calculus. This is a thread on MacWorld Tokyo. Do the math. ;)

      To get back on topic: I don't have a problem with Apple's iMac price raise. But that could be that my G4 iMac is currently in the hands of FedEx, and hopefully will be here tomorrow. Yippee!

      Happy Birthday, King Shisa! (1974-2002)

    8. Re:Not yet mastered. by Perdo · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      They do run huge margins on their hardware. They get $300 for 512 megs of ram. Last time I checked, that costs about $120 for name brand memory. That is over %100 markup.

      That is because Apple markets their products to fools. A mac zealot and thier money are soon parted. Preettty shiiinny gloossssy slick new compuuterr.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    9. Re:Not yet mastered. by Perdo · · Score: 0, Troll

      If they can afford to take risks, perhaps they should. As it stands, they are so far behind the cutting edge technologicly, their in danger puting us all to sleep. They had better wrap that obsolete hardware in a pretty skin. ATA66? PC100? 15-inch display? GeForce2 MX? Stereo sound? Anything that was not available two years ago?

      Consoles have better specifications. Apples are toys.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    10. Re:Not yet mastered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can afford it. I am gy. Very gay. I don't have any children. I don't eat meat (not counting man-meat!). All my income is more or less disposable income. I spend all my money on gay toys like the Apple Computers. If my HIV ever turns into full blown AIDS, I'll make the government pay for my treatment. In any case, I don't have to worry about retirement, because AIDS will get me first, so I might as well spend all my money now.

      - Bruce

    11. Re:Not yet mastered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That reminds me of another company's mantra... SUN

    12. Re:Not yet mastered. by revscat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Consoles have better specifications. Apples are toys.

      You have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. Numbers do not tell the whole story.

      I am a Java developer who has been looking for years for the perfect development environment from which to work on. Since I got my G4 I have without a doubt never been happier. I don't have to fuck with endless config files like I did on Linux, and yet I can use all the *nix tools I got used to. Windows made me want to choke: it was functional, but I prefer not to deal with Microsoft products if I can help it. Compared to OS X it is *Windows* that is the toy.

      My G4 has helped me to do my job better. I can assure you it is *not* a toy, at least no more or less so than any other general purpose PC.

    13. Re:Not yet mastered. by shawnce · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ATA66 - Why would you need a faster bus when the system has ONE harddrive. No consumer grade harddrive can saturate ATA66. So why put in something that costs a little more for no benefit to the end user.

      PC100 - The G4 used in the systems FSB doesn't gain much from going higher (PC133 gives only a slight increase). So again why up the price for little gain.

      Stereo sound - Umm... Mac OS X supports multi-channel sound. You can buy surround sound systems that connect via USB. Again why up the price for something that most consumers wouldn't need.

      15 LCD display... yup that is so last month. Few system have been shipping with 15 LCD by default until recently.

      GeForce2 MX - It only driving a 15" LCD and does it well enough for game play. Sure you don't get 120+ FPS but my eyes don't scan that fast what about yours? Also I don't think that the LCD screen can update that quickly anyways. So again why add the cost...

      I guess I should sell my TV, stereo system, DVD player because the tech started shipping more then two years ago.

      Basically many hardware vendors attempt to up the numbers on things when on the whole it doesn't gain much for the system. It is the difference between competing based on the numbers as opposed to the product/solution.

    14. Re:Not yet mastered. by damiam · · Score: 1

      If you want a non-toy, pay for it. iMacs have a purpose, and they fufill it quite well. Joe Sixpack can do his email, write his letters, play his games,and edit his videos just fine on an iMac, and he doesn't need a 23" flat-panel with dual Ghz processors and a GeForce 4 TI. If you think you need that, then you should buy a PowerMac.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    15. Re:Not yet mastered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're gay? What a coincidence. So was Alan Turing. You know who Alan Turing was, don't you?

  7. Is there a list somewhere... by The+Great+Wakka · · Score: 2

    of all the different MacWorlds? There sure do seem to be a lot of them... A schedule, perhaps? It would be nice.

    --
    Everything is mainstream now.
    1. Re:Is there a list somewhere... by spicyjeff · · Score: 1

      There is MacWorld San Fransico in January, Tokyo in March and New York in July. There is sometimes a Paris/Europe show in the fall but it has been infrequent for various different reasons the past years.

    2. Re:Is there a list somewhere... by rehannan · · Score: 3, Informative
    3. Re:Is there a list somewhere... by johnpaul191 · · Score: 1

      generally the SF and NYC ones are the "big ones" of the expos.... though saving gearo for these two expos is not always good business... like last year's NYC expo was pretty much a preview of 10.1 and some upgrades to imacs and G4 towers.... the Tokyo expo is smaller in terms of people showing up, but i think Apple likes to play in Sony's neighborhood. in the last year Apple has pledged to be less focused on releasing things only at big expos. like in 2001 they used a press event to release something... right now i cant remember if it was the new ibook (icebook, cube-book or whatever you want to call it) or the ipod....

    4. Re:Is there a list somewhere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tokyo actually has the largest turnout of all the Macworlds... at least in terms of attendees.

    5. Re:Is there a list somewhere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Tokyo is twice as big as SF and NYC ... in other words it draws as many people as both SF and NYC put together. It is only seen as smaller because it's outside the US. Also, the Japanese market has traditionally been about notebooks (small, space-saving machines), so Apple has shied away from introducing desktops there, but now that all of their machines use LCD's, maybe there will be more of that in the future.

      Apple has a very large market share in Japan. PowerBooks especially are very popular.

  8. Other Cool Features by jone1941 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    There is one other really cool feature that was left out. The new version of the iPod software now supports address book syncing with Microsoft Entourage (read outlook for Mac OS) as well as OS X's built in address book.

    The information on it can be found here.

    --
    Fear trumps hope and ignorance trumps both
    1. Re:Other Cool Features by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can actually just drop vCards into the Contacts folder on your iPod, and they show up in a Contacts menu in the iPod interface. There are standalone apps for automating this for Address Book and Entourage, but no matter how you store your contacts, if you can make standard vCards, then you can use the Contacts feature of the iPod.

      Standards, sweet standards.

  9. When will they support non-Mac? by sheldon · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I'm curious why they do not support other systems besides the Macintosh with the iPod.

    Perhaps Microsoft should sue Apple over this issue. :)

    1. Re:When will they support non-Mac? by guamman · · Score: 1

      They do, I have successfully used an iPod with a PC several times. The official support may not be there, but anyone with a decent knowledge in computers (read: slashdot crowd) could do it in a second. In my experience, it shows up as a removable harddrive.

    2. Re:When will they support non-Mac? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sheldon, please remove your head from Microsoft's
      collective ass, it's unseemly.

    3. Re:When will they support non-Mac? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For Windows, you can also use http://www.mediafour.com/products/xplay (wouldn't expect Apple to directly support iPod on Windows (or *nix) any time soon).

  10. the prices goes UP? by jchristopher · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Apple is the only company that RAISES prices as time goes by. How can they possibly justify $100 for an extra 5 gigs of storage?

    More importantly, who is buying these things?!?

    Wouldn't a more rational plan be to drop the iPod to $299 and sell this new version for $399? (which is what it's going for now)

    $500 seems like an AWFUL lot of money for a product with a 90 day warranty.

    1. Re:the prices goes UP? by k_187 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      because the hard drives that are in the iPods are insanely expensive. The 5gig HD that's in the low end model would cost you $400. With the iPod you're getting the HD and the mp3 playing stuff. You're not going to find apple selling these things for less than they can get the HDs for.

      --
      11 was a racehorse
      12 was 12
      1111 Race
      12112
    2. Re:the prices goes UP? by dada21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And, thankfully, the free market sets the price just fine. Some people find great value in a good interface and a product backed by a company that has surprising amounts of reboundability.

      I personally would not pay $500 for this device, but since its selling, many people will. Why question it, you either can't afford it, or don't see value in that product for that price. If you want it cheaper, asking Apple won't hurt though...

    3. Re:the prices goes UP? by jchristopher · · Score: 2
      because the hard drives that are in the iPods are insanely expensive. The 5gig HD that's in the low end model would cost you $400.

      Oh really? Here's a link to the Smardisk Firefly, a small portable drive with the same mechanism. It sells for $199, and you can be sure Apple is getting them for way less than that in bulk.

    4. Re:the prices goes UP? by dhovis · · Score: 5, Insightful
      That $400 price for the iPod HD was true when the iPod first came out, but the price has come down quite a bit. You can get a 5GB firewire drive based on that HD for as little as $170. Check out this article at dealmac.com.

      The real reason the 5GB iPod is still $400 is that people are still buying it. If Apple was having trouble selling them, the price would have dropped to $350 or $300. They are still hot, and there is still no comparable MP3 player on the market, period. Size, capacity, battery life, and firewire. No other MP3 player matches the iPod in all 4 of those categories. Until one does, Apple can charge what they damn well please. That is the free market at work.

      --

      --
      The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

    5. Re:the prices goes UP? by Graymalkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What is it with the Wintel retard demographic on slashdot. "How could this thing possibly cost money when I can find supposedly equivilent parts for much cheaper!" The iPod uses a firewire port, have you ever seen a cheap firewire controller worth buying? I haven't heard of any. It's also got one smooth looking screen with a pretty low dot pitch for a monochrome LCD. The battery isn't exactly some shit Energizer or Duracell. I also can't believe you said Apple is the only company to raise prices as time goes by. How much was RAM going for last spring and how much is it going for right now? It certainly isn't any fucking cheaper.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    6. Re:the prices goes UP? by HaveBlue34 · · Score: 1

      Personaly I'm glad the iMac prices went up. At a local Apple reseller they had so much demand that they began to take preorders, so almost all of them were sold before they even made it in the door. Last I checked the list of people waiting (but not prepaid was about 50 ppl long). Price follows demand not just cost.
      The 23" display is F*cking huge. Thats not just one inch bigger but 1.4 times the area of the old one. check this out. About one page down. Massive. 11x17 full page spreads anyone? besides the 22" cost about the same when it came out too.
      As for the iPod: the price sucks. I think I saw the price on those drives go down and I know more people would buy them if they were cheaper. I think the demand for those dropped off after xmas also, weird. I dont think I could listen to 1000 songs between the times I'm away from my computer anyway :)
      The bluetooth kicks butt, hope they figure out a good way to eliminate the "noise" problem between that and the 802.11b airports. maybe a frequency hopping system or auto channel selection?

    7. Re:the prices goes UP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, IIRC the 22" display cost $500 more ($4000) when it was first announced.

    8. Re:the prices goes UP? by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      While the 22" display is indeed hugnormous the resolution isn't really much to write home about. I can display stuff side by side just like on a bigass Cinema display. While the screen itself is a giant the resolution didn't give you THAT much more space than a much cheaper 21" CRT. The 23" I think is a solution to the resolution problem. Now if they would just make 200 dpi flat screens like IBM made for LLNL that'd be really badass.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    9. Re:the prices goes UP? by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      yeah, 1.406 times as large, to be exact. fuck. that's alot. i have a 550 powerbook g4, with a 1152x768 LCD display; and a quick calculation shows that the new display has 2.6 times as many pixels/square in.

      conveniently, the powerbook's GPU can handle one (1) external monitor (not running built in display) @ 1920x1400, 200 pixels larger than the new 1920x1200 23" flatpanel. i'd get one, if i had an extra 3500$ laying around, and a new car already. Looks like i'll just be getting a $300 15" viewsonic LCD to replace this 17" NEC CRT...

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    10. Re:the prices goes UP? by iamiuru · · Score: 1

      were you also expecting to get that convertable Audi TT for the same price the solid top was when it was first released.

      --
      That is your ass, and this over here is your elbow, and NO they ARE NOT the same thing.
    11. Re:the prices goes UP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your argument is flawed, jackass. Our argument isn't. When you look at component costs, for components of comparable quality, you quite readily see that Apple is raking in the dough and that the consumers are taking it up the ass. Though you and your ilk may be fans of anal sex, we consider Jobs to be a profiteering jackass. Comparing Apple to the memory market is a flawed analogy, by the way. Apple is a private industry that sells assembled goods whose prices are dictated by greed, while memory dealers sell a widely value commodity whose price fluctuations are determined by supply and demand. To clarify, Apple is one of the few companies who increases price over time, even though supply and demand remain relatively constant.

    12. Re:the prices goes UP? by tonywong · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think that's a 2.5" drive wrapped in a simple case. The iPod uses a PC Card sized HD which costs significantly more.

    13. Re:the prices goes UP? by k_187 · · Score: 2

      yeah, the iPod uses a 1.8" drive that only toshiba makes.

      --
      11 was a racehorse
      12 was 12
      1111 Race
      12112
    14. Re:the prices goes UP? by mstrjon32 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You also must remember that the iPod does not use standard 2.5" HDD's, but rather Toshiba's 1.8" creation; which happens to be *very* expensive. So don't compare those cheap Firewire HDD's to the iPod. The 1.8" keeps the iPod as small as it is..for an HDD player anyway.

    15. Re:the prices goes UP? by dhovis · · Score: 2

      You did't read my post, did you? The price I quoted was for a firewire hard drive with the exact same 5GB 1.8" Toshiba drive as the iPod. $170 is expensive for a 5GB firewire HD.

      --

      --
      The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

    16. Re:the prices goes UP? by jchristopher · · Score: 1

      Can you read? The 1.8 inch drive that only Toshiba makes IS the drive used in the FireFly for $199.

    17. Re:the prices goes UP? by afidel · · Score: 1

      Yeah my SB Audigy OEM cost me $40, it not only functions as a great freaking sound card but it also has a firewire port, which is what I connect my iPod to. I bought the iPod not because of it's great price/storage ratio (it gets spanked by the archeros and others) but because it was the highest capacity mp3 player that I could take hiking. I did buy the audigy based on price/performance (it was by FAR the cheapest sound card with ASIO driver's that I need for Propellerhead's Reason). I spend money where I need to to get what I want, but I see little value in throwing away money without justification.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    18. Re:the prices goes UP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and the firefly is... 5 GB, not 10. So you can't make claims about the price difference, now can you?

