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G5 PowerBook "Challenge"

CarlBenda writes "MacWorld/UK has some interesting quotes from Jon Rubinstein, senior vice president of Hardware Engineering at Apple concerning the possibility of a G5 powerbook. He's said that a G5 powerbook is "an issue of good, solid engineering" and that "a few years ago, nobody thought it would be possible to get a G4 processor in a PowerBook". Start saving your money."

105 of 529 comments (clear)

  1. "I'm not dead yet.." by grub · · Score: 5, Insightful


    A G5 PowerBook.. not bad for a company that has been dying for 20+ years according to the trolls.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:"I'm not dead yet.." by RevMike · · Score: 4, Insightful
      not bad for a company that has been dying for 20+ years according to the trolls.

      They were nearly dead until Jobs came back. Apple before the iMac had one foot in the grave. Now the company is doing high quality engineering and top notch marketing.

    2. Re:"I'm not dead yet.." by macmurph · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Apple has %7 of the laptop market with a trend towards strong growth in this area. The new G4 and speculative G5 PowerBooks, coupled with the release of MacOS X Panther 10.3 could bolster Apple's laptop markethshare to %10. This would place Apple as the number one supplier of laptops in the world.

  2. 9 Fans by cheesekeeper · · Score: 2, Informative

    The DP G5 has Nine fans in it. I believe the 17" PB has two. That's a little bit of work.

    --

    Best read in good ol' Monaco 9 point.

    1. Re:9 Fans by jo_ham · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And the G5 chassis is basically a giant wind tunnel with carefully aligned vanes and aerofoils. There's no easy way to fit that sort of design into a chassis less than an inch deep (even if it is over 17" wide).

    2. Re:9 Fans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Power Mac G5 has nine fans in it because they want it to be quiet. If you run nine fans at low speed, you move the same amount of air as one fan at high (i.e., noisy) speed.

      The PowerPC G5 at 1.8 GHz dissipates 42 watts of power. That's about the same as the G4 at 1.25 GHz... which is now shipping in a PowerBook.

    3. Re:9 Fans by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 5, Informative

      Good grief, I see comments like this in every story about the G5. There are large numbers of fans so that the machine can run quietly. They could have got by with less if they made a machine as loud as a typical Intel/AMD offering. The fans spend most of their time not spinning or at very, very low revs. Also means that they can add faster, hotter processors for quite a while before they need to worry about changing the design. It's a forward-looking, quiet, controlled bit of design, not a roaring oven.

    4. Re:9 Fans by pmz · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's no easy way to fit that sort of design into a chassis less than an inch deep (even if it is over 17" wide).

      I disagree. The G5 case is designed very similarly to the high-end UNIX workstations (Sun Blade 2000, Ultra 80, etc.), where optimum cooling and reliability are high priority (let's not flame about no ECC in the G5...oops).

      Using a laptop hard drive, battery, etc. along with a slightly powered-down G5 would be very feasible in a laptop. Third-party manufacturers did this for the UltraSPARC IIi in laptops, where the only obvious deficiency, then, was battery life. No one really expects a laptop to be as powerful as a desktop, anyway (settling for a 5400RPM disk is pretty sucky).

  3. The challenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Start saving your money.

    Is that the challenge? To save enough money to buy a Mac? That is going to be tough.

  4. Um... okay? by nacturation · · Score: 5, Insightful
    To sum up the article:
    • The G5 processor runs really hot
    • Notebooks don't like heat
    • It'll be tough to get the G5 in a PowerBook
    How did this made the front page?
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    1. Re:Um... okay? by sammy+baby · · Score: 5, Funny

      Because Apple is suddenly cool these days, and PowerBooks are very very pretty. And shiny. See? Ooh, shiny things.

      (I'm pretty sure that's the logic, anyway.)

    2. Re:Um... okay? by Frymaster · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Because Apple is suddenly cool these days,

      no. apple was always cool. it's just that people are only starting to realize it now. think about it:

      1. one of the original pioneers (if not the pioneer) of home computing in general
      2. first comapny to bring the wimps thing out of the lab and into the living room
      3. first company to bring risc out of the server room and into the living room
      4. first company to make a unix mom-n-dad can actually use

      and, despite all this, the computers still look nice.

      very cool indeed!

    3. Re:Um... okay? by bob670 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Easy, Microsoft didn't do anything today, the RIAA didn't issue any new dumb press releases and SCO ran out of people to sue.

    4. Re:Um... okay? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The same dude said a while back that G5s weren't going to show up in laptops for some reason or another.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    5. Re:Um... okay? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Their computers have always been cool. Well, originally they were very cool, but for a while they were just sorta cool, and then when they moved to PowerPC they got very cool again, but when they couldn't get the G4 past 500 Mhz for a couple of years that wasn't too cool. Anyway, the OS mostly wasn't cool at all through OS8 and OS9, and it's only been since OSX that the software and hardware has come together to make computers that are totally cool again.

    6. Re:Um... okay? by Phroggy · · Score: 5, Informative

      1-3 belong to commedore.(Amiga)

      1. The VIC-20 shipped in 1980 and the Commodore 64 in 1982. The Apple I shipped in 1976 and Apple II in 1977.

      2. The Amiga didn't ship until September 1985. The Macintosh shipped in January 1984 (remember the SuperBowl ad?).

      3. The Amiga used the same Motorola 680x0 CISC chips the old Macs did. Only the new ones are PowerPC-based. Apple has been shipping PowerMacs since 1994.

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

      mostly useless Open Source OS that runs on their over priced hardware

      Darwin also runs on x86 hardware, although support is VERY limited.

      Apple's hardware isn't overpriced when you compare it to competing hardware with similar specs. The first problem is, Apple doesn't make low-end machines, so when you compare a low-end PC to a mid-range Mac, yeah, the Mac is more expensive. The second problem is, Motorola sucks: Apple's mid-range Macs are slower than mid-range PCs with similar features and price, so you have to get a high-end Mac to beat the speed of a mid-range PC (which won't have the other features the high-end Mac does). IBM is stepping up to the plate, though, and this issue should be resolved within the next two years.

