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Apple Gives Laptops Speed Bumps

sockit2me9000 writes "Apple released their new PowerBook today. They include faster processors across the board (up to 1GHz), Radeon 9000 GPUs, and the top-of-the-line model will include a slot-loading SuperDrive. Price points remain about the same. New iBook was released as well."

35 of 738 comments (clear)

  1. Nice and cheap by e8johan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have to say something that I never though I'd say: "These new Macs look great! They are relatively cheap, run *nix and have al the hardware you could wish for!"

    My sincere congratulations to Apple for having swung around from being a stubborn, expensive brand to become a computer supplier that I like. I will concider an Apple next time I buy a computer!

  2. Re:This is great!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Indeed, but for us Europeans, they have not realized that now $1 is very close to 1. I expected Apple to put roughly the same pre-tax cost on both sides of the pond. No way, it's about 10% more. To the point that it may be worth a trip to NYC to buy a fully loaded PowerBook.

  3. PowerBook G4 & iBook by catwh0re · · Score: 4, Informative

    All laptops are now $200(USD) cheaper than before.

  4. Must be a first by protohiro1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Interesting that this makes a portable Apple's ENTRY LEVEL option. The low-end ibook is the cheapest apple you can buy.

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    1. Re:Must be a first by binaryDigit · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well not quite. They still have the original iMac for $799. So the iBook can be thought of as the most expensive G3 they sell.

  5. iBook still stuck at G3 by elliotj · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wonder when they iBook is gonna be given the dignity of a G4 processor. The life of the G3 has been remarkable but I can't help thinking that it has been stretched out not by virtue of the chip itself but rather because Apple is having trouble getting better and faster chips from Moto (hence the IBM PPC rumors recently).

    This is pretty cool, especially for the TiBook. I'm sure video houses will appreciate the superdive to let them make rough cuts on the road and share them.

    Now, sadly, my TiBook is no longer state-of-the-art. I can tell its feelings were hurt: this morning it ask me if it looked fat.

    1. Re:iBook still stuck at G3 by 0x69 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The current iBooks use the new IBM 750fx "G3" CPU's. What's holding them back is *marketing* - the 750fx goes up to 1GHz (25% faster) with 200MHz (100% faster) bus, but Apple's too afraid of eating into (more profitable) TiBook sales to ship faster iBooks.

      IBM did a *really* nice job designing the 750fx CPU. Back in May/June (when Apple introduced it in the iBook) one of the Apple hardware sites did some G3(750fx) vs. G4(Moto) comparison benchmarks. Bottom line: for anything that wasn't written to use AltiVec, the IBM G3 was just as fast as the Moto G4 (at same MHz).

      Weak video systems really slowed older iBooks down in (eye-candy-full) OSX. It's far less a problem in the new iBooks.

      Understand what you'll be using it for and do your homework BEFORE spending the $$$ to get a G4.

      --
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  6. Re:argh by MoxCamel · · Score: 5, Informative

    Be advised that Apple (well, the Apple Store) has a "no return" policy if you change any configuration, such as adding more memory or a bigger hard drive.

    I know this because I wanted to exchange my 15" iMac for a 17" iMac. They didn't want to do it because I had ordered my iMac with extra memory. I had to talk to a manager who not only accepted the exchange, but waived the stocking fee. Their staff was courteous and professional, but persistence pays.

  7. Re:Apple proves the 'rumours guys' wrong by zaren · · Score: 5, Informative

    MOSR has been irrelevant in the rumors "industry" (in my opinion) since they completely missed the boat on the iMac all those years ago. Their "rumors" tend to come from pie-eyed "what-if" scenarios snarfed form IRC these days.

    There's much better Mac rumor sites out there - MacRumors and Macslash being two of them.

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  8. 128MB? by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Note: I am not bashing Apple here. I have owned Macs.

    How far can you really get with OS X and the 128MB these Powerbooks ship with? OS X is great, but the prevailing opinion is that it's more memory hungry than Windows. (It's quite possible that this is a myth. Reviewers love to say dumb things like "I highly recommend that you upgrade to 512MB if you plan on doing more than simple word processing.")

    I'll add, of course, that 128MB uses less power than 256MB, which is important for laptops.

    1. Re:128MB? by dhovis · · Score: 5, Interesting
      128 is the bare minimum. It works, and if you don't run more than 1 or 2 apps at a time, you might not notice the swapping. I have 384MB in my original iBook 500, and it runs Jaguar just fine. It bogs down a bit if I have 10-12 apps running, but otherwise swapping is not a problem.