    19. Re:the prices goes UP? by inkswamp · · Score: 1

      What is it with the Wintel retard demographic on slashdot.

      I'm probably going to score some troll points for this one, but we could coin a new term out of this: Wintard. >:^)

      --Rick

      --
      --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
    20. Re:the prices goes UP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have claimed that, but you have not backed up that claim in any way. The link you provided says nothing about what drive mechanism the FireFly uses.

    21. Re:the prices goes UP? by jchristopher · · Score: 1

      The 5 GB iPod has been, and will continue to be $399. The Firefly, with the same 5 GB mechanism, sells for $199. Whether or not the iPod is worth $200 on top of the drive is to the reader to decide.

    22. Re:the prices goes UP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it is a fucking great FireWire hard drive that also has an MP3 player and contact list built in, as well as stem-to-stern UI and software that makes it all easy and fun to use. The tiny 1.8" hard drives that are used in the iPod are only available in those sizes and are the same price as the iPod at retail. You can plug the iPod into any Mac from the last few years running any OS up to two years old and it just appears on the desktop. Very easy.

    23. Re:the prices goes UP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about attempting to acheive some more market penetration with lower priced products in order to make more profit in the future? Something Apple has never quite figured out.

    24. Re:the prices goes UP? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Apple is selling iPods as quickly as they can manufacture them. If you're selling out at the current price, lowering the price will not increase the market penetration. It will just lower your profits.

  11. No MacWorld Expo in Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine the new iPod announcement there: US$599 gets you a 0-gig iPod, a $100 expense voucher for driving to the US border, and a $100 budget to buy a 10-gig drive there. That would turn out to be cheaper than a complete iPod plus the levy.

    1. Re:No MacWorld Expo in Canada? by Polo · · Score: 2

      From what I've seen of the details of the levy, that only counts for blank media. If they delivered the iPod with music already on it, it would not be taxable. Of course, that could change.

    2. Re:No MacWorld Expo in Canada? by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      If they delivered the iPod with music already on it, it would not be taxable.

      The iPod is shipped with music already on it. I think something like 10 or so songs from different genres. Apple always adds extras.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
  12. iMac more expensive by jchristopher · · Score: 0, Troll
    I find it very humorous that Apple is raising the price by $100 on every iMac model, when they can't even ship them.

    "component price increases"? Uh huh, more like we realized demand is high so we can stick it to you.

    1. Re:iMac more expensive by frinkster · · Score: 1

      Well, Apple is shipping 5,000 new iMacs a day and still can't keep up with demand. I would say that a $100 price increase is justified. Supply and Demand. The free market rules.

  13. One more thing... by S-prime · · Score: 4, Informative

    iTunes 2.04 was also (quietly) released, nothing new here except better stability.

    Also, the Bluetooth update won't be avaliable for download till April (this from Apple's site).

    --
    -- Your local friendly mad scientist-in-training
    1. Re:One more thing... by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      iTunes 2.04 was also (quietly) released, nothing new here except better stability.

      iTunes uses 35% of the CPU on my 500mhz G3 (which is supposedly the equivalent of a 1ghz PIII), so no thanks. Remind me again what it does besides rip and play MP3s?

    2. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, that would be consistent with the version increase of .04!!!!

      good observation.

    3. Re:One more thing... by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      Heh, you don't really believe Apple's marketting department, do you? Photoshop Filter != Every other Mac app

      Of course not! It's called sarcasm...

      Seriously, I like my iBook, but with OS X, I'd say it's equivalent to about a PII/350mhz.

    4. Re:One more thing... by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      thats what you get for getting an iBook...those wont be good until they move to a G4 since OS X uses Altivec for the graphics. try a TiBook.....it runs like a Top of the line tower.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    5. Re:One more thing... by Van+Halen · · Score: 1
      Looks like the iTunes update is on the Apple website but not yet in Software Update. I downloaded and installed anyway, and it wanted a restart (maybe new iPod drivers??). Haven't restarted yet, but version 2.0.4 works now.

      Unfortunately, the problem I most wanted fixed (and reported to Apple) wasn't fixed. It still miscalculates the playing time of VBR files (I did clear my iTunes library and reload just to be sure). I'm guessing this is also why crossfading doesn't work for me. iTunes thinks the file is longer than it is, so it doesn't even try to start the crossfade until it's already over.

      Oh well.

      Offtopic rant: I now officially hate IE for OS X. Apparently the Esc key clears a text boxes, which just happened as I finished typing this the first time around (vi habit). Arrg.

    6. Re:One more thing... by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      thats what you get for getting an iBook...those wont be good until they move to a G4 since OS X uses Altivec for the graphics. try a TiBook.....it runs like a Top of the line tower.

      Typical Apple apologist. Somehow, it's the USER'S fault that the system they just bought is slow.

      I'll just point out that Dell's bottom of the line systems run Windows/Linux FAST. Whereas with Apple "oh, shouldn't have bought that, you really need the top of the line to make OS X fast".

    7. Re:One more thing... by seann · · Score: 1

      it also plays and rips mp3s.

      --
      I'm a big retard who forgot to log out of Slashdot on Mike's computer! LOOK AT ME.
    8. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It also includes an on the fly digital equalizer and a sound field enhancer. Try turning off these options and see if it frees up some CPU usage.

    9. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      you need a girlfriend fast. at least jerk off before you come to slashdot

    10. Re:One more thing... by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      Wow, you must not use VBR MP3's (which means you're probably not ripping them yourself, and I seriously doubt you're ripping all your music at 320) because the CPU usage fluctuates with the bitrate it's processing.

      With VBR set, and the minimum set to 160kbps, iTunes uses an average of 18% on my 450MHz G4 (a good balance of quality and file size). iTunes is optimised for AltiVec, but only during ripping.

      As for what else it does besides rip and play MP3's, it also lets you organise your songs into playlists, and then burn them to Audio or MP3 CDs, and it also supports visual plug-ins.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    11. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know what true audiophiles call 'equalizers' and 'sound field enhancers'??

      Those are devices in a class called 'fidelity lowering devices.'

      Of course, if you're just listening to shitty MP3 pop tunes on the thing, there's really no issue....

    12. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "True audiophiles" aren't listening to MP3s in the first place, so I'm not sure why you're on your high horse here...

    13. Re:One more thing... by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1

      I do the {Esc} thing all the time, too. In general, IE on OS X sucks air compared to Mozilla. Strangely, I don't like Moz on MS Windows or on Linux, but on OS X it's rock solid, quick, and renders pretty well.

      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    14. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      18%

      God the software still sucks. I am so glad I got rid of all that crap. Sweet Mary mother of God. Forgive me: so fucking glad.

    15. Re:One more thing... by rehannan · · Score: 2
      Offtopic rant: I now officially hate IE for OS X. Apparently the Esc key clears a text boxes, which just happened as I finished typing this the first time around (vi habit). Arrg.

      IE does that in windows too. Did you also notice that :wq doesn't work in MS Word?

    16. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is offtopic and it's really kind of a troll/flame/inciteful comment (which is why I'm posting anonymously), but...

      Since when is 18% CPU usage playing an MP3 at all decent?

      Popping up top in an XTerm on my Linux box, and playing a VBR MP3 at 143Kbps (average), XMMS fluctuates between 0.3% and 0.7% CPU usage with the box completely idle. This box is a P3/933, running Linux 2.5.0 (patched to solve the FS corruption issue), XFree86 4.2.0, and the latest XMMS (with the Waterfall vis plugin running in a little window next to my GKrellM), and I have CPU utilization 90-fold less than your box.

      This brings me to the crux of my message:

      Where the fuck does Apple get off claiming they have superior hardware and software when the combination of their latest OS and their own MP3 software takes up 90 times more CPU?

      I'm serious here, and I'd appreciate a mod up from someone else who sees the problem with the numbers.

    17. Re:One more thing... by phaze3000 · · Score: 2
      I'll just point out that Dell's bottom of the line systems run Windows/Linux FAST. Whereas with Apple "oh, shouldn't have bought that, you really need the top of the line to make OS X fast".

      Bullshit, try running Win XP or Linux+Gnome+Nautlius on a bottom of the line PC and you'll find it's a similar speed to an iBook with Mac OS X.

      --
      Blaming GW Bush for the Iraq war is like blaming Ronald McDonald for the poor quality of food.
    18. Re:One more thing... by jweatherley · · Score: 1

      I get caught by the emacs version of this sometimes:

      o Fill in reams and reams of text into an edit box.
      o Select a few words
      o Ctrl-W
      o Aaaaarrrggghhh!

      --

      --
      Reverse outsourcing: it's the future
    19. Re:One more thing... by jchristopher · · Score: 1

      My point is that a "bottom of the line PC" these days is a Pentium IV 1.2ghz! I can assure you that Windows does not run slow on such a machine.

    20. Re:One more thing... by Hes+Nikke · · Score: 1

      Did you also notice that :wq doesn't work in MS Word?

      yeah i did, i also noticed that cmd/ctr-s then cmd/ctr-q closes my terminal without saveing in vi!

      ARG!!!

      back to bbedit ;)

      --
      Don't call me back. Give me a call back. Bye. So yeah. But bye our, well, but alright we are on a shirt this chill.
    21. Re:One more thing... by kaimiike1970 · · Score: 1

      One word: Crossfades. i love having my music all blendy at the edges...

      --


      Do a google search before posting.
    22. Re:One more thing... by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      Since when is 18% CPU usage playing an MP3 at all decent?

      Since when does it matter? The whole point of Folding at Home, SETI@Home, and all those other distributed applications is that no one ever uses all their processor power.

      That 18% is also because my audio is USB audio, and there's no audio processor in my Mac. It's all digital. So for 18% of the processor, it decodes the MP3, turns it into audio, and sends it out over USB to the speakers.

      I think it's brilliant, but then, as mentioned before, very few on Slashdot appreciate elegance (which is why Linux desktop environments are seen as so damn ugly by everyone outside of the Slashdot demographic).

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    23. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You guys are bugging out over how Mac OS X runs on Apple's subnotebook? C'mon. The iBook is filthy cheap, built like a tank, sized like a subnotebook, has 5-6 hours battery life, and your choice of optical drives. It's a great machine. If you are folding proteins on the road then maybe you want a PowerBook G4, but there is nothing wrong with the iBook.

      I mean, here in this thread you're comparing the iBook to Windows desktop machines. What is up, guys? Go check out the other "consumer" notebooks out there and then review the iBook again. The iBook also comes with Mac OS X, AppleWorks, iMovie, iTunes, iPhoto, and more.

    24. Re:One more thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OmniWeb 4.1 is great. Version 4.0 was cool, but 4.1 became my only browser as soon as I used it.

    25. Re:One more thing... by Pussy+Is+Money · · Score: 1

      That 18% is outrageous. Why should it matter whether it is USB audio or not? Did somebody tell you that USB audio is "more difficult on the CPU because it's higher quality" or did you do the convincing all by yourselves?

      --
      Pushin' 'n dealin', shovin' 'n stealin'
  14. More expensive Mac hardware by xamel · · Score: 0, Troll

    Honestly though, what is this new Ipod? Its a 10 GB HDD that can play mp3 files. Last time i checked, a 10 GB HDD was nowhere NEAR the suggested $499...and the new USB 2.0 Hard Drives by Maxtor are much more exciting, with 40 GB of space, and its just as portable as the Ipod.
    Lets check the stats on this:
    New 10 GB Ipod: $499, 10 GB Storage, Mac-only
    Maxtor USB 2.0 HDD: $299, 40 GB storage, Windows/*bsd/*nix.
    MP3 Player: $60
    Hm, for more than $100 less, I get 30 GB more storage and MP3 capability...
    Which would you choose?

    --
    GOD DAMNIT , MODERATE ME!
    1. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      uh, the old hard drive (the LITTLE BITTY ONE) was about the old list price of the ipod. these hard drives are not your run of the mill maxtors! of course its gong to be more expensive!
      plus you get the mp3 player too :)

    2. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by levl289 · · Score: 1

      go and check out apple.com - the iPod is a portable unit. Try explaining how you'd lug those components around that you'd just mentioned.

      --

      Q: What do you think about American Culture?
      A: I think it's a good idea.
      (adapted from Gandhi)

    3. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by jimbolaya · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're going to look awfully silly with that big ol' 40GB Maxtor hard drive on your hip as you go jogging. And I'll bet you'll feel silly, too, when you realize that the Maxtor can't play music on its own.

      --

      There ain't no rules here; we're trying to accomplish something.

    4. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by Graymalkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well considering neither your standard MP3 player or USB 2.0 hard drive have a master bus controller or software, they can't talk to one another. You could carry both the MP3 player and hard drive around until you were blue in the face but you couldn't transfer any of the songs without a host system.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    5. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by helixblue · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'd just love to see you fit your Maxtor USB 2.0 HDD in your pocket, myself.

    6. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      Parent is "+1, informative"? The Smartdisk Firefly is a small portable harddrive that uses the same 5 GB mechanism as the iPod. It sells, retail, for $199.

      Once upon a time, that drive cost $400. That time has passed. You can no longer justify the high price by saying "the drive is so expensive".

    7. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by seann · · Score: 1

      is that a Maxtor USB 2.0 HDD in your pocket, or are you just happy to see me?

      --
      I'm a big retard who forgot to log out of Slashdot on Mike's computer! LOOK AT ME.
    8. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      They sell Archos MP3 players for $205 on Pricewatch right now. They have 6 gigs of storage for half the price of an iPod. However, no firewire, just MP3. I think the iPod is waaaaaaay overpriced. They just have no competition. Who else has a large HD, firewire, nice display, pretty styling, etc? Until Archos comes out with a firewire Jukebox, I think the ipod will remain $399. Now what the @##$ is this? $499 for an MP3 player? That's insane. You could get a cheap computer for that amount of money!