      Besides, they ship just about the only laptops you can buy that come with Perl pre-installed. ;-)

      P.s. If you think the G5 "Looks nice" you must have just had a stroke.

      Hey man, what have you got agaist cheese graters?

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    8. Re:Um... okay? by Echemus · · Score: 4, Informative

      Erm, unless Apple had a RISC based PC in or before 1987, I very much doubt they were the first to bring RISC out of the server room.

      Acorn in the UK developed its own RISC processor (Acorn Risc Processor or ARM - sound familiar?) and released their first computer using it in 1987. It was, what, 5-6 years later or so that Apple released its first PowerPC machine?

      Of course, the A in ARM has been replaced with "Advanced", but Acorn were still the first company to bring out a RISC based personal computer.

    9. Re:Um... okay? by angst_ridden_hipster · · Score: 2, Funny

      OK. While I'm a big Apple advocate and an Apple owner, I must take exception to the statement that Apple has always been "cool."

      My G4 is not cool. It heats up the flippin' room. My cat curls up behind the fan vent like there was a crackling fire behind the grille.

      Before that, my 604e/180 dualie cranked out more heat than your average BLU-118/B thermobaric-tipped ordinance.

      Great machines, yes. Cool, no.

      --
      Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
      www.fogbound.net
    10. Re:Um... okay? by nacturation · · Score: 3, Funny

      P.s. If you think the G5 "Looks nice" you must have just had a stroke.

      Hey man, what have you got agaist cheese graters?


      The new G5 features the Remington Microscreen. Apparently, Steve Jobs was so impressed, he bought the company!

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    11. Re:Um... okay? by dex22 · · Score: 3, Informative
      3. first company to bring risc out of the server room and into the living room

      Now, this has already been settled in court. Apple claimed to have released the first Risc PC, oh, two years after Acorn released a home machine actually called the "Risc PC", based on the ARM6 RISC processor. The court stopped Apple from making the claim, and awarded a nominal sum of compensation.

    12. Re:Um... okay? by commodoresloat · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think it's fair to say that Apple will have a G5 powerbook before Amiga. But at least Apple G4 owners can no longer gloat to C-64 owners about their broadband capability....

    13. Re:Um... okay? by craw · · Score: 2, Informative

      IBM brought out their ill-fated RT PC in 1986. IIRC, RT stood for RISC Technology but we called it Real Turkey. They later dropped the PC designation when ppl realized that it was kind of expensive for a PC.

      I got to use a RT when I was in grad school (IBM donated a bunch of them to our University).

    14. Re:Um... okay? by sammy+baby · · Score: 4, Funny

      For the record, I have nothing against Apple. In fact, I post from a 15" Ti PowerBook (no - not one of the swank new ones with the 802.11g, regrettably) which is my favorite computer to work on.

      You have to admit, though, that pre OS X, telling your average /. reader that you were a huge fan of Apple was like saying that you really, really enjoyed weird fetish videos. The best you could hope for was a nervous grin and a "how nice for you," but inside you know the guy was thinking. "why does this loser get of on this?"

    15. Re:Um... okay? by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ah, but C64 owners can gloat about having 64 kilobytes, while G5 owners are stuck with just 64 bits.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    16. Re:Um... okay? by MasonMcD · · Score: 3, Informative

      Lemme help joo with your history. It's not like Acorn was alone in its intent, or that Apple was just some opportunist:

      ARM was established in November 1990 as Advanced RISC Machines Ltd., a UK-based joint venture between Apple Computer, Acorn Computer Group and VLSI Technology. Apple and VLSI both provided funding, while Acorn supplied the technology and ARM's 12 founding engineers. Acorn, developer of the world's first commercial single-chip RISC processor, and Apple, intent on advancing the use of RISC technology in its own systems, chartered ARM with creating a new microprocessor standard. ARM immediately differentiated itself in the market by creating the first low-cost RISC architecture. Conversely, competing architectures, which were more commonly focused on maximizing performance, were first used in high-end workstations.

      http://www.mobileimperative.com/documents.asp?d_ ID =1793

  5. Great Powerbooks await by Rubel · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You know they wouldn't have chosen it if they couldn't make a good laptop with it.

    Now, they'd better make sure they sort out that heat problem that the current 12" G4 Powerbooks suffer from.

    1. Re:Great Powerbooks await by mosch · · Score: 4, Informative

      I have a PB12. There is no heat problem. There may have been a few defective units at the beginning of production, but it doesn't get too hot to use directly on my lap, nor does the wrist rest get so hot that it's uncomfortable. The only way I can make mine seem to get too hot is if I plug it in and leaving it running something like say... itunes visualizations all day, with no air flowing over it, and no hands running over it. Then it gets hot, but still, no hotter than the bottom of my Latitude.

    2. Re:Great Powerbooks await by InfiniterX · · Score: 4, Informative

      Agreed.

      I'm typing on a 12" G4 right now. I've pounded on the CPU pretty hard, and the only time it seems to get hot is if I set it on a blanket or something rather than on a surface where the heat can actually efficiently dissipate. That's a problem with all notebooks, not just Apples.

      The 12" G4 is no hotter, and in fact seems to feel a bit cooler, than the Dell Inspiron 5000 PIII notebook that it replaced.

  6. More like... by Sydney+Weidman · · Score: 4, Funny

    start saving your hydrogen fuel cells to power the notebooks. Duracell lasts 10^-308 seconds on "Power Save" mode.

  7. Well... by yoshi1013 · · Score: 5, Funny
    What if they started off by marketing them to people who live in cold regions?

    "With the new Powerbook G5, you'll never find your hands cramping up during long typing sessions again! The CPU/hand warmer keeps you going during even the coldest of temperatures!"

