Updated eMac Line Released Today
TellarHK writes "Today, Apple's eMac line got a nice upgrade with all models getting a 32M Radeon 7500 video chipset, display capable of 1280x960 resolution on a 17" flat CRT, and price cuts across the board. $799 will get you a base model with 40GB of drive, 128M of RAM (continuing the rather odd stinginess on RAM configurations), and an 800Mhz G4. $999 will get you an extra 20GB of drive and a 1Ghz processor, while $1299 lands you a whopping (ahem) 256M of memory, 80G, and a SuperDrive at 4x."
You also get an Airport Extreme wireless slot and iTunes 4 included along with the rest iLife. I think the bus speed has been bumped up to 133, but I could be wrong about that
FYI, if you are a student you can get better prices at their online educational store:
(For my school - University of Maryland at College Park)
$749.00
800MHz PowerPC G4
128MB SDRAM
40GB Ultra ATA drive
CD-ROM drive
Discounted from $799 retail price
$949.00
1GHz PowerPC G4
128MB SDRAM
60GB Ultra ATA drive
Combo drive
Discounted from $999 retail price
$1,149.00
1GHz PowerPC G4
256MB SDRAM
80GB Ultra ATA drive
SuperDrive
Discounted from $1,299 retail price
$1,528.00
Image
1GHz PowerPC G4
1GB SDRAM
80GB Ultra ATA drive
SuperDrive
AirPort Extreme built-in
Discounted from $1,698 retail price
Even better deals can be had at Apple B&M stores in universities.
You have to be a valid student to get these prices.
There are also refurbished products that you can buy with Applecare over here.
Adi Gadwale.
see here
I hope you die painfully and alone.
The video card is also at the bare minimum for OS X with the ATI 7500
I run OS X with either an AGP Rage 128 with 16 MB VRAM or a Rage 128 Mobility with 8 MB VRAM. It runs just fine on those without Quartz Extreme, so I'm sure that a Radeon 7500 running QE will be quite nice. It's not like a 17" CRT is that monstrous.
I do agree that you need more RAM, but as another poster has already pointed out, it is nice to be forced to buy as little RAM as possible because of Apple's prices on memory. I would always spec out from the Apple store with the least memory and then go buy what RAM you need from somewhere else. It will save you a bundle.
The eMac (Education Mac) has it built in because according to Apple:
" Schools have told us they really like an all-in-one design because it saves space in classrooms and computer labs." emac