      Apple charges too much. That's how they screwed themselves over out of most of their home computer market in the 80's. Back in the early to mid eighties, Apple was really the only game in town for non-techie home computer users. Then they jacked up their prices cause they figured they had a monopoly. Then microsoft and ibm took over the home computer market. It's Apple's own damn fault that they are not the dominant computer company. Then they also made numerous other titanically bad business decisions, such as stopping Apple clones and other stuff.

      They make good products, but I'm not going to spend 1700 dollars on an iMac. I can't spend that much money on somthing that my present Windoze XP(free version :-P)/Linux box would beat out anyway.

      Before you Apple fans begin to flame me: I once had an apple. It was my favorite computer of all time. I miss it. I just can't afford a Mac. Under my opinion, Apple has mega-smart engineers and shitty marketers. I still think Macs are a tad overpriced.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    9. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Geeks don't jog.

      We like it that there are people out there staying fit and trim, though. You're the prime meat when the aliens invade. I'm probably hazardous material by now with all the trash food toxins I've absorbed.

      Shouldn't you be out running around the track, Mac boy?

    10. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by sfgoth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Before you Apple fans begin to flame me: I once had an apple. It was my favorite computer of all time. I miss it. I just can't afford a Mac.

      And how much do you value your time?

      I'm amazed at how many people will "save" themselves a few hundred bucks when buying a PC, only to waste months of their own time and effort on keeping it working.

      But then again, those $400 MSN "rebates" were a bit hit too. Suckers.

      -pmb

    11. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by dadragon · · Score: 1

      Geeks don't jog.

      The iPod isn't marketed at geeks. If it were, its price would have dropped with its components. People are still buying them, so Apple has no incentive to lower the price.

      --
      God save our Queen, and Heaven bless The Maple Leaf Forever!
    12. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Apple fucked up royally with Firewire. Heartening to see that the drive to kill great tech by sheer abandonment and neglect is still very much alive at Apple.

    13. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by geekoid · · Score: 2

      Sucker? I think not. I was in california, and they way they intially worded it, you got 400 dollars worth of stuff at best buy, you agreed to a long term agreement, which is illegal to do in Cailifornia, rendering the contract null.
      Basically, I got 400 dollars worth of stuff free.twice.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    14. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by inkswamp · · Score: 1

      I'd just love to see you fit your Maxtor USB 2.0 HDD in your pocket, myself.

      Funny... I can think of a much better place to fit it into. >:^)

      --Rick

      --
      --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
    15. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, over here in NYC, it was agony...

    16. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      they screwed up? 125,000 iPods in 2 months sold? Record hardware sales, underestimated demand, spends about a day on the shelf before it's bought at the Apple store?

      Explain how Apple fumbled this one. The firewire was one of its biggest selling points for me. The 5 gigs filled up in 10 min, unlike my Archos neighbor, who had to leave it going overnight to copy the mp3s with USB.

    17. Re:More expensive Mac hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Did anybody here think that while the iPod hard drive was retailing for $400, Apple was selling 125,000 iPods for $399? Now that the 5GB hard drive has dropped in price, Apple has an opportunity to actually make money on iPods. That may have been the plan from the beginning. Sure, they could have charged $499 for iPods last year and now charge $349, but isn't it better to just charge $399 for the whole first year? That's how Apple does it, and it makes buying tech a lot easier.

      Similarly, Apple introduced their AirPort base station in 1999 for $299, when everyone else's 802.11 base stations were over $1000. They sold that same base station for two years at $299, until there were plenty of $299 base stations with similar or better features, and then they released AirPort base station Mark 2 with improved features for ... $299. They made more of their profit off the later buyers, but Apple's customers all know that $299 gets you a base station, and we have bought them in droves. iPod is $399 for 5GB and is still the best player on the market. When someone else has a pocket-sized 5GB FireWire MP3 player that's easy enough for kids and Grandma, then complain about the iPod being expensive.

      Also, I am actually using the included headphones in a personal stereo for the first time ever, because they're so good. iPod is good value.

  15. iMac prices up $100 by Van+Halen · · Score: 2, Informative
    Apple also announced a $100 price increase on all three iMacs. I guess their profit margin couldn't quite absorb the increase in LCD and memory prices lately.

    Also, The Mac Observer has a nice blow by blow of Steve's keynote.

    Otherwise, cool stuff!

    1. Re:iMac prices up $100 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhhh - did you even read the fucking post?

    2. Re:iMac prices up $100 by asv108 · · Score: 2
      From the article:

      "Rapidly increasing component costs is an industry-wide issue right now. Since the new iMac's launch in January, memory costs have tripled and flat-panel costs have increased twenty-five percent, with little relief in sight,"

      I know memory prices have increased a little but tripled? I guess Apple can't just come out and say "We priced the new iMac too low so in order to obtain maximum profitability we are going to raise the price"

    3. Re:iMac prices up $100 by _Bean_ · · Score: 1

      Well at the very least it's obvious the mods didn't

    4. Re:iMac prices up $100 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it's more than doubled since a year ago.

    5. Re:iMac prices up $100 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I don't know who to feel more sorry for. The idiot boy who posted what we all read, the moderator who also didn't read that same info, or the entire /. system that allowed a person who doesn't read the post to get to the status of moderator, whilst people who posted to the infamous post got black balled...

      ::sigh::

    6. Re:iMac prices up $100 by Sentry21 · · Score: 2

      Look on the bright side. Now, instead of early-adopters getting shafted by lowering prices, they're getting the bonus. $100 off an iMac, instead of, say, $100 on? That's $200 I'm glad to pocket.

      It's just too bad that this will hinder adoption, because this really is a great computer, even without all the awesome bells/whistles. This is what computing should be. Well... Maybe not exactly, but it's cute.

      --Dan

    7. Re:iMac prices up $100 by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      Yup, tripled. I picked up a 256MB stick for $40 (Canadian) about two weeks before Christmas. Now they're well over $100; the normal going price is about $120, which is triple.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

  16. Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by zardie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's good to see that Apple's embracing the technology, giving it a greater chance of widespread adoption. Remember what Apple did for us with USB and Firewire?

    Now if only they had bluetooth support for the iPod, I'd be happy about not having to connect it up to the PC every time I wanted to transfer a file.

    Having played with an iPod before and found that the sound is a bit try, the EQ is a welcome addition and was the one thing that didn't convince me to buy one over a NetMD-based walkman. Contact management is just damn cool, evidence that Apple listens to the community out there (remember that iPod contact hack?). Good work, Apple :)

    1. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by Little+Joey · · Score: 1

      Bluetooth would be cool on an iPod, but two of the major features of the iPod are that it 1.) Charges itself via the power FireWire provides so that you never have to hook it up to a power adapter and 2.)data transfer to the iPod is very fast because of the FireWire connection. I *know* critics like us here at /. would complain about how long it takes to transfer MP3s over a 1megabit connection of Bluetooth.

      I also think that the personalization/engraving of the iPods is a feature that will make those who were already going to buy one fall in love with it more. Obviously the iPod doesn't attract the bargan shopper in the first place, but this touch makes it more attractive to the shoppers who fall in love with the product.

      I wish i could afford one.

    2. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by juuri · · Score: 3

      Syncing music over bluetooth would be god awful slow. Do you really want to move up files at 70-100k a second?

      I guess if you had some sort of queing method in place to automatically upload files if you were near that would rock.

      The other thing no one seems to mention. Bluetooth seems to gobble a lot of power when running in discovery mode. Yes I know it isn't comparable to 802.11 but when it cuts the standby time on a phone from well over a week to a couple of days it is a pretty big hit.

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
    3. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by pcwhalen · · Score: 1

      Yes, and bluetooth apparently will interfere with my current 802.11 network. It's an either or situation. 802.11 got to my network first.

      --
      Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain with all your metadata.
    4. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember what Apple did for us with USB and Firewire?

      USB didn't amount to squat until Microsoft rolled it out in Windows 98. Furthermore, almost all of my old legacy x86 motherboards had USB on them, in the form of a header, long before USB was a big deal on the iMac. I just had to go out and buy the USB connector/adaptor to implement it on the new OS when it rolled out.

      Apple zealots had to go out and buy a whole new machine.

    5. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd maybe like to dive into the Mac world, but don't want to spend a lot of money right now. All I want to do is surf and play some games and learn how a Mac works. Should I buy an something like a cheap Tangeriene iMac 266 from Ebay? I see one now for $335. Can it run OS9.x very well?

    6. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you wintrolls still come up with any bullshit excuses you can pull out of your saggy asses.

      Sure USB was sitting on x86 mobos, big deal. It was
      doing nothing but taking up space 'til Apple decided to start pushing it, and Microsoft caught on (in their usual, late in the game fashion) and decided to start supporting it in '98 as an attempt to cash in on the whole "More usable than a Mac" crusade they were running with.

      And all most of the Mac zealots who wanted USB on pre USB Macs had to do was buy a new PCI card.

    7. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but if you want to "learn how a Mac works", you should really be learning OS X. I think any iMac will run it, but it'll be dog slow on that one.

    8. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by barnaclebarnes · · Score: 1

      Having Bluetooth as an add-on sync technology for 'ad-hoc' syncing would be good. Imagine having 2 iPod users being able to swap 1 song between them. That would be great. The record companies probably wouldn't like it...but for the consumers it would be good.

      And when do you leave your bluetooth device in discovery mode for more than a couple of minutes? I only put mine in that mode when I want to pair a device. I do have bluetooth turned on permantly on my t68 and it does not really affect my power consumption.

      --
      [Please type your sig here.]
    9. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is your problem? I admit that the IMAC helped the standard significantly, but you can't claim they are the sole reason why USB became as big. Intel was the main advocate for the technology since 96 and was promoting it to many computer manufacturers to create a wide standard. USB compatability began shipping with late versions of Windows 95. quote- "And all most of the Mac zealots who wanted USB on pre USB Macs had to do was buy a new PCI card." What's your point with this? PC's can also get PCI cards. USB2..FIREWIRE..Gigabit ethernet.. just as macs- I think yoru argument doesn't make sense and just trying to start a stupid mac vs pc comment. Apple has done an amazing job with Firewire despite the royalty fees. and by the way I use MACs too...

    10. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by modipodio · · Score: 1

      Would be pretty cool to be able to stream music to ipods thow .

      --
      __________________________________________________ "UNIX is a fascist state, Windows is a democracy.
    11. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by owlicks58 · · Score: 1

      I can field this for you better than the other reply. I am still on my original Bondi Blue iMac as we speak. with the 266 you'll run OS 9.2 like a champ. OS X is pretty damn slow though on it... I got the 500 MHz + Firewire Harmoni upgrade for mine. It kicks ass on 9.2, but I don't run OS X.1 even though I have it installed, because it doesn't support my video card. It is certainly bearable to run with my 500 mhz, but I watch a lot of videos and it runs those a bit too slow for my taste. I think the iMac would be well worth it though to try out

      --
      -Alex
    12. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And all most of the Mac zealots who wanted USB on pre USB Macs had to do was buy a new PCI card." What's your point with this? PC's can also get PCI cards.

      Shut up, you fucking retard. Someone said Mac "zealots" had to buy a whole new machine to get USB, and he proved them wrong.

      That's his point with his, you fucking asshole.

    13. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by niftyeric · · Score: 1

      I wish i could afford one.

      Tax returns my friend, tax returns. ;)

      --
      proton != antielectron
    14. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      yeah, but there's a maximum of 30 feet signal, meaning it would be like cordless headphones.

    15. Re:Bluetooth, iPod improvements. by modipodio · · Score: 1

      Still if I produce music and if I ran a coffe shop I would stream my music to the customers. if they would like the music or not ... wel thats another matter ;)

      --
      __________________________________________________ "UNIX is a fascist state, Windows is a democracy.
  17. Now I can get... by cliffy2000 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Microsoft Office AND Appleworks on the same iPod!
    http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,50688,00.ht ml

  18. 23" Cinema Display is not the largest available... by quadgie · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Actually, Sun's had a 24.1" LCD out for a while now with the 1900x1200 resolution that the new 23" Apple LCD features.

    http://www.sun.com/products-n-solutions/hw/periphe rals/monitors.html#24.1inch

  19. PC vs. Mac by DeadBugs · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I guess one good side of being a PC user is that price goes down while the performance goes up. Although no one believes that the iMac price increase is due to manufacturing costs. If people will line up to pay $1800, why not charge them $1900 or more. It's nice to have a strong following especially if you can make them pay for it.

    --
    http://www.kubuntu.org/
    1. Re:PC vs. Mac by Catbeller · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Although no one believes that the iMac price increase is due to manufacturing costs..."

      I do. The LCD production has not kept up with the demand (because people love the iMac, you see), so the manufacturer raised the cost of the LCDs. Ergo, price of iMac went up.

      It's not exactly a secret.

      The price will go down eventually, when supply meets demand. It happened with LCD displays for cell phones a few years back.

    2. Re:PC vs. Mac by daviddennis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, exactly the same thing has happened in the Mac world over the last few months. For instance, the high end PowerMac G4/dual 800 was $3,499, while its dual 1ghz replacement is $2,999. The PowerBook G4/667 was $ 3,500 when it was first released; now it's $2,999.

      The new iMac is only a little more expensive than previous iMac price points, but you're getting tons more for your money.

      D

    3. Re:PC vs. Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sorry for being an AC-- i shall register soon

      I certainly believe the claim--LCD price has gone up, and RAM price has also jumped in recent months

  20. Doh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess I was just too late with that, and then the MacCentral link had the iMac thing anyway. Darn - first my article submission was just too late, then my attempted informative post. Go ahead and moderate my redundant ass into oblivion now... ;-)

    1. Re:Doh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! Fucking retard, I replied to the article instead of my post. Moderators: if you really want to have fun, find my old posts and mod them down too! I deserve it!

  21. no one is asking the cheapass wintel troll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...what he thinks.

    and no one cares.

    1. Re:no one is asking the cheapass wintel troll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Judging from attendance figures, nobody much really cares about Macintosh anymore.