  8. Can't wait by Damn_Canuck · · Score: 5, Insightful

    By the time the G5 Powerbooks come out, I think I might be able to actually afford a Macintosh laptop system. Here in Canada, the Powerbooks are at least $2300, and the iBooks are at least $1400. Right now, this is not feasible. But, by the time the cooling system works properly, I might be able to scrape up the thousands of dollars required.

    I do applaud Apple for not releasing information on products that it is unsure about, including these G5 laptops. They have strongly hinted in the article that they are looking at it, but they did not make any promises as to when it will be released. This way, they are not forced to rush production which would result in an inferior product. They are going to make sure they have quality over timeframe, which is something some other software companies should learn. Before you set a release date, get a demo/prototype done, and do at least a minimal level of testing!

    --
    Given that God is infinite, and the Universe is also infinite, would you like some toast?
  9. #1 reason to buy a mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    no one wants to hack it

  10. But does it... by jbardell · · Score: 4, Funny



    ...run MacOS? :-P

  11. Do I smell burning crotches? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Actually, I don't smell them (as in actively seek them out and sniff them -- that's someone else's job), but I ask rhetorically because if previous Apple laptop experience can be any guide, I expect to see more "Laptop burns man's crotch" stories. I saw one or two with their last generation.

  12. Hot Pads by Gilmoure · · Score: 4, Funny

    As hot as the G4 PowerBooks get, they'll need some hellacious cooling on these things. Maybe they'll come with a string you can use to whirl the PB around your head, like a bullroarer. If it makes that cool sound, it'll be great.

    --
    I drank what? -- Socrates
    1. Re:Hot Pads by digicrom · · Score: 2, Informative

      I keep reading these posts about how hot the 12 " PowerBook gets, yet I know of at least 10 twelve's in the field here in Austin, and all run cooler than our brand new Dell Latitudes. I personally have a 12" PowerBook and a Dell x200 (I support sales applications on two platforms directly), the Dell can get very hot to the touch, yet my Mac gets warm but never painfully.

      --
      We are all born originals - why is it so many of us die copies? -Edward Young, poet (1683-1765)
  13. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by pheared · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually what I find irritating is that I finally get enough money to buy an iPod, go get it, and then suddenly there are brand new ones out about a month or two later which totally blow mine out of the water and make me want to shoot myself.

    Otherwise, who cares about a roadmap? Are you really going to put off some major hardware provisioning decision because a roadmap claims (key word) that they will have such and such a product out by a certain time? They are almost always adjusted.

  14. Re:make it run linux! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yes because a unix based OS like OS X is really crappy.

    Uh... oh wait....

  15. It's called processor cycling by Shinzaburo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The desktop Power Mac G5 already does processor cycling in order to keep the noise/temperature/performance balance at an optimal level. Clearly a similar function will be used in the PowerBook G5, just as nearly every Wintel notebook on the market today does.

    I sold a Vaio R505 that would whine up and down loudly depending on whether you were scrolling through a web page or just sitting there reading it. I just couldn't take it anymore. When it comes to choosing performance or noise level, I usually choose to have a quieter machine. But hopefully Apple, unlike Sony, will allow an easy way to control which gets priority.

    1. Re:It's called processor cycling by clem.dickey · · Score: 4, Funny

      > I sold a Vaio R505 that would whine up and down loudly

      Well sure. No one likes whiners. But if Apple could license the Harley-Davidson sound ...

    2. Re:It's called processor cycling by phillymjs · · Score: 4, Informative

      But hopefully Apple, unlike Sony, will allow an easy way to control which gets priority.

      They already do:

      "In addition, the Power Mac G5 computer allows the user to control bus slewing mode. The options for specifying either high, reduced, or automatic processor and bus speeds are located at System Preferences>Energy Saver>Options; then select Automatic, Highest, or Reduced."

      ~Philly

    3. Re:It's called processor cycling by MoneyT · · Score: 2, Informative

      this has been possible on the i and power books for a long time. The issue they are concerned with are people like me who turn processor cycling off.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    4. Re:It's called processor cycling by hysterion · · Score: 4, Funny
      When it comes to choosing performance or noise level, I usually choose to have a quieter machine. But hopefully Apple, unlike Sony, will allow an easy way to control which gets priority.
      Don't worry, they will be silent.

      -- Apple Records

  16. You forgot by ice-monk · · Score: 2, Funny
    4. ????
    5. Profit!!!

    --
    --- You know it's bad when
    bash-2.05a$ fortune
    bash: fortune: command not found
  17. 2.1 speakers? by Tumbleweed · · Score: 2, Interesting

    > Panther will also support Dolby Digital 5.1 sound when used with the G5 optical audio output.

    I notice the $350 set of 5.1 speakers they're offering at the Apple Store to go along with the G5 machines, but does anyone know of any optical-connecting 2.1 speakers that might cost a bit less? I have no need for 5.1 sound, and 2.1 would be more than sufficient, but I'd like to take advantage of the new optical connections...

  18. Re:GREAT by The+Ancients · · Score: 3, Informative
  19. If they're musing about it in public... by Space+Coyote · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... then they aren't working on anything remotely resembling a product. If they were they'd be keeping very quiet about it all. This article has the tone of GM execs talking about flying cars.

    --
    ___
    Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum.
  20. Misconception: Where the heat is comming from by Llywelyn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    > As hot as the G4 PowerBooks get, they'll need some
    > hellacious cooling on these things.

    While I realize that the parent post is a joke, this is a fairly common misconception I figured should be addressed eventually.

    The reason why PowerBook G4 systems get hot tends to be the hard drive and has little (if anything) to do with the processor (which runs at a much lower temperature than anything Intel has offered in years).

    --
    Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    1. Re:Misconception: Where the heat is comming from by mkldev · · Score: 4, Interesting
      When people ask me about the temperature of the PowerPC processor, I like to tell them two stories.

      #1. Where I work, engineers have a tendency to run their PowerMac machines 24x7 with the side open. No fan cooling the CPU. None. Try that with any PC processor, and it'll be toast (or at least shut itself off).