      The good news is that 512MB chips for the iBook are now available for $80-100, so you can max out the memory (640MB) for a reasonable price. Apple memory is still expensive though.

      --

      --
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    2. Re:128MB? by dhovis · · Score: 5, Informative
      cracking an iBook or PowerBook open can be a little daunting (and warranty-voiding if done wrong)

      You haven't done it, have you? Easy as pie. Pop off the keyboard. On the TiBook, you will see the 2 slots. On the iBook, you need to remove the Airport card (if installed), and 2 small screws to remove the cover over the memory slot. Even if you don't know what you are doing, it doesn't take more than 10 minutes.

      In fact, I think there is a diagram on the bottom of the keyboard to help you. There are definitely directions in the owners manual.

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    3. Re:128MB? by Fugly · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, while normally outrageously expensive, apple memory happens to be pretty cheap right now. You can double the ram in any system for $40. Bumping the TiBook from 512MB of RAM to a gig of RAM for $40 sounds like a pretty sweet deal to me. Bumping the 256MB iBook to 512MB for $40 doesn't sound bad either.

  9. Don't forget the iBook in all of this... by rjstanford · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If you don't mind the 1024x768 display (and its a great screen, good antialiasing etc), the new low-end iBook is quite a deal. From apple.com, a 700mhz G3 (faster than PIII-800s seen in many low-end notebooks) with 640mb RAM (OSX is pretty memory intensive) can be yours for $1189. That's getting nicely price-competitive with Dell, etc on the low end.

    A somewhat nicer model with the 800mhz G3, a DVD-ROM/CD-RW drive and the same 640mb of RAM lists for $1489. That gets you a very potent UN*X box with a lot of wonderful features, a lovely OS, and a massively high portability level.

    All this, and an amazing attention to detail as well. Really, switching to Apple is like moving from Chevy to BMW. Sure it may not stack up on paper (horsepower per dollar, etc) but you can end up with an incredibly friendly machine that's a pure pleasure to use! Do yourself a favor and go check 'em out if you've been on the fence.

    --
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  10. Re:It's expensive, but .... by strictnein · · Score: 4, Informative

    IMHO a 1Ghz G4 is about the same as a 4Ghz P4 in speed.

    lol

    come on now, that's just silly and you know it. the length of pipeline does not a processor make (or some stupid thing like that)

    IMHO I am the sexiest man alive. But, in reality, it seems that most (all?) women don't agree.

  11. Re:It's expensive, but .... by cosmo7 · · Score: 5, Funny

    So why not buy a cheaper PC (yes, even with Windows thrown in) and install OsX over the top?

    and then fly around on your anti-grav jetbike.

  12. Here's the text of a CNET news story on the topic: by mrpuffypants · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Apple Computer on Wednesday updated its entire portable line, most notably adding its first PowerBook capable of burning DVDs.

    The PowerBook line now includes an 867MHz model, available now for $2,299, and a 1GHz model that can both burn and read CDs and DVDs. That model will be available later this month for $2,999.

    "This is what our customers have been waiting for," Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president of hardware marketing, said in a statement. He noted that the new PowerBook is the first notebook with a slot-loading drive that can burn DVDs.

    As expected, Apple also bumped up the speed of all of its iBooks by 100MHz while dropping the price of each model by $200. The consumer portables also sport improved graphics now, using ATI Technologies' Mobility Radeon 7500 chip with up to 32MB of graphics memory.

    With the faster ATI chip, the iBook can now take advantage of the improved Quartz Extreme graphics engine built into the latest version of Mac OS X.

    The three iBook models consist of a $999 model with a 700MHz chip, a 12.1-inch screen, a CD-ROM drive, 128MB of memory and a 20GB hard drive; a $1,299 model with an 800MHz chip, a 12.1-inch screen, a combination CD-rewritable/DVD-ROM drive, 128MB of memory and a 30GB hard drive; and a $1,599 model with an 800MHz chip, a 14-inch screen, a CD-RW/DVD-ROM drive, 256MB of memory and a 30GB hard drive.

    As for the PowerBooks, the low-end model comes with a CD-RW/DVD-ROM drive, 256MB of memory and a 40GB hard drive. In addition to the DVD burner, the high-end model includes 512MB of memory, a 60GB hard drive and a preinstalled Airport card for wireless networking.