      I just come to this article on Slashdot for old times sake. It's always fun to troll the fat happy Macintosh zealots. They're so fash!

  22. custom laser engraving? by StevenHallman76 · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Which iPod is yours?"

    "It's the one that says 'Bad Mother Fucker'"

    1. Re:custom laser engraving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or in Japan, "Baadu Maazah Faackah."

    2. Re:custom laser engraving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Which iPod is yours?"

      "It's the one that says 'Bad Mother Fucker'"

      "Excuse me, but what did you say about my mother!?!?" *Smashes iPod on ground*

      "Ahhh shit! Damn you Apple for offering engraving!"

    3. Re:custom laser engraving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you've misplaced the original quote... learn your pop culture next time.

  23. iPod - Excuse Me But Do You Have Any Grey Pupon? by Daveman692 · · Score: 1

    Now that it has a 10 gb drive it may be worth buying. I have wanted one for awhile and wished Apple would support Windows with them. Oh well. A $500 pricetag seems a little steep and will defer me from getting one right now.

  24. sill living in the past... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    i know u wintell trolls don't know anything except what life is life according to what techtv says but...

    ..the imacs are selling like hotcakes and the people that get paid to MARKET don't need your "input."

    go back to suck dell's buttocks. they need YOU.

    1. Re:sill living in the past... by guamman · · Score: 1

      Actually, I own two Macintosh computers. One is a 6100/60 PowerPC running Yellow Dog linux, and the other is an old iMac running OSX. I personally love Macs and just want them to succeed and I know from personal experience (read: I am in marketing) that there is much more money to be made in the low end of the spectrum.

    2. Re:sill living in the past... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err well, they are being ordered like crazy... I don't think you can call it a sale until they are actually delivered and paid for.

    3. Re:sill living in the past... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Apple, having such a captive market (not as bad as it was in the days of Classic Mac when they were almost as tight-sphinchtered as Jaguar dealerships), can play all those 'flood the channel' tricks to inflate sales figures, etc.

      I will give Jobs and his marketing boys credit, they know how to play the hype game.

      I don't know a single person who has bought a piece of Apple hardware in the last year.

      Oh, I take that back. I know someone who bought an Airport, after the third party software to manipulate it with a PC came out.

    4. Re:sill living in the past... by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      When did Yellow Dog Linux support the NuBus PowerPC machines (6100, 7100, and 8100)? When I put my 6100 back into its box, the only Linux it could run was MkLinux...

    5. Re:sill living in the past... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi:

      Last year and a half, I'm running 1.2 with no problems -

      http://nubus-pmac.sourceforge.net/

    6. Re:sill living in the past... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      as long as you go back to suck Steve Job's cock ;)

  25. huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why?

    when did Apple sue Microsoft about the same thing?

    go back to dual booting...

    ...Windows is there only for games, right?

    1. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple lost their lawsuit against Microsoft.

      It was the touch-n-feel lawsuit. If they had one it, it would have set a legal prededent preventing just about any GUI environment from having much at all of the GUI that Apple embraced and extended from Xerox.

      We are all lucky that Microsoft won in that lawsuit. In fact, the reason we are allowed to copy Microsoft widgets in desktop themes, etc. is that Microsoft paid the lawyers to set the legal precedent that defends our right to do so.

      Some people consider that 'ironic.' But some of us just know it's how Bill Gates thinks. He can usually win his fights without needing a pack of lawyers.

    2. Re:huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it was the look and feel lawsuit.

      Pervert.

  26. Re:23" Cinema Display is not the largest available by zardie · · Score: 1

    Yes, but note the pricing. $3400 for the 23" display, $4500 for the Sun 24.1" screen (which I believe is a rebadged Samsung - I may be wrong here). Sure, you need a DVI -> ADC connector but they're not too expensive.

  27. dumb fuck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    your a dumb ass!

  28. Keynote Video? by pgpckt · · Score: 2

    Anyone know where I can see a copy of Jobs' keynote address?

    --
    Lawrence Lessig is my personal hero.
    1. Re:Keynote Video? by artels · · Score: 1

      There was no webcast.

  29. ummmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the Wintel trolls first say they should lower it so they can sell them.

    now this guy says they DO lower it.

    which is it?

    jealousy,

    jealousy. for a couple hundred bux more, u're still too cheap for a better machine. tsk tsk

    1. Re:ummmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a new era.

      We're now called 'Wintel' instead of 'I.B.M.' like in the old days. I always loved it being called an 'IBM troll.' The irony, after IBM decided to emulate Apple and come out with a closed hardware (the PS/2 line) was so ironic.

      I think the term may have changed from 'IBM' about the time Apple started putting IBM drives in some of the Mac II line. I remember the urine stains on the Mac-zealots polyester slacks when THAT one was made public. THEY would have never knew, as it's considered morally reprehensible for a Mac user to open the case in any way that requires a tool.

  30. Clie sync? by tomdarch · · Score: 1

    Given that I can't sync my Clie via USB because of the lack of 'drivers' for OS X, who cares wether bluetooth is involved - how did Jobs do it?

    Any clue what's up?

    1. Re:Clie sync? by moof1138 · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is a beta that has been out since late December, Apple even has a page dedicated to it:

      http://www.apple.com/macosx/applications/palm/

      The release notes for Palm Desktop for Mac OS X said the Clie was supported, and I can synch my Handspring via USB just fine. There are also a lot of conduits available or in progress on the page.

      --

      Hyperbole is the worst thing ever.
    2. Re:Clie sync? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try "The Missing Sync" for OS 9. Find it on VersionTracker.com. It'll sync a clie to a mac.

    3. Re:Clie sync? by Surlyboi · · Score: 1

      As has been mentioned by other posters, there's a
      Palm Desktop 4.0 beta out for OSX.

      I sync my T615c via IR twice a day with no problems.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
  31. Price Breaks for Students by PMAvers · · Score: 4, Informative

    A little tidbit for those college students/those with parents/friends in the education industry. Try going to the Education Apple Store, things are cheaper for 'ya.

    Example: 5 GB iPod: $369 (Normally $399)
    10 GB iPod: $469. (Normally $499)

    Hey, $30 off isn't too bad. Just trying to get the word out.

    1. Re:Price Breaks for Students by Some+Dumbass... · · Score: 3, Funny

      A little tidbit for those college students/those with parents/friends in the education industry. Try going to the Education Apple Store, things are cheaper for 'ya.

      Example: 5 GB iPod: $369 (Normally $399)
      10 GB iPod: $469. (Normally $499)


      Not that I'm complaining (being in the education industry myself). It just makes me wonder, what possible academic value does an iPod have? If none, then what's the point of academic pricing again? Not that I'm complaining, mind you (me want bargain!)

    2. Re:Price Breaks for Students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it has nothing to do with educational value, but mearly getting you to spend money on a iPod rather than beer.

    3. Re:Price Breaks for Students by bonzoesc · · Score: 2

      To get us poor starving college students on the Apple train. Most die-hard Mac-users I know started in uni.

    4. Re:Price Breaks for Students by GrBear · · Score: 4, Informative

      And just remember, if you live in Canada, come January 1st. 2003, you'll likely be paying an extra $210 GOV'T REGULATED MUSIC TAX ($21/gig) on that shiney new MP3 player. Arg!

      Guess I'm going to have to break down and buy one before xmas.

    5. Re:Price Breaks for Students by Queer+Boy · · Score: 2, Informative
      what possible academic value does an iPod have? If none, then what's the point of academic pricing again? Not that I'm complaining, mind you (me want bargain!)

      Music students typically carry around a load of CDs and DAT with current songs they are trying to learn, or pieces they are studying. Putting all of that on an iPod would make it easier (and is faster than transferring to tape or burning a CD). The iPod is also a 5 or 10 gig hard drive, which has similar academic value as a Zip drive.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    6. Re:Price Breaks for Students by cybercrap · · Score: 0

      Well I don't know about "educational value" but it sure makes them 3hr boring lectures by Professor stick in his ass go a lot faster. College has become more bearable with 802.11b in all the classrooms and with earbuds that aren't noticeable and mp3 players that fit in your pocket. Now all I need is to be able to communicate with my cell phone telepathically and school will be great.

    7. Re:Price Breaks for Students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, if yer at a decently large school, check yer campus store.

      Many of them gouge you on prices, but a lot of them give really good deals. (Though, considering the ever-raising tuition costs in most places, yer probably paying for it anyway.)

    8. Re:Price Breaks for Students by Zazm · · Score: 1

      I think you'll find that many IT people in education are presenting this to their purchasing committees as a 10 GB external firewire hard drive with special features not otherwise available on other (cheaper) drives.

      In other news the point of academic pricing is not to always to provide a cheaper option for educational use but rather to hook people who might eventually have a high degree of purchasing power into your product before they get old and cynical (or young and cynical like me!)

      It's the old drug dealer trick of "first times always free!"

    9. Re:Price Breaks for Students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And developer discount: 5GB - $319, 10GB - $399 :)

    10. Re:Price Breaks for Students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can keep all of your documents, or even a whole system and apps, on an iPod, plugging it into any available Mac and having 5-10GB of your own data right there. Think of it as a big box of floppy disks. Sounds valuable, especially if you are doing something like graphics where you want to keep a lot of clipart and your own artwork on h and each time you sit down to work, or fonts, or whatever.

  32. over priced apples by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    $500 ipods, $600 15" LCD displays, does apple only cater to the super rich? yes, clear plastic and shiny metal is neat but cmon! dont get me wrong, i love my mac but i had to get it refurbished through apple just to afford it. just like in the grocery store, when the apples are too expensive, you go and buy bananas. macs would dominate if they could compete price wise with PCs.

    1. Re:over priced apples by Queer+Boy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      $500 ipods, $600 15" LCD displays, does apple only cater to the super rich?

      $24 t-shirts, $50 jeans, does Abercrombie & Fitch only cater to the super rich?

      Yes. Take your broke ass to American Eagle (Dell).

      You either get it or you don't. You either "get" paying more for the end-to-end experience, or you buy some cheap knockoff down the way. You may have something similar, but you don't have the original, nor will it ever be the original, nor will all the complaining that the original costs more, or your knockoff performs the same function make your cheap knockoff the original.

      Get over it.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    2. Re:over priced apples by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't need an end-to-end experience. I didn't think anybody at Slashdot would want anything to do with that.

      The fucking veneer gets in the way.

      Remember, you're talking to the crowd, some of whom haven't had the cover on their machine in ages, if ever.

      I tend to remove the labels from all my clothing. Who wants to be a fucking advertisement for some cokehead in the first place?

    3. Re:over priced apples by johnrengler · · Score: 1

      sure they'd compete on a market share basis... but if Macs were priced to compete with low priced PC's we'd all be wondering about the upcoming HP/Compaq/Apple Merger... Apple is profitable, quit whining and earn more money to buy a new Macintosh... you know you're drooling about one...

    4. Re:over priced apples by gunnk · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This may come as a bit of a surprise, but Apple hardware just isn't that expensive for what you get. It's just that you tend to get a really well-balanced, complete system. Most "bargain-box" PC's are crippled by poor system design. In terms of day-to-day performance, it's hard for me to tell my Dell Optiplex GX240 (1.7 GHz P4) from my custom-built 800MHz P3 at home. Our department got the Dell really cheaply, though, so I can't complain about the relatively poor performance.

      To fairly evaluate the price Apple is charging, why not compare more equivalent hardware? I priced out a IBM ThinkPad T23 vs. an Apple PowerBook a few days ago. The high end T23 sports a 1.2 GHz Pentium THREE processor, 256MB RAM, 60GB HDD, 14.1 inch display,10/100 Mb networking, and 16MB video RAM. The cost on IBM's web store is $3,599.00
      The high end Apple PowerBook "ultimate" model has a 667 MHz G4 processor, 1 GB of RAM, 48 GB HDD, 16 MB video RAM, Gigabit networking, wireless networking and a 15.2 inch display). It retails for $3,699.00.
      Feature-wise, my personal opinion is that the PowerBook is more "loaded" than the ThinkPad. However, the cost difference between the two is less than 3%.
      Looks to me like the Apple price is very competitive.

      Likewise, if you look at the extra $100 Apple announced as an increase in the price of iMacs, you still get a great system for the cost. Sure, you can find "cheapo" PC boxes for less, but you get less computer as well. Apple doesn't market "discount" computers. Just because the iMac is the lowest end system Apple makes you shouldn't compare it to the lowest end PC available. The two are in different classes. Compare the iMac to a comparably-built PC and I think you'll find that Apple's prices remain quite attractive.

      --
      Life is short: void the warranty.
    5. Re:over priced apples by mr100percent · · Score: 2

      the /. crowd is not the target for an iPod.

      There is a reason stores like Old Navy and the Gap make a ton more money than the cheaper Target stores. Apple is going for the experience and looks conscious consumer, where there is a ton of cash to be made.

  33. BlueTooth by pinkpineapple · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is big. If Apple is on the blue tooth train, then it means that the standard will be back from the dead when M$ put it by not supporting it in XP, and will become successfull (see USB for some background.) Apple is obviously working on new desktop and laptop systems with bluetooth integrated. It's not rumors but very certain that BT is what Apple need for their digital hub strategy. I wonder how they are going to cop with interference between BT and 802.11b. And it will be really funny to see how other vendors are playing catch up with Apple when they realize that bluetooth is a really neat solution to connect devices. In M$ interest not to connect easily with Palm, this is the only reason why the beast of Redmond killed the technology by not releasing drivers last summer. However, all the devices like PDAs (ex: iPaq, Loox, etc...) are released in Japan with BlueTooth in standard. Again, US is lagging big time behind Japan when it comes to wireless (3G, and now BlueTooth.)

    PPA, the girl next door.