      #2. Where I used to work, every trade show, we'd trot out an embedded PowerPC with... I think a G3 core. Guess what it didn't have on it? Fan? No, try again. Heatsink? Yup. No fan, no heatsink, and it was only slightly warm to the touch. You can probably imagine the shock on people's faces when we invinted them to touch a running CPU, forget the look of sheer confusion when it sat at about 38C. :-)

      So yeah, PowerPC processors are not particularly hot, relatively speaking. The northbridge and GPU are both generally far hotter; any heat that you might feel is likely from one of those two.

      --
      120 character sigs suck. Make it 250.
    2. Re:Misconception: Where the heat is comming from by squiggleslash · · Score: 2, Informative
      It may be that on average, the hard drives put out more heat than the CPUs, but when the G4 is being hit, I can tell you it's the major reason the PB feels hot.

      I have a 15" TiBook (800MHz). I can sit for hours browsing the web (a disk intensive and CPU non intensive app) with it only a little above ambient temperature, but if I run any half decent game, the fans start buzzing and I have to move the thing off my lap PDQ. This happens less if I put the CPU into powersaver mode.

      Ouch!

      Still beats a Pentium though... Interesting, El Reg is reporting the latest Pentium, Prescott, will dissipate around 100W. That's more than the twin-G5s together do. (Ok, that's a desktop chip, but that said, IIRC the G4 in the PowerBooks is not a "special" laptop model.)

      --
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  21. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by myg · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I put off buying my new G4 15" PB because of MacRumors. And I bought a new one yesterday. I'm happy I waited, but I probably wouldn't have been any less happy had I bought an old one.

    I'm just happy I can be x86-free on the road!

  22. Quotes by vasqzr · · Score: 2, Funny

    "an issue of good, solid engineering" and that "a few years ago, nobody thought it would be possible to get a G4 processor in a PowerBook"

    Sounds like...."One day, computers will only take up one room in a house and cost under $100,000" the old Popular Science quote.

  23. Re:No Thanks by nat5an · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well of course not! Don't be silly! And 640K of RAM ought to be enough for anyone!

    --
    Head down, go to sleep to the rhythm of the war drums...
  24. they could do it today but it'd be a rough sell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They could make one with a G5 tomorrow. But, it would only be maybe a little over 1GHz (10-15 watt range for the G5)*. That is certainly doable in a laptop and Apple has made them in that power range before. Ufortunately, the clock speed won't be any higher than the G4 and you wouldn't be able to take advantage of huge amounts of RAM (that won't happen for years). So, from a marketing perspective the G4 is still an easier sell.

    People just assume that G5 consumes this enormous amount of power because of all the fans in the G5 desktop. This isn't true. Even the 2G takes only about 40 watts or so. One P4 3G takes in the range of 80 watts of power. All of the extra G5 fans are to make the cooling quieter.

    *note that in the PC world 20-30 watt peak power consumption has been considered useable in a laptop.

  25. IBM announcement of a new G5 revision sure signal by danigiri · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Yeah. But...

    We can only start to hold our collective breaths (for a significant time) until IBM kinda announces a G5 revision that's suspiciously low-power and is much cooler (surely helped with some of the latest IBM fab breakthroughs). They might or might not talk the same Moto gibberish of aiming at the embedded market, blah blah.

    Only then Rubinstein and his faeries can reasonably start to work their magic. Supposedly, once bi'blue hints them they can start engineering the wondruous shrinkage of the original G5 motherboard without actually having a G5' sample. After that heroic feat, that industrial design archangel and his minions will come down and design yet another striking enclosure...

    By then, a couple of revisions of the motherboard will have shipped, as well as a couple of G5 tower speed bumps. Besides, one might expect that preceding the mobile G5 we will see the infamous speedy G3+Altivec (IBM's G4) that bi'blue is secretly eager to hurl into Motto's face, to prove their incompetence.

    My two eurocents. You can safely spend your money now

    dani++

  26. I'm really waiting for... by foo+fighter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...OS X 10.3 to ship preinstalled.

    About that time the major quirks will be worked out of the G5 desktop hardware and it'll be safe to run Panther on. I've heard many stories (vocal minority, yada yada) with bad endings about people trying to get OS X (10.0 to .1, .1 to .2, 9 to any 10.x) upgrades to work on their G4s.

    I'm drooling heavily over the dual-G5, but I'm not going to buy it without the new OS.

    I really hate upgrading operating systems. It's a safe bet you'll have a smoother experience with the new software by just installing it from scratch.

    Or better yet, having the manufacturer install it for you.

    --
    obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
    1. Re:I'm really waiting for... by useruser · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's funny to "I really hate upgrading operating systems" and "OS X" in the same post. I've been installing (legally obtained) Panther builds every week for a couple months now on my TiBook. What's my process? - Drag and drop home folder and Applications folder to external firewire drive (40 GB, 15 minutes) - Erase Install with Panther disc 1 (15 minutes) - Drag and drop home folder and Applications folder to TiBook (40 GB, 15 minutes) Yeah, okay, I have to log out and log back in too :P Back to work in less than an hour.

  27. Note to self by bigjnsa500 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Do not use laptop while nude or Mr. Pecker will get burned, like this d00d

    --
    This is a test. This is a test of the emergency sig system. This has been only a test.
  28. Re:No Thanks by v_1matst · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "but does anyone really need the power of a G5 in a notebook?"

    ummm... yes. Some people use their laptops as their primary machine and some people actually use them for more than just web browsing, pr0n and mp3s. I know plenty of people who need quite a bit of processing power (mostly animators and musicians/producers) and the portability of a laptop. The g4 powerbook has been the choice of many, and I'm sure they would welcome the g5.

    Asking if anyone 'really needs' X is -NOT- a good argument against X.

  29. There's Hot, And Then There's Really Hot by rsmith-mac · · Score: 5, Interesting

    While putting the current .13 micron G5 in a laptop would be hard, it's not impossible. The chip itself is hot, but at lower speeds, it's not particularly hot. Desktop P4's are being put in to laptops, and those do upwards of 90wts of heat(with Prescott set to surpass 100wts), which makes for a hot laptop, but isn't impossible, as it results in a powerful "desktop replacement" machine.

