Apple Releases Mac Mini
cranesan writes "The rumors of Apple releasing a small PC are confirmed. The Mac mini can be found at Apple's website. As expected, the box uses a G4 processor. You can order one today; estimate 3-4 weeks shipping date. Base unit starts at $499."
C'mon guys. This isn't news, especially since you reported it yourself here. It's just a two day old dupe of old news.
PC? It's not a PC it's a Mac! *fume*
Karma police, I've given all I can, it's not enough, I've given all I can, but we're still on the payroll.
GotApex? has a "headless Dell" on their site for $449.
Here are the specs:
2.8Ghz P4 w/800Mhz bus
256MB DDR2 SDRAM
40GB S-ATA
2 year on site warranty
Of course, if I don't get modded to hell, there will be a dozen replys from the Apple "amen corner" telling me that the Apple is a better deal, etc.
BTW, this P4 is not even a particularly hot deal. GotApex? had a Dell P4 with a 17" LCD last Sunday for $599 -- the same price as the "high end" Mac mini.
http://www.petitiononline.com/MacmiEU/petition.htm l
This was previously discussed on this Slashdot story. Also of interest is this announcement :
s .html
/. story discussing the Mac Mini, I believe this Mac Mini is doomed for a **huge** success. Good for competition. Good for everyone :-)
Apple announced their financial results for the fourth quarter today, reporting a profit of $295M, or $0.70 per share. They shipped 4.58M iPods, an increase of 525 % over the year ago quarter. But more surprisingly, Apple CPU sales were up 26% themselves over the year ago quarter. Over 1,046,000 Macs went found their way into customer's hands in the quarter.
See http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2005/jan/12result
After reading comments from the other
Animoog.org
yes Its more expensive and slower, except if you value some of the excellent software it comes with and the small form factor its worth it.
imovie is an excellent video editor (enough better the compaq with various cheap editing packages)was abandoned...(Not to mention this apple machine comes with firewire, a requirement for getting video off the cam corder.)
iphoto is excellent photo storage tool.
OS X is pretty good to, but if you want a windows box go nuts..
I have done low-level C work and high-level Objective-C work on both machines, and found them to be perfectly acceptable in terms of performance. I haven't touched the abomination of a language known as C++ for some time, and hope never to have to again, so I can't really give you any advice there (other than to look at Objective-C). XCode is a really nice IDE to use, and code written using POSIX libraries and Cocoa can be ported to other *NIX platforms and GNUstep very easily.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
Well... I'd say this would be one case where you'd buy the OEM RAM. The mini-mac's only got one DIMM. So, if you buy the 256MB, then run out and buy a 512MB stick from Crucial, say, you'd be throwing your money away on the 256MB that came with the unit.
/. is a bunch of nerds at a million typewriters. It's not a political conspiracy determined to undermine your beliefs.
These people are insane. They are including VAT in their 'calculated' prices... Get with it.
eMac is great for dev work, given enough RAM.
1. It's apparently the quietest mac ever made. That's pretty damned quiet. TBH It's so small I doubt you'd fit a fan into it! Of course nobody actually has one yet...
2. The RAM looks like standard SDRAM (most sites say one slot only). The lid looks like a bugger to get off but give it a few days after release and there will be detailed instructions all over the web. No info on the bluetooth & airport - if they've used the same cards as on other macs then it should be easy.. if not, then you'll need to wait for availability.
3. Compare with a similar speed powerbook.
4. With a mini? No, because they're not available yet....
USB microphones are available.
I haven't really noticed much speed difference between my current machine (1.5GHz G4) and my last one (1.25GHz G4), so I wouldn't bother with this. Even big compiles and video editing only gain a small amount.
up it to a gig of RAM
Never buy RAM from Apple. They charge 2-3 times the value of the RAM for installation.
a superdrive
If you really need to burn DVDs. I've got some use from my SuperDrive, but I wouldn't consider it essential. Waiting a year and adding a FireWire Blu-Ray / HD-DVD drive might be a better bet.
bluetooth
You can get a USB bluetooth module on eBay for a quarter of what Apple charge for internal Bluetooth. And yes, OS X will almost certainly support it.
wireless keyboard and mouse
So get a wired one.
and give it a 3 year warranty
It comes with a 1 year warranty. Adding another two years for a third of the price of the machine doesn't sound like a great deal. I'd be more inclined to throw it out and replace it with a newer and faster one if it breaks after the first year.
you don't have nifty Mac stuff like video-in
My PowerBook has exactly the same video-in capabilities as the Mac Mini - a FireWire port. Neither machine has any analogue video input capability, and neither does any recent Mac I've seen without 3rd party hardware (and if you really need it, there are analogue -> FireWire boxes available).
and you have a CPU that compares to what was out a few years ago.
