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New Mac System Specs

xyankee writes " Think Secret appears to be dishing more of the dirt that Apple loves to hate so much, this time dropping details on updated Power Mac G5, iMac G5, and eMac systems soon to be released. Looks like speed bumps all around: Power Macs get to 2.7GHz, iMacs to 2GHz, and eMacs to 1.42GHz. Video cards and SuperDrives are also upgraded."

19 of 650 comments (clear)

  1. Re:No word yet... by hunterx11 · · Score: 4, Informative

    PowerMacs already have PCI-X. You're thinking of PCI-E. Though I really think somebody out there must be a numbskull when we have PCI Extended and PCI Express.

    --
    English is easier said than done.
  2. Midplane by akira69 · · Score: 5, Informative

    So, do you think they fixed the midplane capacitor issue? I've had to replace one already, and the replacement didn't work... I'm still trying to get my 20" iMac working again. Any insight on this? I really hope they redesigned the board!

  3. new ibooks too... by remove+office · · Score: 4, Informative

    new ibooks are also expected to be shipping around the same time, if not a few days later.

  4. Re:Smaller portable needs. by BWJones · · Score: 3, Informative

    Wow, I'm curious to know what kind of needs you have that would justify this...

    Scientific computing would be the answer. When decisions are made that depend on calculations, the sooner those calculations can be completed, the better. I am not yet at the point where I need my own cluster, but when calculations start to eat up hours per day or even whole days, you start to think about these things.

    We are starting a project however, that will likely need a small cluster. I am thinking 5-10 Xserves would cut it for image analysis and dataset construction.

    Sheer gear lust ?

    Well, hellyeaa. It's Apple Computer we are talking about.

    --
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  5. iMac G5 by NEOtaku17 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Good day fot iMac G5 buyers. They have finally put in a graphics card that can play modern games(Radeon 9600 with 128MB of video RAM)

  6. Re:Smaller portable needs. by daviddennis · · Score: 3, Informative

    Apple Motion and Apple Final Cut Pro always can use more hardware thrown at them. I'm working on a long form project where quad processors would really help annoying multiple hour rendering times on FCP.

    The real-time rendering really helps with most things, but it still doesn't work for layering video at different sizes, exactly what I'm doing :-(.

    (I know the original poster made a reply already, but I wanted to point out that he's far from the only person who can use serious power).

    D

  7. Re:Slow learners? by Omnifarious · · Score: 3, Informative

    From what I understand, the judge forced Thinksecret to become an informant. The judge did not tell them they couldn't publish the information. The judge can't tell them that. They never signed an NDA with Apple, and every once in awhile, the first ammendment actually means something in this country.

  8. Re:Pfft, why? by slimak · · Score: 4, Informative

    You do realize that you can run Linux on Apple hardware, right? In fact i think that Linus Torvalds (you may have heard of him) does this.

  9. Re:Smaller portable needs. by burns210 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "I am not yet at the point where I need my own cluster, but when calculations start to eat up hours per day or even whole days, you start to think about these things."

    You may know this already but with Xgrid being built into OS X proper, buying a second Powermac could be used as a ad hoc 2-node cluster. If money isn't a problem, getting 2 of the new Powermacs, one as your workstation and both serving as grid nodes with Xgrid may be your best bet.

  10. Re:No word yet... by FuturePastNow · · Score: 4, Informative

    PCI-X is really designed for servers: RAID cards, gigabit ethernet, fibre channel, things like that. It's just an extension of the original PCI, to wring more life out of it until PCIe was ready, so it's unlikely that more uses will be found for it.

    PCI-express is, on paper, good for everything. The x16 slots are for video cards, the x8 slots for RAID and gigabit, the x1 slots are for everything else, from new ports to sound cards to whatever. Or they will be, anyway; I've yet to see a PCIe device other than a video card.

    People stick all kinds of things in slots (there's a joke there, somewhere). With more stuff being integrated into computers, it's become sort of a power user thing, though, which is why only the Powermac on the Mac side has the slots.

    --
    Give a man fire, and you warm him for the night. Set a man on fire, and you warm him for the rest of his life.
  11. Re:They've ditched the plumbing/new iMac video by cyberwiz01 · · Score: 3, Informative
    ... on the old dual 2.5 G5. Thats a good thing I think. As impressive as the system was, there's something (irrational) in my mind that just gets nervous about things like that. I'm worried that the... juice... will leak out onto the mobo.