    The reason we're not seeing a PB G5 is because the kind of "desktop replacements" being made out of P4's are unreasonable as far as Apple's concerned. Apple wants something sleek, and they're willing to wait for it. Still, compared to the P4, the G5 is far less of a challenge to implement in to a laptop.

  30. Well, they don't want to hurt current sales... by MadAnthony02 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If they were like, "the G5 Powerbooks will be coming out in 6 months", they would have a hard time selling any full-priced G4 laptops. So they wait as long as possible. It's the same reason car companies disguise their prototypes.

    I bought a Powerbook 12" right before they announced additional price cuts for education users back in May... but if they announced it too early, it hurts sales. Of course, I bought 2nd gen iPod for 50% off after the 3rd gen ones came out, so when knowledge is out their, buyers can win - but then apple loses.

    1. Re:Well, they don't want to hurt current sales... by Xerithane · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's the same reason car companies disguise their prototypes.

      Car companies don't disguise their prototypes. I think you are thinking of concept vehicles, which they usually say, "This will never be released." then release a similar model the following year. If you will notice car companies change styles every 4-5 years. That's the lifespan of any particular vehicle style, and after that it gets a moderate change. You can expect that. It's usually a cosmetic change and a few gadget features.

      Apple on the other hand has to use actual marketing tactics. Nobody wants to buy a $3,500 computer when they can wait and buy a much better computer for... you guessed it, $3,500.

      So while you have Apple's reasoning right, you don't have car manufacturers. I'm still trying to figure out if this is offtopic or not.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    2. Re:Well, they don't want to hurt current sales... by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Car companies don't disguise their prototypes.

      Sure they do. And just as with computer-related rumors, there are folks out there who follow and report on new developments and publish photos of suspected prototypes.

      Yes, auto makers will show you their 'concept cars' as a way to generate interest. And they'll sometimes show actual prototypes as well, particularly when the prototype is close to what they expect to produce. But when GM or Ford are testing out a new engine, for example, they'll put it in a car with an existing body style. Or if they're trying out a whole new car, they'll cover the body panels with tape, or leather masking, or whatever.

      Heck, I can even think of at least a couple TV spots where the manufacturers use this idea to make their new model seem more desireable. There's one, for example, where some alleged engineers are testing out a white car (Nissan Altima, maybe?) somewhere in the desert. A bunch of planes, helicopters, cars, etc. show up trying to get a look at the car, and the engineers then hide the car under a tent so that the others (press? competition?) can't see it.

      So yeah, car companies do disguise their prototypes, and for the same reasons: they want to surprise the buying public and the competition with a cool new product at the introduction, and they don't want to hurt the market for the existing model until that time.

    3. Re:Well, they don't want to hurt current sales... by Hjalmar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Car companies don't disguise their prototypes.

      Yes, they do. Car manufacturers will put plastic bras, duct tape, cardboard, panels from existing models, and all manner of other tricks when testing out new cars. When developing new chasis and engines they often will put an existing body on the new chasis, to try out the new stuff on real roads.

      Look in any car magazine and you'll find photos of "heavily disguised spy pics" or "photoshope enhanced pictures of lightly disguised" cars. Go to Death Valley in the summer and you can see disguised prototypes live and in person, getting tortured.

    4. Re:Well, they don't want to hurt current sales... by Xerithane · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Are you saying that auto manufacturers come up with a design and then spend a zillion bucks to retool a production line without first hand building a few and taking them out for a spin?

      You can build a consumer vehicle prototype for around $100K. Even going up to the Cadillac Cien you are going to be less than a million. You don't retool a production line, you just custom build a car, though.

      What you see at auto shows, real, high end, or otherwise, are most often meant for use at... auto shows.

      Uh... yes, which is the purpose of a prototype.

      Yes, I expect that most of these also don't generally make it onto the street, but instead spend their short lives on test tracks (one purpose of which, by the way, is to hide works in progress, i.e. prototypes, from public view).

      By showing flawed designs to the public you dillute the quality of your brand name. That is why they hide them, don't you get that?

      Others do get driven around quite a bit to test performance in real world use, and you can bet that they don't carry bumper stickers that say "This vehicle is a prototype of the 2005 Mazda RX-8."

      Doesn't need to. By the time it hits the streets it's been in a few shows and anybody who can recognize it without badging will.

      All I'm saying is that manufacturers do not hide prototypes because people will wait until they come out, they hide them because if there are problems they don't want it damaging their name.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  31. Always? by John+Harrison · · Score: 4, Funny

    I am not sure that my Performa was cool.

    1. Re:Always? by commodoresloat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah it was right after PCC announced a line of G3s in the same box as the 225 that Apple ended licensing of clones. I still have that machine around; it came with 96M of RAM and, for the time, it cooked. Best thing about PCC though was their advertising; the posters can still be found here.

  32. so then by SweetAndSourJesus · · Score: 2, Informative

    Run fluxbox.

    We do have X11, you know.

    --

    --
    the strongest word is still the word "free"
  33. Dammit by s20451 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I was already saving for a G4 powerbook. Now I have to start saving for a G5 powerbook. At this rate I will own a powerbook when the sun is a cold, dark lump of coal. Great business model, Apple.

    --
    Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    1. Re:Dammit by jawtheshark · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Two years ago I bought an iBook G3 600Mhz with 384Meg RAM (12.1" TFT). While not a powerhouse, it runs Mac OS X Jaguar just fine. While I paid over 2000$ for it back then, you can get that right now for only 999$ (G3 800Mhz, 128Meg RAM), slap in some extra RAM (which is cheap) and for a bit more than $1K you have an Apple.

      I guess you want to do Dynamic Fluid Calculations, and simulate some nuclear reaction on the road, so you really *need* that G5 Powerbook....

