MacBook Announcement Expected on Tuesday
wwhsgrad2002 writes "Both ThinkSecret and Apple Insider are reporting that Apple could hold a press conference as early as Tuesday, May 9th, to announce their new line of MacBooks. The laptop will be the Intel-based successor to the company's popular iBook line. The 13.3-inch widescreen MacBook is expected to sport Core Duo processors from Intel Corp and pack novelties such as a completely magnetic latching system, built in iSight video camera, and MagSafe power adapter. Additionally, each MacBook is expected to come bundled with Apple's Front Row and PhotoBooth software applications. A coding glitch with Apple's Web site has all but confirmed the MacBook moniker for the new consumer laptop."
Damn, and I just got the 15" version. Would be nice to have one that's a little more portable. Definitely happy with the performance though.
[%] Cingular Ringtones
Cheers,
Ian
Please, don't put some toilet video card in the macbook. I'm looking at you Intel Integrated.
If you're going after the college kids market AT ALL, the macbook has to be able to game at least most of the time.
--- Do you believe in the day?
Why would they time it to be the same day as Nintendo's press conference on Tuesday?
I understand that they're different markets, but all eyes are going to be on Nintendo that day. They could easily put it off a week and get 100% of the attention.
The consumer line of laptops have had several differentiating features from the pro line. And I think in addition to the lack of gigabit ethernet, lack of expansion slot and included wireless, the CPU was the other big differentiator. I find it hard to believe they will put in a dual core CPU into the new "iBooks" - I would guess a new single-core pentium-M CPU ...
I just hope they keep the dedicated video, and stay away from the integrated Intel video.
And by floppies, of course, I am referring to your testicles. Be very careful when snapping your mac book shut if you aren't wearing pants.
It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
boring.
By virtue of its name the MacBook is a low-end version of the Pro. Fair enough, but the specs are pretty much going to be identical to the Pro version I guess, except with a lower end GFX card, less storage, smaller screen, slower CPU. I've suddenly stopped finding Apple hardware releases interesting.
Three or four years ago, it was kind of nice because there was a certain sense of innovation there and you really didn't know what to expect, but now I get a certain sense that Apple's product releases are going to be mainly governed by speedbump releases of Intel's CPUs from now on...
new Intel CPU == new Apple laptop, so expect to see a new range of Pros when Merom is released towards the and of Q3 this year, a new Xserve when Kentsville is out, and a new bunch of pro desktops when Conroe is released... unfortunate, but probably true.
... and on this Tuesday Apple made announcement that they will announce on Saturday the date of the next announcement about their laptop.
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
If you had your testicles in between the keyboard and the lid when you shut the machine, then I'd be very worried.
By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
how else do you cum on a chick's face?
move that 300gb firewire/usb drive a little too close and poof all your data gone to the land of the unrecoverable
It would be nice if Apple was less focused on the US car driving market and considered releasing a sub-notebook (<0.9kg) for those of us that walk, fly, and/or use public transit, and need to always carry around a computer. I have desktop computers with large displays at home and work, so I don't need to lug around a monstrosity, when I need a computer during commute and when traveling, just something small that easily fits in my purse.
As a frequent business traveler, I have been buying and using small Intel based Japanese sub-notebooks for 8 years, and would love to buy a Apple notebook that can run MacOSX, especially now that I can use bootcamp to multiboot other OS's as well. But I don't see that happening anytime soon.
Maybe Apple should licence an OQO or similar sized device and port their OS to it, if they aren't interested in building a sub-notebook from scratch.
... then we don't have to guess.
Do those two names strike anyone else as a bit silly? I wish Apple had kept the PowerBook name.
First, Apple needs to get schools looking at these models for next year. If the company waits much later, schools are already going to make plans based on existing models.
Second, I doubt Apple thinks it will be upstaged in ANY way by Nintendo -- and I think that judgment will be correct. Many gamers and geeks will be paying attention to Nintendo's announcement, but an Apple announcement will greatly upstage it in terms of media attention, IMO.