    --
    -- I feel better now. Thanks for asking.
    1. Re:BlueTooth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It may be that Bluetooth and 802.11b (Airport) can coexist in the same frequency range (2.4GHz), but at the cost of reduced data rates/throughput. It is interesting that Apple offers Bluetooth as a USB dongle rather than have it built-in so at least there is some seperation between the Airport (802.11b) antenna which is built into the computer/laptop and the Bluetooth unit. Maybe Apple can build-in Bluetooth and have a more effective solution (less intereference) in the future if they ever update Airport from 802.11b to 802.11a which operates in a different frequency band of 5.8GHz.

    2. Re:BlueTooth by stripes · · Score: 3, Funny
      It is interesting that Apple offers Bluetooth as a USB dongle rather than have it built-in so at least there is some seperation between the Airport (802.11b) antenna which is built into the computer/laptop and the Bluetooth unit.

      Or maybe it is just that they figure people won't buy a whole new computer just to get it? I expect future Apple products will build the BT module in (unless there is basically zero demand).

      Well that and if you put a Blue Tooth antenna inside a TiBook I bet it has a range of about 3 inches :-)

    3. Re:BlueTooth by evilviper · · Score: 2
      this is the only reason why the beast of Redmond killed the technology by not releasing drivers last summer.

      Yeah. Microsoft's failure to include USB support in Windows 95 & Windows NT 4.0 really killed USB didn't it?

      I could think of a million other examples, but I imagine you could too so I'll leave it at that.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    4. Re:BlueTooth by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 2

      IIRC, Toshiba has been selling notebooks/laptops with BlueTooth support for over a year.

    5. Re:BlueTooth by White+Roses · · Score: 1
      Yeah. Microsoft's failure to include USB support in Windows 95 & Windows NT 4.0 really killed USB didn't it?

      Well, almost. Until Apple went full-on USB in the iMac. M$ has a history of crapping on anything new until they can monopolize it. If it were left to M$, we'd all still be using parallel ports and serial mice.

      --
      Do not touch -Willie
    6. Re:BlueTooth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many USB parts were on the store shelves before 1998 when Windows and MacOS shipped with USB support? USB-equipped computers had been shipping since 1996.

      Note that the issue with USB was that they had to go back and rework the plug-n-play system to accomodate hotplug devices, and that took longer than they expected (and was buggy in 98 anyway). Plus Win 2000 was 2 years late for other reasons (ActiveDirectory).

      Bluetooth just missed the feature cut for XP, and they have said they will add it via WindowsUpdate (I assume there's no radical changes required, and it's just a driver).

    7. Re:BlueTooth by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 2
      I think you're quite right, and I too found this encouraging. You see, my tech dream device right now is a bluetooth living room remote control. Sure, it sounds stupid and frivolous and all that, and that's why I think Apple just might make one.

      The idea would be for Apple to make a set-top living room hub connected by either Firewire or fast ethernet to your computer. There would be inputs/outputs on the box for video and audio, which would play on your living room TV and stereo. Using the BT remote, you would basically have a living room interface to the content of your computer, and be able to play back your music and video files in your living room. (I also imagine the BT remote would double as a universal IR remote; basically, the living room hub would relay commands to other components in "bright" IR pulses.)

      The BT remote would basically log itself in to your main computer as a remote user, and have a rudimentary LCD filebrowser built in, giving you access to the contents of your hard drive. I imagine if you had the TV on, there would also be a more expansive interface to your computer (based on AppleTalk, maybe). And, of course, the thing would act as a PVR, but the files would shuttled through the interlink and saved on your hard drive, where you could later manipulate them with iMovie, recompress them, burn backups, or whatever. This means the box would have to do hardware compression (maybe into MPEG-4?) and also have enough numbercrunching power to play back compressed video from your HD, but neither of these features would be terribly expensive anymore.

      Anyway, I hope this is the sort of thing Jobs has in mind when he repeats the mantra that the Mac will be the digital hub of the home. This is the sort of digital hub that I would actually buy.

    8. Re:BlueTooth by evilviper · · Score: 2

      First I'd just like to say that I despise USB. It's a poor replacement for much better technologies.

      Secondly, Microsoft sits on their thumbs with any new technology until such time as it's gained enough momentum that it's in their interest to support it. And as my original post pointed out, that not a tactic to kill any particular technologies, it's just their mediocrity being taken out of context.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  34. ibm by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    perhaps you haven't seen the ibm 22.2 lcd with double the resolution! oooh! (t22)

    1. Re:ibm by Metrollica · · Score: 1

      There is a story about the IBM screen here. They have just dropped the price in the last few days 53% from $17,999 to $8,399.

      --



      --Metrollica
  35. Trying to save a quarter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The iMac story is a scandal. Apple are screwed w.r.t. to the iMac and they know it. This quarter's profits from the iMac are in the crapper due to the supply problems and the $100 per iMac will help them look better. Since they can't meet demand and won't be able to do so for a while, the orders they lose don't immediately effect their sales. I expect that once supplies are there, the price will go back down otherwise they'll really screw themselves. Basically by doing this Apple is admitting they're completely f***ed on iMac sales. 2 months and 1400 dollars to get the cheapest desktop Mac is really quite pathetic. This is like something out of the early to mid 90s Apple. I write this as an Apple stockholder and someone who has been considering buying an iMac.

    1. Re:Trying to save a quarter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why are you putting all the blame on Apple? The LCD prices went up and supply of them is limited. Apple doesn't control the LCD market - it makes the computers.

    2. Re:Trying to save a quarter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't Apple make a huge investment in an LCD company to avoid a problem just like this? Rising LCD prices aren't to blame, this is a simple case of Apple realizing they can charge more.

    3. Re:Trying to save a quarter by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 1

      An AC wrote:

      > 2 months and 1400 dollars to get the cheapest desktop Mac is really
      > quite pathetic.

      The cheapest Mac is the $800 G3 iMac. No supply problems that I know of.

      My G4 iMac took about 4 weeks to get shipped from the online Apple Store.

      Happy Birthday, King Shisa! (1974-2002)

    4. Re:Trying to save a quarter by Pussy+Is+Money · · Score: 0, Troll

      Fuck this kind of bullshit. When Apple repackages some frizzy new tech widget and slaps the Apple logo on it the hype is enough to make you think that Steve Jobs had just personally shit a golden turd, but when these con artists fail to ship, suddenly it's the fault of the suppliers? What a piece of crap. Thanks.

      --
      Pushin' 'n dealin', shovin' 'n stealin'
  36. Macworld Tokyo 2002 Info by Metrollica · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Macworld Conference and Expo/Tokyo 2002 website is here with information on the event and the exhibits.

    There is also a thread at Macrumors on the event.

    Those wanting to watch the keynote are out of luck because there are no plans to broadcast it this year, like they have done in the past.

    --



    --Metrollica
  37. mod +1 Insightful by Emugamer · · Score: 2

    I totally agree. Though I am not quite informed as you are as the reason for microsoft killing bluetooth Ive seen what sticking with plain old 11b is doing to the area (seattle). I mean its fun surfing through badly protected windows domains with wireless implementation in the middle of the night from your car with a couple of friends with laptops. But it gets old after around a month. Hear Hear to Apple! oh yeah and if any apple rep wants to buy my loyalty forever respond and offer me a 23" display.

  38. Some Good Articles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Maclegion.org has a few good articles about this stuff. Their best is on the new disply and is worth checking out.

  39. Alan Smithee??? by Nathdot · · Score: 5, Funny

    Traditionally 'Alan Smithee' is the moniker taken on by a movie director when he is so ashamed of his work that he will not be associated with it by name.

    So it's a little worrying to see who they reference (via graphic) as the iPod project manager on the story link.

    :)

    1. Re:Alan Smithee??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usually the name that Apple uses in its promo stuff is Leonard Shelby... Ever seen "Memento"? Think Different.

    2. Re:Alan Smithee??? by Tide · · Score: 2

      I like to use Alan Smithee or Leonard Shelby. They are good fictious names I can easily use on the web site. Sometimes we mix match each others names, anything to stay interesting but still below the radar. I'd be more woried what product Alan Smithee was the manager for. ;)

      Whats up with that 4 score... kharma whore! hehe :)

      --

      People think Microsoft is the answer. Microsoft is just the question, "No" is the answer.
    3. Re:Alan Smithee??? by angelo · · Score: 1

      Can I call you lenny, or do you not like that? Ever since that movie, I've had a hard time saying the name lenny withought pronouncing it like Teddy.

  40. Levies apply only to blank iPods by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Imagine the new iPod announcement there: US$599 gets you a 0-gig iPod, a $100 expense voucher for driving to the US border, and a $100 budget to buy a 10-gig drive there.

    The proposed CA$21/GB levy applies only to recording devices on which no sounds have ever been fixed. Apple could just cut a deal with Vivendi to put an MP3.com sampler on each unit before shipping it.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Levies apply only to blank iPods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple could just put a seven second MP3 of Steve Jobs snorting cocaine through a $20 on the machines before shipping.

      Or Stallman singing the 'Free Software Song' although Dick might object since it wouldn't be in OGG like it is on the GNU FTP site.

    2. Re:Levies apply only to blank iPods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "On which no sounds have ever been fixed" is part one of a two part definition which concludes with "any other prescribed medium".

    3. Re:Levies apply only to blank iPods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple could just cut a deal with Vivendi to put an MP3.com sampler on each unit before shipping it.

      A GB can contain something like 16 hours of compressed music. If they preload the device with 1 GB of pop music, the cost won't be negligeable and arguably the remaining 9 GB are blank media, hence taxable (leviable).

      I wish that Steve Jobs would do something original like preloading the iPod with 1h of ambient sounds from 160 places around the world. Waves crashing on the beach, downtown manhattan, downtown Bombay... If you're reading this Steve and think that this is a kick ass idea, then you can use my idea free of charge. Just acknowledge that the idea came from an "Anonymous Coward on Slashdot".

    4. Re:Levies apply only to blank iPods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The iPods now support Ogg with the latest firmware patch.

  41. Did Apple steal it? by batobin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm curious as to how Apple got their brand new "Contacts feature" seen here. It seems to me that two other people beat apple to the punch. iPod Organizer and ipoAddress.

    I'm curious as to whether Apple went to the developers, and bought the idea/software. I know they did this for SoundJam, in order to get iTunes. They literally bought out every SoundJam developer, and took the software.

    I also know this is how the "time in the title bar" idea got started. 3rd party software, bought by Apple. Any facts surrounding this acquisition?

    1. Re:Did Apple steal it? by dgoodman · · Score: 2

      before those two software packages came out, people had been doing this by hand anyway. Those two developers just took an idea more or less in the public domain and wrote software to make it easier. Apple simply added in the functionality people had been hacking into the iPod on their own to begin with...

    2. Re:Did Apple steal it? by dhovis · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I don't think Apple bought anything. They may have noticed that the people who had come up with ways to encode contact info into MP3 ID3 tags were getting a lot of attention.

      From what I can tell, this upgrade lets the iPod recognize the vCard format and puts a visible folder on the iPod called "Contacts". Any vCards in that folder show up in the "Contacts" menu on the iPod. Simple as that, and much simpler than turning your contacts into silent MP3s.

      The iPod apparantly has a pretty nifty OS with 2 ARM processors and 32MB of flash in it. It is probably capable of a lot of things (OGG support, perhaps). Don't expect Apple to come out with a dev kit for it anytime soon, though. I'm sure Apple does not want to have to support 3rd party software, and I think it is unlikely anybody would create a "killer app" for the iPod, other than the "killer app" that it already has. Most likely you would only see a few games.

      --

      --
      The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

    3. Re:Did Apple steal it? by batobin · · Score: 2, Informative

      To reply to my own original post:

      I did some research, and it turns out Apple implimented the contact feature much better than anyone else has previously. The other poster was correct to say that it now runs off of vCards. Very cool.

      Also, to reply to what someone else said. The new iPods (and all the old ones updated by the new iPod firmware) can indeed support Ogg Vorbis. Very cool!

    4. Re:Did Apple steal it? by Fletch · · Score: 1

      It is probably capable of a lot of things (OGG support, perhaps).

      With the upcoming quicktime 6 adding AAC, i'd expect support for that on the ipod before i'd expect OGG.

      What i want is an ipod with a color screen, capable of playing MPEG video. Sitting on the train watching any of my Simpsons episodes would be excellent. =)

    5. Re:Did Apple steal it? by KFury · · Score: 2

      "They literally bought out every SoundJam developer, and took the software."

      Actually, there was only one SoundJam developer, Jeff Robbins, and though he's a prolific software developer for C&G (Conflict Catcher, etc) he's also an Apple OS engineer and has been for more than six years.

      Casady & Greene has a tight relationship with Apple, and you can be sure that Apple made the buyout (or licensing) worth their while.

    6. Re:Did Apple steal it? by batobin · · Score: 1

      Whoops, my bad. I'm glad you caught me on my facts.

      My point still remains, though. Apple has been known to abduct 3rd party software into their own company. Date and Time, iTunes, etc. etc.

      Thanks again for that tidbit of knowledge, I didn't know that. Do you happen to know the company/person who first came up with the clock in the menu bar? I once knew, but have since forgotten.

    7. Re:Did Apple steal it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about "abduct" ... they have a history of purchasing overwhelmingly popular Shareware apps and incorporating them into the default interface.

      iPod's Contacts feature is very cool, not a hack. Standard vCards put into a folder called Contacts on the iPod hard disk show up in a Contacts menu. I'd love to be able to put some small text files into a folder and read them through the iPod interface as well, for notes, or recipes or whatever other small catalog of things you'd like to carry.

      iPod is so great. I carry mine everywhere, and use it as a hard disk all the time. When I finish working on something, I put the product (a Web page, or MP3 file or QuickTime movie) onto my iPod right away as a spare backup until my PowerBook is backed up. Little things like that come in handy.

      It is also a chick magnet.

  42. I'll tell you what I would really like on an iPod by thesolo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Offtopic, I know, but I would really like to see SHN (shorten) file support. Sure, you could transfer them on there, but I would like to see the iPod actually play them.

    Mp3s are just too lossy for my liking. I could still fit a few losslessly compressed albums on a 5 or 10 gig iPod, which is fine by me! Anything to keep from bringing a battery-draining CD player and loads of discs.