    I don't understand why people are so paranoid about water-cooling.As long as the hoses are clamped well and the user doesnt do anything stupid like waving sharp objects near the tubing, there should not be any problems. Apple uses a special mixture that is non corrosive and kills algae so there's no need to worry about that. Besides a good quality pump can last just as long as a fan 90 there are no reliability issues either. People need to stop being so paranoid about water cooling.

  12. Re:document tracing technologies by jcuffe · · Score: 5, Informative

    The canary trap IIRC. Tom Clancy made a big deal about that with his main character throughout most of his novels. Apparently the way it works was to make many different copies of the documents, using a program to vary the punctuation and word choice. It's a remarkably elegant solution, and if Apple isn't doing this now, I don't know what the hell their problem is.

  13. Re:Slow learners? by amliebsch · · Score: 4, Informative
    Actually, the UTSA does restrict the freedom of speech and has been upheld as constitutional thus far.

    Er...the UTSA is not a law. It is a model statute. It only applies where and to the extent to which it has been adopted. It also usually requires that the publisher know that the source of information is violating the law by disclosing it, essentially making the publisher a party to a crime.

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    If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
  14. New Mac iBook by Kiriwas · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've had my new Mac iBook (my first Apple purchase) for a little over a month now. My old compaq (750 MHz) laptop died finally from the compaq white screen of death and I needed a replacement. I'm still at University so money is tight; I wanted the PowerMac but the iMac was much more in my range (1300). The one thing I've noticed about it is that you never really notice lag from the processor... BUT... if you don't have like a gig of ram, you can get a lot of lag while multitasking (think all 4 Office apps, firefox, X11 and a couple terminals). Fortunately, adding ram is easier than I thought, and aftermarket ram for them is pretty cheap. Overall, I will probably be saving up for a new G5 desktop whenever I can afford it. I'm hooked!

  15. Re:Smaller portable needs. by Johnny+Mozzarella · · Score: 4, Informative
    Check out these sales figures for the second quarter: Keynote Presentation

    In spite of the recent trackpad isses, PowerBooks are selling like iPods(yes, hot cakes have been replaced by iPods).

  16. Re:No word yet... by doggkruse · · Score: 5, Informative

    Tiger is supposed to include this feature:

    Fine Grain Locking (SMP scalability)
    Enjoy improved performance and scalability.

    see http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/unix/

  17. They both make knives for the Swiss Army ... by balamw · · Score: 4, Informative
    They have both made knives for the Swiss Army since the late 19th century. This describes what I recall as the case.

    The Compromise of 1908

    The company from which Wenger emerged had been a supplier to the Swiss Army as early as 1893, and its competitor, Victorinox, since 1890. Wenger is in the French-speaking Jura region, and its competitor is in the German-speaking canton of Schwyz. To avoid friction between the two cantons, the Swiss government decided in 1908 to use each supplier for half of its requirements. So while Victorinox can lay claim to be the "original", Wenger can state that its Swiss Army Knives are the "genuine". In any case, both have been manufacturing Swiss Army Knives for over 100 years and both must meet identical specifications laid down by the army.

    B
  18. Re:Slow learners? by As+Seen+On+TV · · Score: 3, Informative

    No, that's what his own lawyer says as well. Ciarelli's position since the beginning has been that YES, he did indeed break the law, but that he should be exempt because California has a (stupidly misguided) "shield law" that gives certain special classes of people certain protections.

    I was actually kinda hoping that this case would inspire either the court or the legislature to get rid of that absurdly unconstitutional law, but it doesn't look like that will happen. Instead, the judge just declared that whether the "shield law" is constitutional or not, Ciarelli isn't protected by it.

    So the facts of the case are not in dispute.

  19. Re:2 drives halves your MTBF by Jahz · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just to perfectly clear for everyone, a hard drive's tested Mean Time Between Failure (MTBF) MEANS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING IN REALITY!!

    For the end user, purchasing a hard drive with an MTBF of 500,000 hours indicates that you have a 50% chance of disk drive failure in under 500k hours, and a 50% chance of drive failure after 500k hours. In other words, if a hard drive sells 1,000 units, and half of the drives die in an hour, while the other half last 1 million hours, the MBTF is 500,000 hours. Useful, eh?

    Also its worth noting that manufacturers test the MBTF by putting a few dozen (or more) drives into a giant over and stressing them to the max. They will fail in a reletively short time. That time is averaged and modified to "reflect" real world usage. It is useful only for drive manufacturers (for risk management estimates etc...)

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