David
Apple Stores are hosting a pre-release event for the Red Hot Chili Peppers on Tuesday, May 9th. MacBooks will not be released on the same day.
By virtue of its name the MacBook is a low-end version of the Pro. Fair enough, but the specs are pretty much going to be identical to the Pro version I guess, except with a lower end GFX card, less storage, smaller screen, slower CPU. I've suddenly stopped finding Apple hardware releases interesting.
... is a Hardware fetishist. The specs of the MacBook Pro vs the lower end MacBook will not be all that much different than those of the G4 PowerBook were when compared to the old iBook line. The MacBook [Pro] still holds it's own when compared to the vast majority of PC laptops available on the market today in terms of innovative design. With a handful of exceptions the competitors still look like bricks by comparison which was already true when they were compared to the G4 PowerBooks three years ago. Not that the Hardware is the most attractive part of Apple computers anyway it's the OS, it's ease of use and the various specialist applications that the Macintosh platform excels at... and lets not forget the complete absence (so far) of malware.
Only to idiots, are orders laws.
-- Henning von Tresckow
The 17" macbook pro's are shipping. I have a tracking number, in any case! We'll see how long it takes fedex to get them here from Shanghai.
Cheers.
If you want to argue that THIS particular notebook won't be earthshatteringly innovative, that would be a reasonable argument (assuming that the reports about what it will have are true). The new MacBook will be a logical lower-end extension of the MacBook Pro. But to make the sweepting statement that Apple hardware is now boring is totally unsupported by any facts that I know or anything you covered in your post. Apple's lineup of hardware is very strong, IMO. The fact that we don't currently expect anything fascinating in this one product doesn't make the entire company's hardware boring (or anything close to it).
David
Print outs.
If the MacBook is going to be as innovative/different as everyone seems to think (widescreen, etc.) then why isn't there going to be a special event where they can tout it?
Even if it's a small one like they had for the mini and iPod HiFi introduction...
And if they are going to have one of these events, they need to give the press time to schedule it. Send out invites, etc.
-ch
...or will they get screaming hot like the MacBooks Pro do, thus preventing you from actually putting one on your lap?
Know that there is a difference between the Macbook (iBook) and the Macbook Pro (Powerbook).
The pro line is called the MacBook Pro, so the consumer line is called the MacBook. I expect the Intel towers, if they ever appear, to be called the Mac, MacTower, MacPC, or the like. They do seem to be moving away from the brand of 'power' to the brand of book.
As far as the screen size, the industry does seen to be standardizing on the 13.3 screen as the small entrant. In terms of cost, this is probably the best choice for the entry level portable. What is interesting is that this probably means that we will see a consolodation of the iBook and Powerbook into a Macbook. The MacBook will be a compromise dimension betwen 12 and 15 inches, while the pro models will be 15 and 17 inches.
Which also leaves the 12" models in limbo. These are really a perfect size, and if the 12" PowerBooks are ever $800 dollars I may buy one, as we are unlikely to see such a machine again. I wonder how long Apple is going to produce PowerPC based macines, which is, really to ask, how long until the PowerMacs are replaced. Or is Apple just going to produce laptops and media centers, and leave the pro image editing to the MS crowd? I shudder to think.
In any case, we will see what happens over the next few day and the next year. Certainly Apple has plenty of time to pull an rabbit out of it's hat since we won't see big PC sales until christmas of 2007 when MS vista will be ready for prime time.
Oh, the joys of life. Perhaps I will get a PowerMac G5 yet, even if they slurp electricity like it is water.
"She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
I have an old G3 iBook, and it's too big. To get me to buy another portable they need to offer something comparable to a Sony VAIO 505 in form factor. Or preferably, a tablet Mac, but I doubt Steve's biases will let that happen.
GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
Religious war? More like a troll. Try giving some examples to support your opinion. Good for design and that's about it? What rock have you been hiding under? I know a TON of scientists who are using macs, because OS X has the ability to run all the UNIX tools we are accustomed to, but they have an easy to use interface and all the business type software that's missing from a linux machine. Plus, being able to drop into an apple store in any major city to get help when your video out isn't working and you have to give that powerpoint presentation tomorrow is a nice bonus.
The whole "they don't have the software" argument has been dead for a long time - the only markets where OS X software isn't up to par with windows are niche ones - specialized proprietary software with a small user base, or things like games. As much as it might shock some people, most people don't buy their computers to play games.
Come on, if you're going to bash macs, update your talking points. 1998 called, it wants its troll back.
Cause the PC laptop offerings have heads spinning? Please.
Or because there's no tablet (hint- they won't do it until they get it right - after two PC stumbles, who can blame them)?
Or because the Apple market has held its own and continues to build eas of use and value? Count me in.
Case in point. My wife just bought the latest Acer which has the touted features of:
- brightview screen (a shiny piece of plastic that produces glare and fingerprints at an astounding rate)
- constant light for the bluetooth status (thanks - eats batteries)
- constant light for the wifi status (ditto batteries)
- constant light for the battery, num lock, cap lock (all of which are mirrored in the taskbar anyway)
- three USB ports Woohoo! One more than an iBook!
- a four cell battery which is an eight cell battery with four cells torn out. Honestly, you can squeeze the case and feel where the missing cells are supposed to be.
- 2.5 hour battery life if you spring for the 8 cell battery separately.
- Speed. It's a 2.something, if I turn off all the fancy XP graphics under system performance, it can almost keep up with my 1.33 iBook for general use with a few apps open.
- software. none. after loading her up with picasa and itunes, whenever something mildly novel comes up, she shuts the lid and asks me to do it on the iBook. And she knows how to work a PC - she does it all day at her job. She's a wiz at office + access, but for real world stuff, the integration just isn't there - they made this point in one of the new apple ads - and it's about time.
I'd rather spend my time getting the work done than figuring out the workaround or forking over the license fee for getting it done on a PC.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
You were shooting for score:5, Funny - right?
Brought to you by Carl's Junior.
I hope they come up with a 13.3" MacBook Pro. I use a 12" PowerBook right now; it's so handy and small, I don't want a bigger laptop! Of course, Tuesday's 13.3" MacBook may have all the features of my PowerBook and then some. Just have to wait and see, I guess.
And hopefully it's your last time trying one of these things. It looks like a matrix marketing scam. I notice you included your link so you must be aware of that. The chances of actually getting a MacBookPro probably hover just around the 0 mark.
Dual boot Windoze then dumbazz... That's what boot camp is for...
You worry about his testicles? Your relationship must be close indeed.
You see, the key to Apple was product differentiation. I don't think people really understand what Apple has taken on when it moved to Intel.
Essentially it's moved its entire product lifecycle up a gear. You'll see newer, faster Apples appearing much more frequently than you used to, because Intel release interim speedbump chips throughout the year - maybe as many as 5 or 6. For Apple, this is a good thing.
But, Intel also releases a new platform technology every year or so, so when Yonah's successor Merom is released, Apple has no choice but to do the same, otherwise it has a marketing dilemma of people doing a like-for-like speed comparison between a Yonah Mac and a Merom PC.
Now, we know that comparing Macs to PCs is apples and oranges, but Joe Public doesn't know that and would possibly plump for a fast new Dell over what on paper looks like a slower, older Mac.
The other downside is that by keeping up with Intel releases, Apples are going to date a lot faster. In a year, the 15" Macbook Pro will be a slow Macbook Pro assuming Apple keep up with Intel. Now it may not be slow to use as OSX software doesn't seem to bloat as fast as PC stuff, but it could potentially cause confusion for new buyers.
The bottom line is that essentially, Apple have rescinded some of their control over their product line development. While they can innovate on peripheral elements such as illuminated screens, magnetic power cords and the like, the core of their machine is now owned by Intel and they are going to have a much tougher time exhibiting the kind of product differentiation that they have been able to in the past.