    Anyone know if that kind of hack is even possible? If it was, I'd buy one in a second.

  43. regarding price increases by BigBir3d · · Score: 2, Informative

    the price of memory went up for the iBook's too. it was $300 for the 512MB upgrade, it is now $400, well that's what it was when it went up nearly 2 weeks ago. the salesperson actually told me to not waste my money on "Apple memory" and do what she did, buy it online! (course i saved myself even more...)

  44. Full Live Coverage, Post Summary and Links by BoarderPhreak · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Is available here. The coverage was updated as the keynote progressed - you might say the server got Slashdotted!

  45. Re:C# by Eccles · · Score: 2

    I was waiting for someone to outdo the 22" Cinema Display, funny it was Apple that ended up doing it themselves.

    ViewSonic has had a 23" 1600x1200 LCD out for a few months now for ~$3500, so Apple was bested slightly already. (Even now, the Viewsonic has a larger screen -- 23" widescreen isn't as big as 23" 4:3 -- but the Apple is higher-res.)

    --
    Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  46. D'ohhh - Correct URL! by BoarderPhreak · · Score: 2
    D'ohhhh!

    Try here instead.

    1. Re:D'ohhh - Correct URL! by decaying · · Score: 1

      I didn't think my MP3 server had a web server running.... [:

      --
      ----- One piece short of Legoland
  47. Re:I'll tell you what I would really like on an iP by asv108 · · Score: 2

    I love the SHN format for downloading shows of etree or Furthur but as a portable device format it doesn't stand a chance because the filesize is just way too large and there are no SHN chip decoders in existance. What I would really like to see is a lossless format that reduces file size even further. Shorten is basically abandonware that has been adopted by a niche.

  48. who cares about contacts by kfs27 · · Score: 1

    everyone has a cellphone, not an iPod, and they hold their important #'s in there. what about todo lists and the like, that stuff would be much cooler to me? anyone else agree?

    --
    Kenny Sabarese
    www.kennysabarese.com
  49. Re:23" Cinema Display is not the largest available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Sun 24.1" monitor, while manufactured by Samsung, is not a 'rebadged' product by any means. It has been specifically engineered to Sun specs by Sun Engineers. Samsung provides the assembly lines and co-developed, etc.

    I'm using one now...

  50. Microcode Solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I still have not heard anything about the imac emulator that Microcode was supposed to announce/demo at the show. Is it still vapor?

    1. Re:Microcode Solutions by elbisivni · · Score: 1

      Nothing at all, but then that's not too surprising considering the company's rather entertaining approach to life, the universe and everything. A google search on Darek Mihocka, the company's owner, is always good for a laugh...

  51. technically, it is not 'out' yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the Sun monitor was introduced last week, and Sun is only taking pre-orders. I'd like to talk about the manufacturing schedule, but my NDA prohibits...sorry.

  52. cheap bastard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BMW...Mercedes....Lexus...it's called total cost of ownership, and it involves more than dis'ing anyone that appreciates the slogan "you get what you pay for...".

    Maybe you need to ask your parents to raise your allowance...(recalling that spoof commercial "we didn't get cheap computers....we just got cheap parents!" :)

    1. Re:cheap bastard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, European cars have the WORST track record in terms of repair frequency and costs...

    2. Re:cheap bastard by pelorus · · Score: 2, Funny
      "European cars have the WORST track record in terms of repair frequency and costs..."


      The ones we sell to yankee doodle suckers do, yeah...

  53. Price Breaks for Everybody!!! by dhovis · · Score: 3, Informative
    Even better:

    5GB iPod (refurbished) for $339 from store.apple.com (Click on "Special Deals"). Comes with the same 90 day warranty as a new iPod.

    --

    --
    The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

  54. Re:I'll tell you what I would really like on an iP by a3d0a3m · · Score: 1

    Really, a 256kbps vbr mp3 is not far off from a lossless compression like SHN (shorten), check out this comparison of the audio spectrum here.

    adam

  55. Captain Obvious!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OOO - thanks for pointing out what we all read!

    Do you think maybe you could help us all out and link to this thread from within your own post??

    Maybe you've hit on such a meaningful thing you should go submit it to the editors - I'm sure they haven't heard this lovely tid bit.

    1. Re:Captain Obvious!!! by Captain+Smooth · · Score: 1

      The name's Captain Smooth buddy.

      --


      The ability to monopolize an industry is insignificant, next to the power of the source.
  56. No mouse-button jokes yet?! by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 1


    Christ, this story has been up for 2 hours and we *still* don't have a "for another $100 I had sure better get another button on my mouse!" joke? What's Slashdot coming too? Next thing you know, they'll admit that OSDN is run on an AppleSeed cluster of Tangerine iMacs!

    --

    --
    $tar -xvf .sig.tar
  57. RAM pricing by Animats · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I hadn't looked at the DRAM industry in a while, and was surprised to see what's happening. Back in the 1980s, the Asian countries took the DRAM business away from the US, and Intel exited the DRAM business.

    Things have changed. Micron (Boise, Idaho) is taking over the industry. They bought Toshiba's DRAM business, they bought TI's business, they bought KMT's business, and are negotiating to buy Hynex, which is in trouble. They and Samsung are in a race for the #1 spot now; if the the Hynex deal goes through, Micron will be far bigger than Samsung in DRAM.

    In 2001, there was a huge DRAM glut, which pushed prices down. Micron, instead of cutting back, used its advantage as the lowest-cost producer to squeeze out the weaker players. Here's an overview of the industry.

    It looks like that when the dust settles, Micron will have about 40% market share, Samsung (S. Korea) about 22%, Elpdata (Japan) somewhere under 20%, and minor players the rest. The era of brutal competition in DRAM may be ending. The number of players is much smaller now. We may see more "stability" in DRAM pricing.

    1. Re:RAM pricing by cybercrap · · Score: 0

      Yes but who wants stable high pricing. Less competition leads to higher memory prices. Plus it will take out all the fun of stock piling when memory is cheap.

    2. Re:RAM pricing by weeeee · · Score: 1

      Oddly enough, I bought a Micron DDR RAM chip from BestBuy the other day and it contain of all things Samsung modules. I thought it was rather odd.

    3. Re:RAM pricing by jaysones · · Score: 1

      Yeah and Micron bought Interland, formerly a premiere web host, and turned them into complete crap. I'm not sure micron is making all the right moves based on the number of sites we're moving away from them.

    4. Re:RAM pricing by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      Yes, if by "stability" you mean "the price will never drop again." That kind of stability is good for those couple of companies, but bad for everyone else.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
  58. Bluetooth and keyboards/mice? by sjonke · · Score: 1

    So, will this be an obvious way to add the much needed wireless keyboard and mouse to the new iMac? Are there bluetooth keyboards and mice? The idea would be to plug the bluetooth USB adapter into one of the ports on the back of the iMac.

    For that matter, what about providing a wireless bluetooh USB hub?!? That would be kind of nice. Then you could use any old USB keyboard and mouse, plugged into the wireless hub. Better still, I could plug my iMic into the hub in order to wirelessly transmit digital audio from my computer to my stereo.

    Do I have to design, build and sell these things myself?

    --
    --- What?
    1. Re:Bluetooth and keyboards/mice? by glwtta · · Score: 2

      A wireless keyboard that you have to plug in. Why, that's brilliant!

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
  59. Re:Apple Needs to Re-Design all Laptop Motherboard by Ilan+Volow · · Score: 3, Funny

    Wouldn't be easier just to redesign Unix users?

    --
    Ergonomica Auctorita Illico!
  60. Get The Missing Sync by sfgoth · · Score: 2

    Mac OS Support for Sony CLIE handhelds. Version 2.2, now shipping, adds support for the new CLIE PEG-S360. HotSync your Sony handheld with any USB equipped Mac and your Sony handheld USB cradle or cable.


    http://www.markspace.com/missingsync.html
  61. iPod will play uncompressed AIFF files by sfgoth · · Score: 3, Informative

    No lossless compression, but you can still store several 600MB CDs of audio.

    iPod specs

    -pmb

  62. Perceived value of "overpriced apples" by Infonaut · · Score: 5, Insightful
    One thing I've never understood about the PC-Mac price comparison is this: Ten years ago, $4,000 bought you the computer you really dreamed of, the one that could do "everything". of course, "everything" didn't include high-end digital photography, digital moviemaking, ripping MP3s, or playing the kind of immersive 3D games that are available now.

    $2,000 got you the machine you could afford -the one that you could use Office and Quicken on, play most middle-of the road games, and if you were willing to wait a long time, dabble in graphic design and multimedia.

    Now the machine you really want still costs $4,000, but the machine you can afford is down to $1,500, and it does far more than even the best home computers did just two or three years ago.

    The fact that there are $500 commodity PC boxes available is nice, but does that mean that the $1,500 iMac no longer has value to the person who purchases it?

    It seems to me that rather than comparing the prices of PC and Mac CPUs and peripherals, we ought to be comparing overall value to the consumer - i.e., is this machine doing everything I want it to do, for a price that I find worthwhile?

    If you love your Mac, but you don't love PCs, there must be more perceived value in the Mac for you. If that's the case, isn't it intrinsically worth more to you than a less expensive PC?

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re: Perceived value of "overpriced apples" by l0wland · · Score: 1
      I am guessing Mac owners don't have very fulfilling relationships with real people.

      The number of anti-Apple rants you've posted within 1 single news-item makes me wonder whether you're not owning a Mac yourself. ;-)

      --

      "Honey, I feel a certain distance between us..." "Really? A 31ms ping ain't that bad..."
    2. Re:Perceived value of "overpriced apples" by pelorus · · Score: 1
      "Save the $1000 dollars for your girlfriend/wife/kids."


      And force them to use Windows or *worse* Linux in order to get their assignments and projects done?


      Get real.

    3. Re:Perceived value of "overpriced apples" by Perdo · · Score: 2

      Oh my! they might break a nail!

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

  63. Music students that need to listen to music... by alexhmit01 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My fiancee is studying music in school, and she has to listen to a rediculous amount of music. One of the reasons she got a laptop was to be able to rip the CDs in the library so she wouldn't have to fight for access to them with others in the classes.

    Now when she gets new listening assignments, she hops into the library, rips the CDs, syncs the iPod, and she's set. If she really likes the music, she makes a copy of the CD to go in the CD Jukebox in our apartment so she can listen to the higher quality recording.

    Now she doesn't mind the 30-45 minute subway rides that she does getting around town because she just turns on her iPod and the music is waitting for her.

    Could this be done with non-Apple equipment, sure. However, the two hours of helping her adjust from being a Windows user to a Mac user made up for it from reduced tech support on my end... As I type away on my Windows machine whose copy of Internet Explorer couldn't use view source last week...

    Alex

    1. Re:Music students that need to listen to music... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I type away on my Windows machine whose copy of Internet Explorer couldn't use view source last week...

      You deleted Notepad.exe??

  64. What's on my mind is... by Stenpas · · Score: 3, Insightful
    It's been six months since the last major MacOS X update, and as Steve has said, we should be done with the transition to MacOS X this upcoming March 24th. So where's the update that makes the rest of the transition possible? It's not good enough in its current form.

    Newer ipods and bigger cinema displays are great, but MacOS X is vastly more important. Guess the transition period needs to be lengthened now.

    1. Re:What's on my mind is... by Ford+Fulkerson · · Score: 4, Informative
      Guess the transition period needs to be lengthened now.

      The transition was completed at MacWorld in January when all Macs started shipping with Mac OS X as default. What else is needed to complete the transition?

      --

      Somewhere in the heavens... they are waiting.
    2. Re:What's on my mind is... by Gekiganger+3 · · Score: 1

      The removal of OS 9.x from all new macs, with insurance that you can still do everything you need to with OS X.

    3. Re:What's on my mind is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > The removal of OS 9.x from all new macs,
      > with insurance that you can still do
      > everything you need to with OS X.

      No, no, no ... the transition to Mac OS X won't be complete until they are shipping a 64-bit kernel. Or maybe when they ship solid-state hard disks. Or a thought-control UI.

      C'mon ... they shipped Mac OS X on March 24, 2001 and said there would be a transitional period of one year before Mac OS X is the default OS. They started shipping Mac OS X as the default in January, 2002. Other than music and audio people (who have mostly Mac OS 9 software and most of it talks directly to the hardware) most Mac users can boot in OS X and stay there quite comfortably, especially on a new machine. So what if they are using Classic 1/10th of the time? Windows users are still running 16-bit Windows apps and DOS apps.

      Even in music and audio there are a handful of pro apps on Mac OS X, and Cubase 5 is coming in less than three months. Logic will be around there are earlier, and MOTU is clearly close as well. Reason and ReCycle have been announced, and should be here within a few months. Music and audio is ALWAYS the last to go, and we're only a few months away right now.

      People are so hard on Apple. I guess because they unabashedly try hard people think they should be perfect. I have a friend who has been running Mac OS X only (no Classic) since she got MS Office X in November, and she is so happy with it. She opens her PowerBook and gets to work instantly, then when she is done she closes it. She never reboots, and it never crashes. Even her apps hardly ever crash. Word crashed on her recently and she was so surprised that she asked me about it. There are a lot of silent users out there like that, quietly enjoying really trouble-free computing with Mac OS X.

  65. get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A 22" CRT, while capable of a much sharper image, uses 3 to 5 times the energy, most of which is thrown into your home or office climate. Together, these will raise your operating expense...throw in that 'bigger desk', and up it goes again. And what about the upcoming regulations that will require the consumer to pay for disposal of these monsters? More cost....

    Your desire to quote a lower price, while ignoring the increased soft costs associated with CRT ownership make you the fool, sir. But this is exactly the type of logic that marketing guys love in a consumer. Too bad you can't take a break and realize you're being manipulated. Ignorance is bliss...right?