      If you are new to Mac, just start with the low end. If you're happy with that, you know why people spend so much on the high-end models. I know now, and if I had 4000$ spare, I'd be first in line to buy a new G5 Powerbook. (And my sister would be most happy with my current iBook)

      --
      Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
  34. A G5 by any other name. by flux4 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Remember, no-one has said that we'll see the Desktop G5 processor (a PowerPC 970) in a portable form-factor. Just like we never, ever saw the first Desktop G4's processor (a PowerPC 7400) in a PowerBook. What the portables got were more power efficient, less hot chips -- like the PowerPC 7410, which popped up in the first titanium PowerBooks.

    Since Apple can still call these revised chips "G4", "G5", etc, it may seem like they've accomplished this incredible engineering feat in getting the big ol' chip inside that teeny case -- but the first breakthrough is the improved processor, over at Moto or IBM. They still have thier work cut out for them, but at least Apple doesn't need to ring the entire case with fans...

  35. G3 by Phroggy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What I'm really looking forward to is, apparently IBM is working on adding an AltiVec-compatible SIMD unit to the G3 processor, and ramping up the clock speed. A couple of those would make a sweet laptop.

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  36. Re:G4 too hot by justMichael · · Score: 2, Funny

    Compile KDE

  37. Re:What a lack of a story... by cosmo7 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm a very happy Apple user having switched a little under half a year ago.
    Not true.

    But this is such a non-story it shouldn't have even been posted here.
    True.

    There are already CPUs in laptops today that can give the G5 a run for its money.
    Not true.

    They may not have great battery life, but heat issues have been taken care of.
    Not true.

    There's nothing unique about the G5 that makes it any more difficult to get into a laptop than any other CPU design.
    Not true.

    That Apple is talking about a G5 laptop as if it's a big technical deal has me worried.
    Not true.

    The newly released Powerbooks are already up to half as slow as their Centrino counterparts which sport similar or better battery life.
    Not true.

    Perhaps the G5 Powerbook won't see the light of day until next fall when the G4 Powerbook will be tremendously outclassed.
    You can hope, you pointless troll.

  38. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by Sebby · · Score: 2, Informative
    Then buy your stuff now.

    These kinds of statements always make me think of this scenario:

    Guy: dude, we're gonna be late, let go!

    Driver: yeah, but I need gas. Gas is high today; it should go down tomorrow, I'll buy it then and then we can go

    Guy: .... Dude! We've got to be there TO-DAY!

    Driver: I know, I know; but gas is too much! I'll save more if I wait and buy it tomorrow!
    ....

    --

    AC comments get piped to /dev/null
  39. A laptop for every lap by RevMike · · Score: 2, Insightful
    At least thats what they could say and just do what IBM has done with their Thinkpad MAMOTH series (the ones that are like 8lbs, but have a real P4 in them)

    There is no "one-size-fits-all" for laptops. Different users have different needs. A road warrior who is flying 2 or 3 times a week probably wants as lightweight a machine as he can get away with. And he is will to trade screen size, processor speed, and keyboard comfort for a few less pounds to drag through the airport.

    Other people like a laptop because they can carry it from their desk to the conference room easily. They wouldn't care if it weighed 20 pounds, they want a full desktop replacement that is portable enough to move around the office and be carried home occassionally.

  40. Re:No Thanks by xoff00 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    does anyone really need the power of a G5 in a notebook?

    Its not the processor speed my users need, its more addressable memory.

    My users routinely load 1-2GB images (we're a scientific shop working on NASA images) and that slows the G4 laptops to a crawl.

    Its also the main reason I'm investigating AMD's 64bit chips -- just for more addressable memory.
    (I'm morally opposed to paying for Intel's overpriced CPUs, so Xeons are out).

    --
    ...Xoff
    Phineas J. Whoopie, you're the greatest!
  41. Why put a G5 in a portable unit??? by mslinux · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Most all laptop users want a small, light-weight, cool (even after running all day) and semi-powerful laptop that has a good battery life. G5's are great procs, but they are *far* from meeting the above requirments that *most all* laptop users want. They are too hot, use too much power and too big at present... give them a few years.

    The G4 has a lot of life left when it comes to portable computing.

  42. Here's how I tested by BoomerSooner · · Score: 4, Informative

    I went to the local CompUSA where they leave them on all day running some screensaver, and felt both the 12" Powerbook and the 12" iBook. There was a VERY noticable difference. The iBook seems significantly cooler than the 12" Powerbook and the 15" TiBook was cold (Since the case doesn't transfer heat well through the casing).

    As a laptop user my #1 priority is being able to use it comfortably. The Aluminum Powerbook was too hot (12"), the 17" was tolerable, and the 15" Titanium was a dream (paint chips are not acceptable either). So I chose to wait for the new Al 15" and when my local CompUSA eventually has one on display (3-4 months from now) I'll see if it's cool enough. I bought a 900MHz iBook instead and it stays relatively cool. Hell maybe I'll just wait another year and hope for the G5 powerbooks.

    I'd rather have these things than a hot laptop:
    Less speed (Apple already has this covered, My PIII from 2 1/2 years ago is 1.2GHz)
    More Fans/Noise
    Less attractive case (design is for girls, I'll take ugly and cool over cute and hot every day).
    Larger/heavier case.

    1. Re:Here's how I tested by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      "...for girls, I'll take ugly and cool over cute and hot every day)."

      De gustibus non est disputandum.

  43. Make up your own roadmaps by hayne · · Score: 5, Interesting
    [...] I finally get enough money to buy an iPod, go get it, and then suddenly there are brand new ones out about a month or two later [...]

    Otherwise, who cares about a roadmap? Are you really going to put off some major hardware provisioning decision because a roadmap claims (key word) that they will have such and such a product out by a certain time? They are almost always adjusted.

    Well, you seem to be saying that you would have delayed your purchase had you known that some new models would be out in a month or two. So, at least in this case, it was in Apple's best interest to keep its roadmap to itself. They got your money earlier than they might have, and your time-to-trade-in-for-new-model clock started a bit earlier.