I'm prepared for another iPod Hifi myself.
Seeing that Intel is pushing Duos very hard. Dell is delivering Duo notebooks at the 699 price point, mostly when you catch them on one of their "sales". I have seen 15.4" versions with default options hitting as low as 649 for a 1.66 Duo.
Now some will say that Apple does not have to consider Dell or XP notebooks in their plans I think they do. The price segment the new MacBook will be headed into will be up against the bulk of the XP systems out there. Also take note that many college age kids will look at prices and features. Since most work can be done just fine on XP systems for school work Apple will have to consider their offering closely.
Things I expect. At minimum a 13.3 screen, probably a 14 as those screens are in good supply. Base model will be a Core-Solo and max will probably be a 1.83 Duo. Integrated graphics will probably be default but they honestly should at least offer a X1400 256mb option as this feature will appeal to many college age users as well as those looking for a lower priced system to run both X and XP. We probably won't see drives as large as the Pro and will see a 4200rpm in the base model. Gigabit ethernet, USB2, FW400 and a cardslot are a given (chipsets are common for all, it probably would be more to actually get an old 10/100 chipset). figure a good keyboard without backlight but I expect iSight.
Get a x1400 256mb, Duo 166, 512 base (2gb max) out the door for 1299 and I will be all over it.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
You mean the people who make the software you want don't support OSX? (Or windows, now, since that is supported on new macs) (or *nix)
Perhaps if you were more specific I would be less inclined to reply sarcastically.
Although the moon is smaller than the earth, it is farther away.
because OS X has the ability to run all the UNIX tools we are accustomed to,
Well, it's a little more complicated than that. Some UNIX tools port easily to OS X, others are a pain to port. The situation with OS X is better than Windows, but it's not a drop-in replacement for UNIX.
and all the business type software that's missing from a linux machine
You'd be surprised... there actually isn't much of a difference.
Plus, being able to drop into an apple store in any major city to get help when your video out isn't working and you have to give that powerpoint presentation tomorrow is a nice bonus.
That and the nice looks of the machine are their main advantages. Fortunately, Linux runs on them, so you can have the best of both worlds: Apple hardware and Linux software.
And hopefully it's your last time trying one of these things. It looks like a matrix marketing scam. I notice you included your link so you must be aware of that. The chances of actually getting a MacBookPro probably hover just around the 0 mark.
And yet his chances are still infinitely greater than yours (under that offer).
Funny how that works... and no... I never sign up for them either.
Wow, this will be great! I've been waiting for this!
switcher \'swi`ch &r\, n.
A person who thinks that they are a Mac user but are really just trying to be. The mistake they make is to try to become a Mac user, when real Mac users are all about not trying to be anything and following your own rules. There is no fashion code to being a Mac user. There are no rules as to what applications you have to run.
Recent converts like you are ruining the old school Mac community because you are posers. Apple releases one OS that popularizes Fitts' law and the Genie effect, and suddenly people assume being a Mac user is all about owning a Mac. But a real Mac user is born, not made. You "switchers" are misrepresenting yourselves and the Mac platform. You're giving people the wrong idea of what Macintosh is.
switcher: shops at hot topic, thinks Firefox is a good Mac app, waiting for OS X port of PayrollPro 2000, follows any hint of a fashion trend (instead of setting them!), wouldn't know Clarus from Carl Sagan.
real Mac user: someone true to who they are, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They're not fond of rules and they have no respect for the status quo. The ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world.
There's your answer. At least nowadays (the Powerbook Duos were a while ago), Apple seems to feel that the notebook should contain everything you're going to actually need on a frequent basis. So there aren't external drive bays, docking stations, port replicators or things like that - and yeah, they lean toward the larger screens.
:)
The old 12" iBook was 2.2kg, the 12" PowerBook was 2.1kg. So far, the MacBook Pros have been a little thinner and lighter than the PowerBooks they replaced. If the new MacBook is actually thinner (as has been rumored) than the old iBook, maybe they can get it down to 2kg or less - that'd be nice.