    1. Re:get real by Perdo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the difference is, I own a Mitsubishi 22" DP2040u. The SGI sucks 27 watts, the DP2040u sucks 155 watts. Used 16 hours a day, 31 days a month, results in a 12 dollar electric bill. Including the $75 recycle fee, I can run my monitor for 10 years before my total cost of ownership exceeds the SGI. $1500 invested instead of spent on a flat panel makes the CRT pay for itself relative to the flat panel in the same timeframe. I still have an 8 year old 21" HM-4520-D. I know the life expectancy of a CRT. The apple cinema display has a life expectancy of 15000 hours. That is less than TWO YEARS. 6 years peak with conservative use.

      So, with 1/3 the life expectancy, Buying THREE for every one CRT, Where are your cost of ownership numbers now?

      You do not own a cinema display. You have absolutly no idea what it costs to own one.

      --

      If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    2. Re:get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ruthless.

    3. Re:get real by pelorus · · Score: 1
      On the other hand they look bloody lovely.


      I know so many people - new to the Mac so not complete suckers - who HAd to buy the 17" LCD to go with their G4 when a 17" CRT would have sufficed.


      There's also the issue that a 23" LCD would give you the same screen size as..what..a 25" CRT?

    4. Re:get real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since I work where they design & build them, you are right...I don't have any idea what it means to you, the consumer...I get mine for free. I can have any monitor, CRT or LCD I want.

      I don't pay for the monitor nor the electricity to run it, and I get a new one every month. I have a pair of 24" LCD's on my desk right now. Hate me...it's ok w/me :)

  66. Good Apple spin lately by Gaetano · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Seems to have been alot of really positive (overall) articles on apple and their products lately.

    I used to be a Mac slammer. Nothing made me quite as happy as slamming indignant Mac die hards, unless it was slamming brainless Microsoft Bots. That was before Steve Jobs came back to apple. Then I started watching them with interest.

    Now, after all these good stories lately, about the ipod, imovies, OS X and its unix environment, I have to say someone slipped me some of the Mac coolaide.

    I want one! I want one now! Damn! And I'm happy about it too!

    Gimme a mac!

    1. Re:Good Apple spin lately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of any of the software you've invested in will run on that Mac.

      It keeps me from ever doing anything stupid.

    2. Re:Good Apple spin lately by teamhasnoi · · Score: 1
      Pretty much everything I have tried will work on 'that Mac'. Use Virtual PC and Windows 98. My G4 733 runs VPC faster and far more stably than my Pentium III 800 can. I can acually play Falcon's Eye on the Mac's VPC, and I can't on my PC! (running xp,beos,linux and 98) I'm an OS junkie.

      You can also install linux uder VPC. There are a couple issues (couldn't get the CD to mount), but why bother? You've got all that unix-ey goodness just waiting for you!

    3. Re:Good Apple spin lately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't give in. Homosexuality can be cured. Check out God Hates Fags

    4. Re:Good Apple spin lately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Macs are cool like communism.

    5. Re:Good Apple spin lately by pelorus · · Score: 1
      Where did you get "invested in" from?


      /. is the haven of the WaReZ kiddies.

  67. Bullshit by Perdo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The price of memory is back down. Flat panels have never been cheaper. The barrier to entry for Apple is up $600 from the CRT iMac.

    Have they got any idea what their competition is doing? PCs have twice the power for half the cost. $1400 will buy one hell of a fast PC with firewire, USB 2.0, Geforce 4 graphics, all the speed and features of the dual G4 1Ghz for the price of an iMac. God it kills me what fools mac zealots are. Begging to be robbed. Pretty shiny slick glowing throbbing easy slow expensive fragile.

    --

    If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

    1. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      let me know where i can get my 512 MB SDRAM for $80 (or was it less?)

    2. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $1700.00 is a LOT to have the priviledge of using Windows XP with is limited support for mp3, its non unified interface, and spyware.
      I would gladly pay a $200.00-$300 premium just to be able to use MacOSX. Plus, the Apple hardware is truly well put together. Nothing that can be compared to anything a PC manufacturer produces. I suppose that at the end of the day it just depends on how much you value your time and the frustration that comes with relying Microsoft products.

  68. iPod desinformation by porky_pig_jr · · Score: 0, Troll

    I have nothing against either Apple or iPod but they really shouldn't say things like this:


    "With an industry-leading 20 minutes of skip protection, iPod keeps playing without missing a beat. iPod has a 32MB solid-state memory cache, meaning that it has no mechanical or moving parts, so it's not affected by movement of the device."


    Well, cache is a cache, but the hard drive is mechanical and it moves. Unless by 'it' they mean 'cache' but the whole sentence appears as if it were the whole iPod which is solid state.

    1. Re:iPod desinformation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The HD only spins long enough to fill the cache, which is every 20 minutes. So, most of the time, it doesn't move.

      The point is that you can jump up and down with it, and it won't skip for 20 minutes. 'Don't know about you, but I can't jump up and down for 20 minutes straight. Those who can have reported good results.

    2. Re:iPod desinformation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Technically, when you say "it", you are assumed to be referring to the last noun. In this case, "it" refers to "solid-state memory cache". They are trying to explain that "solid-state" means "no moving parts". The whole point of the cache is to contain the actual data you're hearing now and 20 minutes into the future, so you don't ever play directly from the hard drive. This avoids skips and the hard drive can sleep while the music plays out of the cache.

      Apple's marketing speak is no worse than anyone else in the industry. I've never been disappointed with an Apple product, and I've found that if you want to know the specs on something, you can find them on apple.com. With the iPod, there is a ton of info at apple.com/ipod.

  69. Why the added vCard support? by zapfie · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Why the added vCard support to the iPod? It's kind of like mounting a railgun to a toaster.

    --
    slashdot!=valid HTML
    1. Re:Why the added vCard support? by William+R.+Dickson · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If I could mount a railgun to a toaster, you can bet I would. You can't have too many railguns.

  70. Re:who cares about contacts - use vcf by confu2000 · · Score: 2, Informative

    You can use VCF files to make todo lists/display random text data.

    And it's a heck of a lot easier and more elegant than setting up mp3 tags.

    begin:vcard
    version:3.0
    fn:To Do List
    title:1) Write Perl Script\n2) Write .vcf file\n3) Copy to contacts folder on iPod
    end:vcard

    Voila.

  71. no Ogg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, the new iPod software doesn't support Ogg. Could the hardware support it? Probably. But it does not, at least as of 1.1.

  72. Feed Forward? by mojo-raisin · · Score: 2

    I wonder if this new Apple display will be the first to incorporate Mitsubishi's Feed Forward Display Technology. Then we'd finally be able to watch full motion video and play QuakeIII on our LCD Displays - and I'd actually consider owning one.

    1. Re:Feed Forward? by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      that's interesting, although it sounds like a complex hardware solution for somthing that could just as easily be done in software; assignign different gamma corrections to different parts of the spectrum. engeneer the software to be altivec enhanced, and you have a program that sits in the background @ root level that consumes 4-7% CPU

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    2. Re:Feed Forward? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I watch full motion video and play Quake on my LCD displays already. I play Alice on my PowerBook all the time (Quake III engine). The key is the digital connection between the graphics adapter and the display, and having a good-quality display. If you have a VGA connection on your LCD display, that is where you get ghosting and slow performance, because you are going from a digital graphics adapter to a digital display through an analog connection. The digital-to-analog and analog-to-digital conversions take time and reduce quality.

      DVD movies in Mac OS X look amazing, even full screen on a Cinema Display. I watch DVD's like this pretty often, also on my PowerBook.

      This is part of what's good about Apple: high-quality. They have been shipping full-digital display systems for years now. I bought the very last analog flat panel Apple shipped, in early 1999. Since then, they are DVI all the way (ADC is DVI plus USB and AC). People have low opinions of LCD's when all they've seen is low-quality and/or analog-connected displays. Ask someone with an Apple system about LCD displays and they will tell you that they don't miss CRT's one bit.

  73. All You need is... by BlackGriffen · · Score: 2

    the ability to deal with an HFS+ firewire hard drive, right? That's all the iPod is, really, that and some software to play the tunes on it.

    BlackGriffen

  74. Re:23" Cinema Display is not the largest available by pinkpineapple · · Score: 2

    Sun patented ugly design too I can tell. At least and not like Apple, Sun can rest assured that one will copy their design. Plain Fugly!

    PPA, the girl next door.

    --
    -- I feel better now. Thanks for asking.
  75. Re:I'll tell you what I would really like on an iP by mojo-raisin · · Score: 2

    Even better would be flac support which is LGPL'd, supports ID3 tags and works very well.

  76. What about Steve Jobs? by PaxTech · · Score: 1
    I wonder if Steve Jobs has more than one button on his mouse... Somebody should sneak in there and see.

    I guess I can kind of see the logic of making it as simple as possible for the consumers the iMacs are geared to, but shouldn't the high-end towers come with a mouse with more than one button? Don't get me wrong, I have a Mac and I love it but the first thing I did was buy a new mouse.

    --
    All movements for social change begin as missions, evolve into businesses, and end up as rackets.
    1. Re:What about Steve Jobs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bought a 2-button mouse when I first got a Mac, too, but eventually I realized that I wasn't using the second button very much, and when I was, I could just as well have gone File > Item or View > Item instead, in the pervasive menubar at the top of the display.

      Similarly, I used to tell my wife about cool key shortcuts, and finally she said she just likes to use the menus alone, no key shortcuts, no context menus. It makes a lot of sense to just pick the one way that always works and stick with it.

  77. I made the leap by PaxTech · · Score: 1
    I tried Linux on my desktop, and I found I spent more time frigging with it than actually working. My debian server is great, but for me, Linux just wasn't there on the desktop. I went back to Windows and was miserable.

    But two weeks ago I got a G4 tower and I couldn't be happier. It's everything I always wanted Linux on the desktop to be.

    --
    All movements for social change begin as missions, evolve into businesses, and end up as rackets.
  78. Every iPod has custom engraving already by KFury · · Score: 5, Informative

    Check the back of your iPod. Under the edched logo you'll find your iPod's serial number etched in as well, and it matches the serila # you'll find in 'settings'.

    Kinda cool, kinda unnoticed.

    1. Re:Every iPod has custom engraving already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      karma goes out to anyone who knows where the serial number is stored on the host mac

    2. Re:Every iPod has custom engraving already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that the serial number user to ID you when you DL or listen to music???

    3. Re:Every iPod has custom engraving already by Fear+the+Clam · · Score: 1

      karma goes out to anyone who knows where the serial number is stored on the host mac

      Depends which Mac is the host. For what it's worth, the iBook serial number is located inside the battery compartment, under the battery.

    4. Re:Every iPod has custom engraving already by angelo · · Score: 1

      The new iMac's serial number is in the cd tray fold-down.

    5. Re:Every iPod has custom engraving already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go Apple menu > About this Mac. Click the version of the OS and it will change to the build number of the OS ... click that and it will change to the system's serial number.

      You can also get the serial number of any Mac by running Apple System Profiler on it. It's in /Applications/Utilities.

      The iPod will also tell you its serial number in the interface itself, and the iPod Updater software that updates or restores the iPod's firmware also shows you the serial number of connected iPods.

      If you buy your Mac from the Apple Store or register it with Apple otherwise, the serial number will also be on your personal support page. You login and see a list of all of your Apple gear, with model and serial numbers. Great for insurance.

  79. AirPort vs Bluetooth by maggard · · Score: 5, Interesting
    802.11b & Bluetooth have one problem - they conflict. So do 2.4 GHz cordless phones and microwave ovens for that matter. Indeed some folks are finding old 900 MHz cordless phones and baby monitors to be more reliable then the increasingly trafficked 2.4 GHz Industrial-Scientific-Medical bands.

    So, with Apple leading the renaissance in wireless networking (it was their introduction of the AirPort that kicked of this current wave of activity) how will they reconcile this with Bluetooth? All of their computers ship with wireless card slots and built-in antennas; they all also ship with USB ports (also popularized by Apple.) Which is to drown out the other? While it's true that they can co-exist it is at the expense of greatly reduced data rates, already an issue for folks used to 100 Mbps or 1,000 Mbps (standard on many Mac models) Ethernet.

    My own bet is that before or along-with any USB-BlueTooth product introduction Apple will ship a revised AirPort, or at least a software tweak with a built in Bluetooth-friendly autonegotiation. Or, failing that we'll see the release of an AirPort II featuring 802.11a (at 5 GHz and capable of 54 Mbps) thus safely different from cordless phones, microwave ovens, baby monitors, 802.11b, 802.11g, Bluetooth, HomeRF, and a half dozen other wireless applications.

    As to microwave ovens - well 2.4 Ghz is the resonant frequency of water so no change possible there. However it is something to think about as you hold these various new wireless devices up next to your body.

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
    1. Re:AirPort vs Bluetooth by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2

      Actually, I'm pretty sure I read a series of reviews that said that wasn't a problem, and they had both bluetooth and Wireless LANs going at full speed with almost no problems. Remember Bluetooth is based on frequency hopping with clever bits - I think they manage to avoid each other pretty well

    2. Re:AirPort vs Bluetooth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually they are both frequency hoppers, but airport does it nicely and bluetooth is like a bull in a china shop, changing frequencies all the time without looking to see if the frequency is in use first.

    3. Re:AirPort vs Bluetooth by mccalli · · Score: 2
      802.11b & Bluetooth have one problem - they conflict. So do 2.4 GHz cordless phones and microwave ovens for that matter.

      I keep hearing this. I have two microwave ovens, a cordless DECT digital phone with two handsets, and I run a wireless 802.11b network.

      No problems at all. So how come I'm getting away with it?

      Cheers,
      Ian

    4. Re:AirPort vs Bluetooth by Dorf_of_Eleven · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've just finished playing with loads of Bluetooth gadgets - a CompactFlash Card for my PocketPC, a module for my cell phone, a PCMCIA card for my laptop, and a Bluetooth printer. All performed flawlessly, beyond my expectations.