  13. Re:Slashdot Apple's bitch? by benedict · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The proliferation of categories is pretty silly,
    but ...

    this is a unix-focused site to some extent. And
    Apple ships more unix than any other manufacturer.
    So it stands to reason that we'd talk about them
    here.

    --
    Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
  14. Not sad, good engineering. by Arker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The majority of the processing needed in modern pcs is in fact for all the graphics. So it makes perfect sense to have a faster GPU than CPU - that's where the horsepower is needed. Even if you're doing relatively computationally intense work (I run statistical analyses daily) the requirement still don't add up to the level required to run Aqua or WinXPs graphics.

    Remember the Amigas? Positively legendary machines, and for good reason, they were designed this way. The CPU wasn't much at all by modern standards, but it was enough to do what it needed to do just fine (and, in all honesty, enough to handle the non-graphical computations done on most pcs to this day.) The Video Toaster was capable of working pretty much independant of the CPU, and it had a lot more horsepower... the end result was a machine that surpassed PCs made many years later in real functional power.

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  15. Winter in Whistler by snowlick · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Anyone else see the name on the DVD the next to the laptop on apple.com? it read: "Winter in Whistler". I sense a swipe at Windows XP!

    --
    Crystal Meth: Would you ingest somthing made from a poisonous gas and an explosive metal? You do it every day -- Salt!
  16. Myth of the "Working Class" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Apple Ibooks are still out of reach for those of us who compromise the working classes

    Excuse me, the reason I can afford a Mac is that I work therefore that makes me in the "working class". What you are talking about is that "Slashdot Class" -- a group of people that think its a sin to pay for anything. Which makes the best notebook for you the one found in the dumpster behind a fortune 500 company. Instead of using the Windows 2000 Pro install already on it, you fdisk the harddrive and install Gentoo Linux so you can show it off at your next meeting of the 2600 club complete with Anarchy and Calvin peeing on the Windows logo stickers.

    For the rest of us in the "working class", Apple has produced some awesome notebooks at a reasonable fee. Where is the PC Notebook that burns DVDs? What Linux distro supports that?

  17. A Number of Good Reasons by FreeUser · · Score: 4, Interesting

    1) AMD and Intel have both embraced Microsoft's Pallaadium "trusted" computing nonsense, which may quite possibly be leveraged lock free operating systems out of the platform at some point in the future. IBM and Apple in contrast ARE NOT DOING THIS (at least at present), giving us the very ironic possibility that it will be Apple hardware in the future that is open (and able to dual boot alternative operating systems) and NOT Intel/AMD.

    2) The laptops have noticably longer battery life than their equivelent Intel counterparts

    3) and snazzy 16:10 displays...

    4) The high end model now comes with a DVD-RW burner and software

    5) The OS is Unix-like. Dual boot OS X with Gentoo PPC GNU/Linux, and you have the best of all possible worlds.

    That last point is the most important. My next laptop will almost certainly now be an Apple, with the DVD-RW burner. Of course, I'm not going to order them until shipping times become a couple of days, rather than a month, and I'll probably prefer just going to the store to buy one I can take home with me, but with this new release the Intel platform, with its Microsoft pre-installed crap (that I blow away anyway), its short battery life and no non-external DVD-RW burning options, has lost me as customer. Palladium has likely made that loss perminent.

    So yes, unlike many such promotional stories, I think this is a big deal, it is certainly News for Nerds, and for many readers, myself included, it is certainly Stuff That Matters.

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  18. They aren't so underpowered... by Arker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't fall into the Mhz myth, the clock speeds on these things are lower, but they get more work done in a clock cycle too.

    That said, they're still a little slower in terms of work done per second than the fastest Intel has, just not nearly as much so as you may think looking at the clock speeds. But it doesn't really matter all that much. CPU speed is just one factor of overall performance, and with a good design it doesn't need to be nearly as fast as it would on a poorer design. The design on the Macs really is much better, the bottlenecks aren't as bad, and they have plenty of power where it counts. Think of it as finesse vs. brawn in comparison with your typical Intel/AMD system, where the surfeit of CPU speed is used to overcome a basically less efficient design. Consider that probably over 90% of the computation done on a pc these days is concentrated in the graphics rendering, and the look at how much more efficiently the mac handles that - all the way from a GPU which is faster than the CPU to the Altivec system in the CPU, which beats the hell out of MMX/SSE and all that.