(If the specs are at all decent, I need to buy a few, anyway.)
Incidentally, I have multiple colleagues who use 12" PowerBooks and just tuck them (in thin sleeves) into their little-tote-bag purses. Amusingly, they frequently breeze through metal detectors where everyone else's laptop gets taken out and turned on, because after all, nobody wants to search a purse.
Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
I have to say that apple has nice packaging but they are bum (to use a technical term). They don't support the software I want.
Can you elaborate on that? If you mean they don't support Windows software, well that's like saying the Apple orchard doesn't support orange juice production. If they don't support some specific piece MacOSX written software package then I would have to ask since when is it the OS maker's job to support the software? That's the software company's job. I don't complain to Microsoft when Firefox crashes on my XP machine.
Perhaps, but then I don't have to sign up to some shitty offer and persuade 5 of my friends (and each of them persuade 5 more friends etc.) to sign up too. All for the remote chance that the affiliate fees will cover a MacBookPro for the guy at the top of the chain.
Considering a bottom of the range MacBookPro costs $2000, this site probably expects to rake in $4000 before sending one out. Assuming $5 in affiliate fees are earned from every rube, that means 1 MacBookPro for every 800 people. Therefore your odds of getting one are at least 1 in 800.
It's no wonder the site is so light on details. It's a scam.
Expect Intel toilet-graphics in all but the most powerful MacBook, if even that. Remember, this is their budget machine. The toilet-graphics will allow them to drop the price OR make more of a margin on the computer. Either way, they win.
This is super disappointing to me. I was really hoping Apple would come out with a small tablet with a discrete graphics controller. I love mine, but would get rid of it in a second if Apple came out with something just like it.
+++ATH0
Remember, it's not a purse, it's european.
No.
Fortunately, Linux runs on them, so you can have the best of both worlds: Apple hardware and Linux software.
In a couple of weeks I plan on getting one of the new 17" Macbook Pros and was thinking about setting it up for dualboot. As it has BSD under the hood though I don't really think it's needed. Installing Linux on a new Mac is more a desire than a need the way I see it.
FalconShould there be a Law?
Laminated, obviously.
By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
MacBook has the word "MAC" in it. That's Apple's very expensive brand name, and they would do very well to promote it. They learned this from the auto industry.
"What kind of car do you drive?"
No one says "oh, I drive an SC 430." They just say, "I drive a Lexus.
Focus the brand!
Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
The G4-based incarnation of the Mac mini was basically an iBook without the LCD or keyboard-- it had identical specs. It stands to reason that Apple will continue that similarity once both machines are Intel-based. Which means that the iBook x86/MacBook/whatever they call it will have GigE and be offered with both Core Solo and Core Duo CPUs, just like the Intel mini.
As for missing features, some of them are strictly to differentiate the product lines. But you can bet your bottom dollar that gigabit ethernet will be in the MacBook. For one thing, the Mac mini which will share the MacBook's specs has it. For another, if Apple wants to get into the downloadable movies business, GigE across their entire computer line is a no-brainer-- and the G4 iBook is currently the only machine in their lineup right now that lacks it. It doesn't matter that current consumer-level broadband routers only do 10/100, it's just important that the Mac not be the bottleneck when Joe Sixpack wants to download a movie. Broadband internet will get faster and cheaper, eventually, and consumer-level 'infrastructure' items will start supporting gigabit. When that happens, Apple's products will be ready and waiting to take advantage of it.
~Philly
Why dual boot when you can virtualize?
"The way we can tell it's C# instead of Haskell is because it's nine lines instead of two." -- wadler
Everybody thinks the new screen will be a camera of some sort, but input is where it's really at.
It's a danged digital canvas.
It's a tablet and more, but it's too new to make it into a product, unless that's part of Steve's new anti-leak plan.
I work at Apple and can confirm that there will be Intel processors in this line-up of notebooks. Hope this valuable information helps.