And is still used in the current PowerBook line, and is probably fast enough for most people.
Is this really a good deal?
If you insist on adding every possible customisation to it, then no. If the basic model (perhaps with the RAM upgraded to 512MB) is good enough for your needs, then yes.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
He does have UID 5, so it seems legit. Unless he hacked that uid too offcourse :-)
Apple keyboards contain a small USB hub, providing two additional ports. One is usually used for the mouse, and I've plugged a USB dongle into the other one in the past. If you use an Apple keyboard (which I would strongly recommend - trying to work out how windows and alt map to command and option can be a pain since it seems to vary between manufacturers) leaves you with 2 USB slots free.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
It's either buy the RAM from Apple and have them install it pre-ship, or buy it from CompUSA/Apple Store, have them install it in-house.
Because the MacMini is not user servicable, and if you're not ADT (Apple Desktop Technican Certified) *poof* your warranty will go up in smoke.
Although your dream loses its point when you stop and consider that you could just get an iBook for that kind of money...
Tiger's Core Image system is what provides that eye candy. Sadly, Core Image requires a much better GPU than the 9200.
That isn't to say that Tiger won't run on a Mac mini or an iBook - it most certainly will. You just won't get all the nifty eye candy. And really, other than the temporary "wow" factor, you can do everything you need to do without a bunch of superfluous effects.
Tiger will run an an iBook or a Mac mini, just without all the extra gewgaws. And believe me, with Dashboard, enhanced search, and the way Apple OS upgrades generally get faster with each release, even without CI it would probably be a worthwhile upgrade.
That includes switching in some more memory.
Not that it stopped me buying one and speccing it with 512MB: it's not as if it's going to be doing a lot of memory intensive work for me: for that I use my DP G5 :-)
Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
Geh the cheap RAM off crucial (not kingston or any other) and take it to a apple authorised reseller. Have them crack open the case and you don't void the warranty and its still cheaper.
Jonathanjk.com
Heard where?
The RAM I've got in my old G4 began its life in a Dell server. It runs OS X just fine. It ran OS 9 and 8.6 just peachy, too. I have trouble believing that an OS could identify the difference between OEM and 3rd party RAM, or behave any differently.
Cheap, flaky RAM, on the other hand, can hose a machine no matter what OS you're running.
This simply isn't true. I'll let Henry Norr, veteran Mac journalist at http://www.macintouch.com/mwsf2005notebook.html/, tell it like it is:
Apple "does not recommend" that users upgrade the memory themselves - you're supposed to have a service provider do it if you want to add more after purchase - but doing it yourself does not void the warranty unless you damage something. A booth person told me the memory slot is easily accessible once you get the case open.This has been Apple's policy for donkey years.
"Where's my other sock?" - A. Einstein
TV out is easy, and for only about $20.
What I'd like to see is a better audio out option. This thing could make a sweet HTPC. Or HTMac as it were.
If you are buying a new USB keyboard, you should look into 3rd party Mac keyboards. While the Apple keyboard is quite nice, there are others; I have a Matias Tactile Pro on my desktop G5 at work which I like. It has a good feel, and should survive millions of presses.
Here's a recent discussion about 3rd party keyboards: http://www.lowendmac.com/misc/05/0110.html
And it is true, keyboards are non-powered hubs and you can only rely on them for low-powered devices. For instance, half of USB thumb drives will work from a keyboard (more or less). I doubt if the iPod Shuffle will work very well out of a keyboard; probably won't charge, and won't get USB 2.0 speed transfers.
I bought no-name RAM for my PowerBook G4. One DIMM worked, the other didn't. I did an RMA on the dead stick and got a new one in a couple of days that worked just fine. My algorithm for selecting a RAM vender was to pick the cheapest one on ramseeker.com. I have been doing this on Mac systems for years without any real problems (other than the occasional dead stick that has to be returned.)
Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
No, it only comes with C/C++/Objective C/Python/Ruby/etc. Fortran you have to install it separately: http://developer.apple.com/hardware/ve/fortran.htm l
iDVD now supports output to disk image files and third-party DVD burners.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.