    I'm typing this on a TiBook now, a 666 Mhz G4, and believe me, when I put it up against a new Intel based notebook it won't take the speed crown, by any means, but it's close enough that I don't really care. It will outperform Intel notebooks with over twice the clockspeed quite handily on most tasks, and when you look at things like the screen and the cd-rw/dvd drive... Apple was overpriced once but it's changed. You'd be very hard pressed to find an intel notebook with the same features in the same weight-class much cheaper. And OS X beats WinXP in nearly every category for my money. Easier to use, prettier, AND more powerful under the good as well... tcsh or bash beats cmd.exe any day.

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  19. Time's are a-changin' by MisterSquid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Excluding my grandma who is sysadmin in a linux-only rendering farm (that's a joke), Apple is the only option consumers have to WinTel. Apple's tenacity, inventiveness, and rich *nixy-goodness is why Apple is the darling of the computing world these days, even at 6% market share.

    I'm not trolling, but I'm guessing you've not yet used a recent (4 years) machine made by Apple. (My apologies if I've put my foot in my ignormaus. Apple is becoming a favorite among newly converted geeks because they produce good stuff and because they're finally starting to get it: *nix, Photoshop, Apache, SSH, MS Office. Apple's laptops have no WinTel equivalent. The interaction between the command line and Aqua is something at which to gawk.

    On a less preach-to-the-choir note, is it so different than announcments for minor revisions of relatively arcane (if beloved) open source software? Not that I'm saying such posts are bad, but that it might be the nature of the Slashdot beast.

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    blog
  20. They're great machines, that's why by wirefarm · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've never had a machine that I liked using as much.

    The thing that makes a big difference for me is that the internationalization is seamless; right now, I'm converting a PHP app from English to Japanese. Using my iBook I can open the files from the Linux server using samba and easily convert the strings in the text editor that comes with Os X. If I have to do other editing to the code, I prefer vi, which comes standard. SSH is right there for me. My shell works the way I need it to, without installing Cygwin.

    I have 4 computers on my desk - Redhat/Japanese Windows dualboot IBM Thinkpad, 2 NT Workstations (Eng. & Jp.) and my iBook. I could use any of them that I wanted, but the iBook is what works best for me. (The RedHat box comes close, but I've tweaked the hell out of it to get it just right - it would take weeks to set up another box the same way, whereas I could pick up another iBook and replace this one instantly.)

    The suite of "iApps" (iCal, iTunes, iMovie, iPhoto, iEtc...) are a joy to use, better than anything you can get for Windows. Really. Mail filters out spam perfectly for me out of the box. Viruses? Not even an issue.

    Plus, every app looks great. I stare at the computer all day at work, it might as well look good. Let's face it, Windows is tired-looking, even XP, which to me looks cartoonish and pathetic.

    As for games, I wouldn't know - I haven't got time for them.

    After a while, you get to the point where you'll be happy to pay a bit more for a machine that actually works.

    Oh, yeah, BATTERY LIFE. Sweet.

    Cheers,
    Jim

    --
    -- My Weblog.
  21. Re:MegaHertz Myth!! by kasparov · · Score: 5, Informative
    Google to the rescue!

    So as not to be a complete ass, the first link from that article as a statement that a P4 overclocked to 3.9GHz (wow--he used liquid nitrogen) was only able to do 4.9 Gigaflops. A dual-G4 1GHz did 15 Gigaflops...

    --
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  22. No USB 2.0? by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I looked for it on the web site, but I didn't see a mention about USB 2.0 support. Since external FireWire storage devices seem to be getting driven out of the market place (judging from my local Staples and CompUSA) it would have been nice to see this feature.

  23. Re:It's expensive, but .... by pauljlucas · · Score: 5, Informative
    Maybe a USB-serial converter would work.
    They do work. Try Keyspan.
    --
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  24. Re:Proof that its still not good enough by ahknight · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is proof that Apple still has a ways to go. If their changes were that radical, nobody would wait for "...next time I buy a computer.." and would actually do it NOW.

    Radical or not, I, like most people, have to wait until I have the money to actually buy it in order to, well, buy it. I'm going to shoot for the entry iBook the next time I buy a computer because that's when I'll have the money to do it.