Full Tilt
Apple released a sub-notebook in 1992 - the Duo 230. I've often wished for a modern equivalent - I haven't used the optical drive on my iBook since I installed the OS and apps, and I doubt it would be much of a technological stretch to push everything but a USB port and a headphone jack into a Firewire port-extender. The iBook is nice, but it's still too big for convenient day-to-day backpack transport. I'd love to have OS X on something smaller.
Perhaps Jobs is sitting in his execs chair reading /. stroking his white cat and laughing manically as his latest plan comes together.
As an Apple stockholder, I do not support the switch from IBM and FreeScale (formerly Motorola) PowerPC to Intel chips. Apple is effectively outsourcing the design of its hardware, of which much innovation and creativity were well received in the marketplace. Aside from the Rosetta chip, what *REALLY* distinguishes a Macintosh now from a PC aside from the shiny metal and plastic? I am not trolling, I know that Apple couples hardware from 3rd parties together very well, I just don't see how the switch to Intel chips is going to increase marketshare, damn, a Macintosh is a Macintosh only goes so far, the underlying hardware does have something to do with the *Macintosh* experience.
Aside from Intel speed bumps, the Macbook and Macbook Pro will have very little distinction. Hopefully, Apple will provide the chip in a socket and have a block of jumpers to upgrade chips and adjust CPU and logic board frequencies. At least I upgraded from a Motorola 400 MHz G3 to an IBM 500 MHz G3 in my Blue & White 'Yosemite' Macintosh with relative ease. With Intel-type designs, upgrading Macintoshes shouldn't be difficult.
Apple is treading in dangerous waters by switching to Intel and risking becoming irrelevant by embracing commodity PC hardware. Steve & Co. better have really, and I mean *REALLY* superior software to compete against The Borg, and I think that Switching to Intel pretty much burned the bridges with IBM and PowerPC unless Big Blue can produce cooler temperature chips that burn-up the Intel chips.
...and you will understand why Apple won't enter this market. Origami is going to Oribombi.
I've been considering buying my first Apple laptop since they switched to Intel, and looked at both the Boot Camp and Parallels options to have Windows on the side for when I need it (work, games).
Bottom line : Based on the many reviews I read of Parallels beta, virtualization is A LOT more practical than dual booting, since you don't need to reboot. The speed loss is there, but not that much.
HOWEVER, forget about it if you want to play games or any application that uses the 3D features of the graphics card heavily (BTW has anyone tried Solidworks on the MacBook?). In those cases, dual booting is the only viable option since the performance loss is VERY present.
DISCLAMER: Again, I haven't tried those myself, only read the reviews. And I would love to have feedback from people who did test both.
Rosetta chip? The only that differentiated Apple in the past was OS X anyway.
So that means its safe sex. Right?
Apple is effectively outsourcing the design of its hardware, of which much innovation and creativity were well received in the marketplace.
Well recieved in the marketplace 10-15 years ago maybe. Apple's recent system design has pretty much been uncompetitive and basically full of low-end PC components anyway. They last time they built a truely "best-in-class" system was in the PMac 8600 era.
Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
"Pro" does not mean "bigger screen." I want a 12" or 13" laptop (actually, I'd take a 10" or 11" laptop if it was superhighrez), but I also want non-integrated graphics, backlit keyboard, gigabit ethernet, lots of video out options, and so on.
The most important feature in a laptop is portability. I don't want a fucking iBook. I want the smallest fully-featured PowerBook imaginable, and, ideally, I want it to have 1600x1200 even on a 12" screen (OK, perhaps that's hyperbole. But 1280x1024 at minimum. Fuck 1024x768.)
Why can't Apple just make it happen? I don't want to lug around a 15" machine just to get all the real features.
Um, Apple always outsourced their CPUs. Motorola/Freescale made the G3s and 4s, and IBM made the G5s. Before that Motorola made the 680x0s. Apple was a member of the PowerPC alliance and got some input that way, but Motorola and IBM made the chips. The extent of Apple's pull was revealed when IBM didn't produce a notebook G5 or even keep up with Steve's processor speed promises, and Motorola stagnated on the G4.