    Since you seem to accept that roadmaps are often works of fiction, why not make up your own roadmap? Hmm, the interval between previous generations of iPods was x, so I project the next revision will be in the month of y. Then, if you delay a purchase after looking at your roadmap, you will be happy if the roadmap was accurate and new models arrived when you projected them. And if your roadmap was inaccurate, you have only yourself to blame.

    If Apple published a roadmap that they didn't live up to, everybody would be unhappy about it. And there are lots of reasons why they might not introduce new models by the projected date. A manufacturer always incurs additional costs in introducing a new model so they would prefer to keep selling the old model as long as they can. If the old model is still selling well, why bother introducing a new model at all?

    1. Re:Make up your own roadmaps by Tkil · · Score: 3, Informative

      Note that, for Apple products, various sites already do this for you:

      http://buyersguide.macrumors.com/
    2. Re:Make up your own roadmaps by Senjaz · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If the old model is still selling well, why bother introducing a new model at all?

      Accually Apple doesn't do this which is yet another reason to admire them. They release new cool stuff because they can and release updated stuff when it's ready. Unlike other certain tech companies they don't sit on updates just because they want to milk as much money from the old tech as possible. Apple leads the market in many ways, a position it wouldn't hold for long if it started doing that.

      --
      Don't blame me - this .sig had steal me written all over it.
  44. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 4, Funny

    What? You bought the product of a computer company, only to find out that a short time later, the company releases a new! improved! product? I am shocked, SHOCKED I tell you. That is totally unexpected behavior! It never happens.

  45. G5: only one CD drive? by PhilHibbs · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only thing stopping me going out and buying a G5 right now is the fact that it only has one CD/DVD drive bay. I had a go on one at the week-end, and nearly drooled on the floor.

  46. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by prockcore · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I just want a roadmap on an SSH patch for OSX.

  47. Bullwhoey by SuperBanana · · Score: 2, Informative
    I have a PB12. There is no heat problem.

    After about 10 minutes of running any cpu-intensive activity, my PB 17" is typically between 130 degrees and 140- the fan kicks in around 140, shuts off at 130. It's been sitting on my desk all day doing next to nothing(I've occasionally queued up some mp3s) and it's at 110.3 according to Temperature Monitor.

    Using it on my lap, say, while on the couch, with any kind of activity, and it'll quickly get rather warm. Playing a movie or AVI file is an excellent way to do this. It gets uncomfortable within a half hour easily.

    Oh, and putting a CDROM in and using it for about 5 minutes will cause the OTHER half of the powerbook to get hot and THAT fan to switch on.

    Sorry, but anyone who says "my laptop doesn't run hot!" doesn't use their laptop very intensively.

  48. But will they ship with by w3weasel · · Score: 5, Funny

    Asbestos iPants?

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  49. Sure...for $4000 by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A decently configured G4 PowerBook is $2599. That's as much as a G5 desktop already. I fully expect G5 PowerBooks to start at $2999 and extend past $4000.

  50. Finally!! by green+pizza · · Score: 4, Informative

    People just assume that G5 consumes this enormous amount of power because of all the fans in the G5 desktop. This isn't true. Even the 2G takes only about 40 watts or so. One P4 3G takes in the range of 80 watts of power. All of the extra G5 fans are to make the cooling quieter.

    I'm glad to see someone finally point this out. The exact wattage number is 46.7 watts for the 2 GHz PowerPC 970 "G5" running at full speed (2GHz CPU and a 2:1 multipler for a 1 GHz FSB).

    A 2.4 GHz P4 (400 MHz FSB) uses 62 watts, newer P4s use even more. Prescott is expected to use 100 - 105 watts. (And this is totally ignoring the even further power needs of the "extreme" edition with its added transistors for on-die L3 cache)

    Apple has always seemed to overengineer the heatsinks and fans in their desktop model, for about as long as I can remember. Oddly, many of the PowerBooks use a much different "transfer the heat from the CPU, Chipset, and GPU right to the bottom of the case" cooling method.

  51. Not surprising by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Given that Microsoft's favorite method of innovating is to mimic whatever Apple does, it seems reasonable for Apple to hold its cards close to its vest.

  52. Undiscovered potential. by DroopyStonx · · Score: 2, Funny

    This may very well be the stepping stone we need to finally bridge the laptop/stove gap.

    With the heat put out from this bad boy, you'll be able to cook a meal within the confines of your cubicle WHILE remaining productive. Talk your co-workers into buying one and everyday lunch can be a cookout.

    I'll take two!

    --
    We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
    1. Re:Undiscovered potential. by evilviper · · Score: 2, Insightful
      With the heat put out from this bad boy

      The numbers I've seen, put the G5 at 40watts... And that's the DESKTOP processor. They might build a more-effecient portable version, just as the x86 boys do.

      That means, the desktop processors is putting out about as much heat as as a PII 500MHz. Just for additional comparison, that's only 57% as much heat as higher-end AMD XP processors. The P4 puts out even more heat, making the G5 only 40% as hot and power-hungry as modern P4 processors.

      So, in essence, a dual-G5 system would be about as hot as a single-processor AMD XP+ system, all the while, being better-than twice as fast, processing-wise.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  53. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by Virus1984 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The default setup of OSX doesn't have SSH enabled...so the average user isn't concerned by such patch. I guess that if you're Unix-savvy enough to need to SSH to your OSX box then maybe you're Unix-savvy enough to install the patch by yourself without waiting for Apple to distribute it via SoftwareUpdate.

    --
    Don't forget to think different.
  54. New processor needs new mouse ! by 0xBulbizarre · · Score: 2, Funny

    I hope that apple will soon discover that a mouse can have more than a single button...

    Those trackpads with only a button are a pain under *nix

  55. Re:Apple commercials lie by zpok · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They don't lie. Their statement is absolutely true ... for a given value of true.

    Go to an Apple store and say "Gimme that grater, yeahhh... ... the big one!". Voila, you have "the most powerful personal computer in the world".