      Any effect on my 802.11b? Nope, nodda. Why? Because I'm one guy, and I'd need to push myself to use both networks to their limits at the same time. Perhaps the Bluetooth-802.11b interaction makes a difference at an office, but really... if it's that big o' thing, tell the Bluetooth guy to go stand in the corner (out of range) :)

      --
      WhatEVA
  80. proof of concept by seanw · · Score: 3, Funny
  81. Re:C# by TobyGlyn-cube · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure how you justify that a monitor with lower rez than the Apple bests it Apple?

  82. waht the hell is easter eggs??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what is easter eggs? a game or does it turn your ipod into colorful easter patterns? that would be so icute

    1. Re:waht the hell is easter eggs??? by jweatherley · · Score: 1

      The iPod contains a little breakout game. A reminder of Steve J giving Steve W the shaft!

      --

      --
      Reverse outsourcing: it's the future
  83. Clie & Bluetooth by xirtam_work · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    one thing I sure that no one has mentioned yet is that Sony haven't released the Bluetooth memorystick for the Clie yet. That was one of the reasons I got rid of mine. Moving over to the Palm m515 with a bluetooth card is much easier than hanging around having to use the IR modem on my Ericsson T39 and the Clie.

  84. mod -1 Cruel by kubrick · · Score: 2

    Hey, how would you like a 23" display?
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    Nah, just kidding :)

    --
    deus does not exist but if he does
  85. Re:23" Cinema Display is not the largest available by Josh+Mast · · Score: 1

    Perhaps they should put a pink bow and Hello Kitty stickers on it, then? Would that be more to your satisfaction?

  86. Re:I'll tell you what I would really like on an iP by Baki · · Score: 2

    If you store uncompressed albums, your iPOD will also be battery-draining.

    These HDD based MP3 players usually spin the HDD once in a few minutes to buffer something like 5 minutes into RAM. Using uncompressed sound, your HDD will be continuously running, shortening the battery life a lot.

  87. A little more on the iPod 1.1 update: by clemens · · Score: 2, Informative

    1. It can correctly display some previous undisplayable Chinese characters now, which is a great saving: a very common character that is used in Chinese names can now been seen. It was such an eye-sore!

    2. There used to be a track in my iPod that would freeze up the machine. Now the problem is gone.

    Good job, Apple!

    --
    This is the funniest signature I could ever think of.
  88. Did anyone else notice this? by LighthouseJ · · Score: 0

    When you click on the iPod link that goes to the apple.com website, look down at the screenshot of the Contact window. Notice the name, Alan Smithee? To most people, they wouldn't give it a second thought...

    I was watching a TV show last week that spent 30 minutes talking about a Hollywood director named Alan Smithee. The thing about this director is that he does not exist. The Directors Guild use this name to indicate that this movie is basically doomed to fail before it starts. Although websites won't say that detail, they give a bunch of filmographies. You can certainly do google searches for his name. Note the absence of pictures.

    It's just ironic/weird that the Alan Smithee name would be used there, maybe they are foreshadow the iPod, saying the unit is doomed before it starts?

    1. Re:Did anyone else notice this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're just making an incrowd joke to the film buffs who buy their stuff (FCP).

  89. Moving in the right direction by RageEar · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Thank God Jobs got off of his megalomaniacal pedestal for long enough to point the company in the right direction.

    I've always loved Apple, being raised on them as a child. Only when I entered college and wanted to play the latest games did switch from a Mac to a Wintel platform. But I always had hope that Apple would somehow turn themselves around.

    And, lo and behold, the seemingly permanent "interim" CEO has made leaps and bounds with the company.

    With the influx of the various digital media into society, I find myself wanting a Mac more and more each day. With a new Mac equipped with FireWire, USB, and wireless (and a BSD-style kernel) I would be a very happy geek.

    Anyone have a cool $2000 laying around that I could use to buy myself an iMac or iBook? ;)

  90. Macs & Medication by maggard · · Score: 2, Flamebait
    Congrats - you put together a Frankenstein.

    See one in a store? No. Going to see one in a store? No.

    First off Apple generally uses pretty high quality components. Their LCD is a sight nicer then your $300 closeout special. Apple also integrates everything a hell of a lot better. Of course that's a lot easier when the OS comes from the same vendor (where's yours?) Indeed right there is half of the value of the machine, it runs MacOS X. And of course the included applications, not shovelware but good stuff that works with the hardware and works intuitively.

    Of course there's also the point of the screen being on a pedestal. That's unique in the industry and totally rocks - it's amazing how seductive it is to have a display one can casually reach out & reposition, tilt, angle. It really does change the experience and some panel-on-pegs is not the same at all.

    Then there's that whole service & support thing. You may disdain it but the iMac is the intro level computer and ask any real vendor - it costs, it costs a lot to support folks. Phones, websites, repairs, parts, trained folks, etc. You may be willing to spend half a day getting your CD burner to work; most folks just want one that works and if it doesn't a number to call and a quick & easy resolution path.

    Am I a Macolyte? No. I have a few, and yeah the mac.com address (free, stable, fast, offers POP, IMAP, SMTP, WebDAV, HTTP, no adverts, can't beat that) but I've also a room full of PCs. Which do I recommend to folks? Depends on what they want to do and how they like to work.

    For some things Macs are spot on, for others PCs are a better choice. Macs are price competitive (your apples-to-oranges comparison notwithstanding) as one long as one avoids the Apple memory. The iMac is a great intro or home machine, trivial to set up and fast enough. I also find the laptops to be good deals with rugged cases & long battery life. The G4s are fine machines though they do cost the dickens but if ya need them there they are. Depending on your business a Mac might or might not be appropriate, certainly in some fields a Wintel box is a much better choice, others a Mac fits the bill.

    But you, you seem to have a chip on your shoulder. Fine. But don't go making stupid statements and not expect to get called on them. Nor come looking for an argument or to act out your frustrations at whatever. We've both had our say and at this point any further discussion would be almost like baiting those foamers one sometimes finds on streetcorners - just inane & embarrassing for all around.

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
    1. Re:Macs & Medication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See one in a store? No. Going to see one in a store? No.

      You are shopping in the wrong stores - pickup maximum PC and check out the recent article about the mom and pop computer makers. Just because you can't see the truth doesn't make it wrong for everyone.

    2. Re:Macs & Medication by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      mom and pop places are the same thing as setting up your own box, you are just paying some one to do it for you. they do not address any of the points he makes any better than dell or gateway or HP/Compaq.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    3. Re:Macs & Medication by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      bravo, sound logic in the midst of all the chaos...

  91. Re:Apple Needs to Re-Design all Laptop Motherboard by rthille · · Score: 2, Funny

    Not entirely true. My Powerbook G3 running OS-X has the control key in the right place, as well as the control key on the bottom next between 'fn' and 'option'. I'm an old NeXT guy, so there was no way I was putting up with OpenStep 5x with the control key in the wrong place.

    It wasn't that hard to do. If you are interested, let me know.

    --
    Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
  92. Ahem. you mean FOUR BILLION in the bank by Type-IIa · · Score: 1
    Yeah, that US Dollar, Yankee-Boy

    Apple posted 38 million profit in the first quarter this year.

  93. Re:C# by Eccles · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure how you justify that a monitor with lower rez than the Apple bests it Apple?

    The Viewsonic bests the old Apple 22" in size and resolution, which was the point I was making. The new Apple is probably slightly smaller but higher-res, so which is better depends on your needs and perhaps your eyesight. (Your equipment too, but if you're in a position to buy a $3500 monitor, you can probably afford an equipment upgrade.)

    Me, I wish I was in a position that it would be worth asking: can you run these in portrait mode so you can put two side-by-side?

    --
    Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  94. Your coolness factor could drop a lot... by niftyeric · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    if you actually did more than talk about your cool new iPod and showed your friends your "cool" new iPod. ;)

    --
    proton != antielectron
  95. "Get a Mac" - Just one more person... by stixnpics · · Score: 1

    If just one more person tells me to get a Mac...
    I swear I'm gonna do it.

    Of course, that "one person" is my wife.

  96. HD! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since noones mentioned it yet, the reason for the increased pixel density of the new 23" display is that it's High Definition instead of just digital like current LCD's.

    As someone else mentioned, SUN technicly has a larger LCD witht heir 24", but it has the same resolution and much lower pixel density, not to mention that it doesn't support HD signals. SO once again Apple releases a "first".

  97. Get a clue: they don't conflict by sjonke · · Score: 1

    At least my 2.4 GHz phone and my Airport Base Station do not. I did a test, using my phone at the same time as a download via the basestation had absolutely zero impact on the download speed or the signal strength. In fact the download speed happened to slightly increase, though certainly unrelated. I suppose if I kept trying different channels on the base station until I hit the one that the phone uses I'd see a problem, but I didn't bother to try it.

    --
    --- What?
  98. 10 gigs still isn't enough by Cainxinth · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Big mp3 collectors like me are waiting for the elusive 100 gig portable or always-on wireless music streamer. 2000 songs or about 130 albums is nice, but what I really want is to be able to go anywhere with every single album i own/illegally downloaded.

    1. Re:10 gigs still isn't enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The key with iPod is that the fast transfers and easy UI (in both the player and iTunes) make it trivial to change the music. My CD collection comes to about 50GB, but having 5GB of it with me all the time in my shirt pocket is much better than having the whole 50GB with me in a large player that I have to carry in a bag, and that has a poor interface.

      Of course there are trade-offs with iPod like any technology, but I think Apple made all the right trade-offs, coming up with a great device that's fun to use and serves its purpose very well. I love mine ... might be the best gadget I've ever had, except maybe my Cinema Display, which I've never even had to adjust a setting on, not on the display or in software. PowerBook G4 is pretty fucking cool, too. I write and record music wherever I happen to be, all on a 1" thick notebook.

  99. YMMV by maggard · · Score: 2
    Get a clue: they don't conflict

    Well thank you for your helpful and informative posting. I've no doubt it will be well appreciated by those folks who haven't had your fortunate experience.

    I've had any number of friends and clients report problems, particularly those in device-rich environments like offices. Indeed one recently had to decide between their new Siemens 4200-series 2.4 GHz consumer phone system I'd recommended and their WiFi base station just brought in as part of another project. The same is true for the customer who watched his presentation go down in flames when a bevy of Bluetooth devices in the room slowed the 802.11b link he was on down to uselessness.

    No doubt the authors of numerous articles on this exact topic (see Google) will also be cheered to hear that you've exhaustively researched & tested this and determined their own results are in fact wrong.

    Where would we all be without your support and cheerful insight?

    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  100. Forgive me, for I have sinned by Van+Halen · · Score: 2
    Thanks to everyone who's pointed out what a complete moron I am. I wouldn't have figured it out otherwise! And I even screwed up that one... (idiot)

    I did, in fact, read all of the links in the story except the MacCentral one. I had submitted a story on all this just a minute or so after the guy that got it did, so I thought I'd add the little tidbit that I didn't see in his submission. I was wrong. Can slashdot ever forgive me?

    As I said, moderators, please mod me down to -1 (I'm posting this at +2 for maximum karma damage) and if you find it in your hearts to do so, moderate all of my recent posts down as well. Thank you.

  101. IHBT (nt) by damiam · · Score: 2


    --
    It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
  102. I am siked about the adapter.. by cannacoke · · Score: 1
    I was looking over the site and almost fell out of my seat, D-Link is making the USB to bluetooth adapter, who would have known. I have a couple of D-Link's 802.11b stuff and it works great (although I still had to buy the apple card). It would be cool if they came up with Mac drivers for their 11b cards.

    Oh my head,
    CanNaCoke

  103. Re:Apple Needs to Re-Design all Laptop Motherboard by robertchin · · Score: 2

    Same thing with my powerbook G4, although the caps lock light still toggles on and off when technically it's acting as a control key. Go figure.

  104. Watching E-Bay... by jcr · · Score: 2

    I'm just waiting for the flood of people cashing in their 22" Cinema Displays to buy a 23" Cinema Display HD...

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  105. Dark & expensive by Turbyne · · Score: 0

    From http://www.apple.com/displays/acd23/

    "Shines in lab settings, too
    "The Apple Cinema HD Display is just the ticket for 3D modeling, and for graphics-intensive visualization tasks on the outer reaches of science and engineering. And the Apple Cinema HD Display is a great research partner in yet another sense as well: it emits near-zero electromagnetic output, minimizing the kind of interference with sensitive scientific equipment that can skew readings or results."

    Guess that makes it one sexy, big-ass, hi-res, expensive DARK monitor.

    --
    ~A'Ëq'i4d)^'$ÊSÈòB
  106. Super Rich?! You retard!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't even have to be rich to afford $1100 of computer equipment, loser.

  107. Re:Slashcode's HTML vs. Microsoft HTML by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's an excellent suggestion. Since Linux is about to become obsolete, due to the Hurd, Slashdot will most likely need to investigate a superior platform like WinXP and IIS.

    Since Perl is part of .NET, it stands to reason that they could quickly move the code over and implement web services and a proper underlying database.

  108. Cool monitor... by Tug3 · · Score: 1

    ...if only I could buy one!

    Yeah, sure it's cool that Apple releases a updated cinema monitor (about time someone might add). I'm just one of those sorry sods that own a PowerBook, and have to settle to a analog-monitor. As the PB is my only computer I have to live with a huge tube sitting on my desk. Well, at least it's easier to turn around than the Apple flats...

    I can only wonder how Apple doesn't offer any monitors for PB owners at all! I wish there only was an Apple monitor to suit the coolness of the Ti-PB... Meanwhile I'll just spray-paint my old Sony tube with silver paint...

    --
    If all else fails, pull the plug and get out...
    The Life is out there...
  109. Baby by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Keep whining you baby! You show real maturity by bitching, moaning, and getting your page slashdotted. Loser.

  110. More info on the iPod software by SpookComix · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The software they're using to power the iPod has been rumored to be ported to other hand-held devices as well. There are even talks of making the devices compatible with PCs, but possibly with limited functionality.

    --SC

    --
    You read fiction? I write it! Lemme know what you th