You seem to think that the processor makes a Mac. It doesn't. Apple may well keep up with Intel speed bumps but that doesn't mean they have to make a big product announcement every time. Apple commonly tweaks their product lines with little or no fanfare and their real innovation has always been outside the processor.
Rosetta chip? What?
The myth that they are 'design' machines really needs to die. Maybe back in the late 80s, when the only WYSIWYG DTP software available was on the Mac, but the Adobe, Macromedia and Quark software used by most 'design' types has long been designed / developed in a cross-platform way. By numbers, there is more design software on the PC.
I don't really think there is a lot that makes the Mac an inherently better platform for 'design' - or rather, I don't think there is anything that makes the Mac a better platform for design that doesn't ALSO apply to other fields.
As for software support in general - as a software developer who uses both PCs and Macs, I've not found myself stuck for anything. I use different programs on both machines, but you can achieve the same functionality on both platforms. Sometimes I find myself cursing not having Expose, Xylescope, native PDF support or the Omni apps on the PC. Sometimes, as with Oracle XE, the problem is in the other direction.
If you're not a troll, I'd suggest developing a bit of curiosity towards the systems you use, and a bit of flexibility with your tools - it could pay dividends for your career.
'Capitalists of the world, unite! Oh
You'll probably be able to buy a 'best' MacBook with pretty much the specs you'd like for the small MacBook Pro you're talking about. Of course the price will be the expected one for the specs (including Apple tax).
I pledge allegiance to the Apple of Cupertino, and to the Macintosh for which it stands. One nation under Steve, indivisible, with user-friendliness and iPods for all.
Yeah, yada yada, yap yap, whateavah. But the names MacBook Pro and MacBook are soooo stupid! People will call both products lines MacBook, and will not understand the name change.
Beauty is in the beholder of the eye.
Actually, it's not a Rosetta chip. It's a Rosetta stone. For some reason, Apple decided to put a small engraved stone inside every Intel Mac. This stone is read by a very tiny scribe that lives inside the computer and translates instructions on the fly for the processor. The scribe gets bored after a couple of hours, hence the inclusion of the iSight camera on top of the screen of most of their new models to allow him to get a view of the outside world, like a periscope, and the lackluster performance of the Mac mini: the scribe can see nearly nothing, which makes him angry. He has to move to the IR receiver for the remote control to watch something else than a hard drive or his personal stone.
If they solicit in the UK, then they can be prosecuted for holding an illegal lottery. One of the Free iPod scams was last year.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
Apple stores don't get merchandise before the public announcements. And some people over at macrumors.com suggest that this may 9th date is because of the red hot chili peppers album being released on iTunes that day.
Open Source Java Web Forum with LDAP authentication
Dude, as much as I like HP stuff; they son't make Toughbooks. Panasonic does.
I'm guessing the cat is black. Otherwise you would see white cat hair on his black turtleneck sweaters at the keynotes.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
Steve Jobs said it when he announced the PB G4 12", and a friend who happened to have both showed them to me.
It's true. It's smaller in every dimension.
So get yourself a PB 12" and you've got the Duo 230 beat.
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
...is going to increase marketshare." May I ask what planet you've been on for the past few months??? You haven't heard about Boot Camp? Aren't you aware that the Intel switch removes the last excuse PC users had not to switch to a Mac-- they can now run Windows software on Macs! The good things the switch will do for your Apple stock price should more than compensate for your unhappiness!
uh, niche markets like accounting? The latest version of Quickbooks Pro for Mac is an improvement (most definitely not the crippled, half-assed version they use to promote), but it's still not not reached feature parity with the PC version and it can't work with PCs on a multi-user license, which means your office has to be all one platform or the other unless you're really comfortable importing and exporting critical data a lot. The Mac only alternatives are cool, but finding any CPA or bookkeeping firms to verify your small business accounting that accepts anything other than a Quickbooks Pro file is a monumental task.