    Besides, what moron goes out and gets a new computer when their current one works just fine? I have a PowerMac G4/450 that's over three years old and it runs 10.2 at a more than acceptable speed ("damn fast") and is no where near needing an upgrade. I'm only getting the iBook because I need an iBook. There are those people that buy things for the sake of having them and then there are those that buy when there is a need. Obviously the previous poster does not need a new computer now. The fact that he is waiting is not a statement on Apple's ability to market or make a product but a statement on the efficiency of the poster with regard to his possessions and money.

    Hmm, a mature attitude towards something on Slashdot. Anyone else feel that cold draft come out of the cracks of Hell?

  25. Good Timing by WesHertlein · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, I seemed to have lucked out with my first Apple purchase. One of the first e-mails I looked at this morning:

    To Our Valued Apple Customer:

    Apple is pleased to announce a new generation of iBooks with faster processor speeds. We invite you to visit the Apple Store at http://www.apple.com/store for details.

    Your 600Mhz iBook has been upgraded to a 700Mhz iBook at no additional charge. If you would like to review the changes made to your order, visit http://www.apple.com/orderstatus.

    If you have any questions, feel free to contact us at the number below. Thank you for choosing Apple!

    Yup, that's right. My bad luck, I just ordered an iBook last week. This is a *very* cool move by Apple... they simply canceled my old order (for the low end model) and swapped in a new order (for the low end model). I'm saving $200 + tax on this, and getting a faster model.

    Quick note for those who recommend gobs of RAM... that's done and done. Same day I ordered the iBook, I placed an order with Coast To Coast Memory for an addition 512 MB. $95 after tax and shipping, and it's already here.

    That's the downside... I wanted the laptop this week. At least they had a good excuse for not getting it to me. :)

  26. Re:"speed bumps"? by qengho · · Score: 4, Informative

    where I live, speed bumps are used to slow people down.

    Heh. Although the term seems incongruous, it's shorthand for "bumps up the speed."

  27. Re:battery life by BinxBolling · · Score: 5, Informative
    So can I watch an entire DVD on a single battery charge?

    Yes. Also, if you download something like DVDBackup and use it to copy the DVD to your hard drive before your trip, the Apple DVD player can play it from there, which will probably consume less power than spinning the DVD drive would.

  28. Re:Considering switching to iBook by mikerich · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I would appreciate it if you guys could comment on how difficult a defection to Apple could be for me.

    I made my iBook my main home machine about 3 months ago and it was relatively painless. Getting used to not pressing Ctrl was the hardest task.

    Without knowing exactly what you do, the best answer is 'it depends'. Your main expense may well be replacing software that you have used on the PC - which could work out VERY expensive. If you have a lot of PC software you might want to think about getting a Windows emulator to help you continue working as you replace software with Mac applications.

    Microsoft are offering good deals on Office X right now which eases the pain of buying what for many of us is an essential product.

    Remember, OSX has a very nice little mail program thrown in for standard, AppleWorks is a perfectly competent office application if you don't need all the features of Office and naturally you have a browser included. There is a DVD player, the very lovely iTunes, iPhoto, iCal and iChat and a CD burner. For many people this will be all the productivity software they ever need. (Assuming that you consider that DVD player to constitute 'productivity' :) )

    Best wishes,
    Mike.

  29. Re:A small survey for slashdot by finkployd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've avoided Apple computers all my life. I have worked with all flavors of Unix (except HP-UX), Windows, DOS, and OS/390 in my short career (I'm 24). However lately I noticed that more and more people have iBooks and tiBooks at meetings, conferences, and generally everywhere I go. I work for a largish university (PSU) and am involved in several consortiums like internet2, Educause, etc.

    Lately I gave in and started inquiring what all the fuss was about and learned about OS X and started following apple a little closer. Well, to make a long story short, I'm typing this slashdot comment on a flat panel iMac :) So yeah, I never took apple seriously until about a year ago, but now I'm pretty impressed with them and see them making a comeback (if nowhere else, certainly in higher education).

    I still use the other operating systems for servers and whatnot, but I will probably end up using OS X as my primary desktop once it gets a little more polished (as cool as it is, it still has a ways to go, but I have no doubt it will get there)

    Finkployd

  30. They Even Updated our Orders!! by skeeter1001 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not only did they release the new upgrades -- they contacted those of us that have placed orders which have not shipped yet and offered us an upgrade. Granted -- the upgrade offered was "at no additional cost" even though the new system cost $400 LESS! I pointed that out and they made the necessary adjustments :) WAY TO GO APPLE!