    Or you can have one built to your specs - by your friends no doubt - which either won't match the G5's specs - but may very well be better in one or two area's FOR YOU - or can't run your run of the mill programs except in simulation mode - which sort of defeats the purpose.

    There are a few more powerful systems, but they can't reasonably be called "personal computers".

    There are a few configurations which might be good enough for you and blindingly fast, but again, you won't match the out of the box specs of the G5 - and you'll pay just as much or more (if you don't go over the hill and buy the flatscreen, 3button mouse, iPod, surround speaker set, 8Gigs of ram etc..)

    Personally I don't care if it's the most powerful or just an extremely powerful PC, it's a mac, and it's features are just right.

    And its advertising is imo less "outrageous" than most IT-related ads.

    --
    I think, therefore I am...I think.
  56. No Apples to Apples comparison. by nobodyman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple keeps publishing benchmarks that compare the G5 to a Pentium 4. I can appreciate that Apple is trying to woo the pc crowd but these figures don't really interest me.

    I am already an owner of a G4, and I don't want to purchase a G5 until I know that it's worth the money. How much faster is it? 25%? 50%? I usually don't upgrade until I can double performance for the same amount of money as what I paid for my current computer.

    Does anyone know where any G4 vs. G5 specs are posted?

  57. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by rodik · · Score: 2, Informative
    According to this full-disclosure report the recently discovered exploit only affects systems that allow root login, something OS X defaults not to.
    The attack makes an enormous amount of ssh connections and attempts
    various offsets until it finds one that works permitting root login.
    So, unless you've explicitly set PermitRootLogin to yes, you're safe, at least for the moment.
  58. Why people buy Mac's by ducomputergeek · · Score: 5, Informative

    Last year I purchased a top of the line 14.1" ibook with 700Mhz G3 and 640MB ram, combo drive and Airport card. If I am using say iTunes, iMovie and Photoshop, the lower left hand corner will get a little warm and the fan kicks into overdrive, but that is after 3 or 4 hours of running all those apps. I bought this to replace a Viao Z505 ultra thin. I loved the 1"thick and 3.5 pounds, but even with a pentium 233, the damn thing would almost burn me if I left it on for too long and windows would crash due to overheating. I say someone saying how they had 1.3Ghz PIII laptop a while ago, that's nice, but can I tell a difference in say PowerPoint between my 700Mhz G3 and a 1 Ghz Althon? Not really and my mac has crashed twice in the last year. Once I was trying to see what it would take (photoshop, itunes, imovie, Golive, and FCP and then launch a classic app...that did it). I can close my laptop and reopen it without it crashing like on my old laptop. I reset my ibook only after downloading updates every two weeks or so. At one point it had an uptime of over 28 days. That's 28 days of open, close, open, close and the system began doing strange things. I guess 1 reset a month isn't that bad for a laptop. Now I design webpages for living deployed on *iux based servers. Being able to develop in a *iux enviroment and still have tools like Photoshop and Dreamweaver/flash is a tremendous advantage to me and a feature that I will pay a little more for. Another issue is TCO. One the clients I met with today does video production and he is still using a G3 500 and uses FCP and PS on a daily basis. He's had the machine almost 5 years and can still purchase new software. Will it run as fast as a G4, no, but as he said, if it takes 4 hours to render a video, I go fishing and come back. One other photographer switched to using Dell's, but quickly found that he was upgrading about every 18 months compared to 24 - 36 with Macs and even though the hardware costs are cheaper, but he said that he was losing a lot more time with system crashes and is considering going back to Mac's and getting a dual G5. This laptop will proable last me another two years with proably a new battery needed in that time, but maybe at that time I will consider a powerbook and a g5 will be in it.

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
  59. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by Morky · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When I wanted to buy a VIC20 in 1981, I had heard that something even better was in the pipeline, so I thought I should wait. The salesman correctly pointed out that if that's my stance I would never buy a computer because something better is always right around the corner. Check out the MacRumors.com buying guide. They have pretty accurate advice on the Apple product upgrade cylces.

  60. RUBINSTEIN MENTIONING G5 POWERBOOKS? by tyrione · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The man never speaks of technology in a future sense.

    He always discusses product technologies after they have been and/or near completion in R&D.

    If the G5 Powerbook is coming from his lips you can bet they are working now on other products.

    His approach has been the same since the HP days, the NeXT Days and so on and so forth.

    John is not one for hype. So this is good to see.

  61. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by Babbster · · Score: 3, Interesting
    There's a significant difference in that x86 processors are commodity items. In addition, most processor price cuts occur when newer processors arrive at the top which shove all the slower processors down a notch (or a couple of notches depending on how many new processors hit the market). This has the net effect that you'll be paying about the same amount for the fastest processor whenever you happen to buy it.

    With Apple, they upgrade their product line and promptly discontinue production of the old products which means that there is no lower tier which would reap the decreased cost benefit of the upgrades. Because of this, it's not in Apple's best interest to announce upgraded product lines ahead of time because it would have a chilling effect on the sales of the products they've already produced. This phenomenon can also be noted in the game console industry where price cuts may be rumored for a while but no confirmation announcement will be handed down until the price cuts take place. For example, if Nintendo announced today that as of October 1st the Gamecube would be $99 instead of $150, that would be tantamount to Nintendo saying "You shouldn't buy a Gamecube until next month."

  62. Re:Lack of Apple roadmaps is frustrating by stingerman101 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Intel sells processors, Apple sells computers. Your beef really is with Motorola and IBM now.

  63. User needs a new mouse by TheInternet · · Score: 2, Informative

    I hope that apple will soon discover that a mouse can have more than a single button...

    And I hope slashdotters will soon discover they can buy a 5-button scrollwheel mouse for, like, $12. Mac OS X is aware of 2+ button mice.

    I don't know the exact reason Apple ships a one button mouse, but I think most people that complain about it have easily wasted more money in time than the cash it would take to buy a mouse.

    Seriously, any USB mouse should work.

    - Scott

    --
    Scott Stevenson
    Tree House Ideas