For most individual users, there's Mac software that's as good or better than the PC otpions, but there's still a huge gap in several very important areas which are far too large and important to call niche.
Does this article in Wired change your mind at all? http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,64614,00.html .
I don't complain to Microsoft when Firefox crashes on my XP machine.
Maybe not to Microsoft. But about Microsoft? Come-on, be honest. Get it off your chest. We all do it.
If you think different, supply a link which states with exactness how many people you need to recruit to be guaranteed a MacBookPro. Betcha can't.
I'm not sure why you think because "the industry does seen (sic) to be standardizing on the 13.3 screen" that "we will see a consolodation (sic) of the iBook and Powerbook". There are 12" iBooks and PowerBooks now. There is no reason there can't be same-sized MacBooks and MacBook Pros.
I'm not sure why you think the entire PowerMac segment will cease to exist. It is pretty clear it will be the last to be replaced, because of the terrific performance of the dual core G5. If they replaced them now, they would have no performance increase to show for it. That's probably why they replaced the oldest machines first, to be able to boast of a 2x-4x performance increase with the Core Duo. Whoop-de-do, so the latest dual core Intel is twice as fast as a single core, last gen G4? Am I supposed to be impressed?
I'm not sure why you were modded +5. Goes with the quality of the stories on the main page today, I suppose.
Lies about crimes
Look at these bits in particular:
Yup, even if you complete the requirements of their offers, they're not required to actually send you the machine.Are you adequate?
I've been using an Apple machine in one way or another since 1987, when my family got an Apple IIGS. I've never owned a PC. I've had an LC, an LC II, a Centris 660av (the machine of the true believer), a PowerMac 7500 (that lasted through so many upgrades by the end it had no original parts left except the case and power supply), a white iBook, PowerBooks 180c, 520c, Wallstreet II G3 and Al G4, and a Sawtooth G4 (I got lucky and got one of the original 450MHz ones, before the speeds were reduced.)
Right now I have the PB G4 and a Core Duo Mini. I sold the G4 tower (it was also pumped full of upgrades) and just about made enough to cover the cost of the mini--try doing that with a 6 year old PC.
Here's my point--the Core Duo Mini is the coolest piece of Apple kit I've used since OS X 10.2 came out and I switched over permanently. The 1.66 Duo is enough faster than the 1.25 G4 in my PowerBook that I have started to complain about the PowerBook. The OS feels tighter, somehow. I've never had a single problem with Rosetta, apart from a few PrefPanes and plug-ins not loading, which was expected. Mundane things, like browsing in Safari, are hilariously faster. Harder things, like transcoding video, are noticeably quicker. Parallels is nice to have around, even if I never use it.
If the new Macbooks are this good, they're going to be the biggest hit Apple's ever had, particularly at the college level. I don't know any non-geek students who still buy desktops, and the speed and polish of the MacBook coupled with the whole BootCamp/Parallels thing is going to wow a lot of people. I was initially hesitant about the Intel thing, but it really has breathed a whole new life into Apple's product line.
london is drowning and i live by river
Final Cut Pro.
We use Macs and PCs. On the whole, I find PC users to be ignorant and useless, and Mac users to be arrogant and annoying.
I have to have time for both, but I wish I had time for none...
You: going by some numbers Apple put out.
Me: held them both in my hands at the same time.
Take a look at the Apple specs for the size of an iPod Mini and then measure it yourself. I'm not sure where Apple gets their numbers from, then often have nothing to do with reality.
I will modify my statement in one way: The PB 12" is at least as small in every dimension. In at least one dimension (I forget which), it was so near to the same size that I couldn't tell the difference.
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
I won't be buying Apple products (especially those based on Intel hardware) because they includes draconian Digital Restrictions Management (DRM). Apple and Intel have sold out their users to the entertainment cartel made up by the RIAA, MPAA and other leaches.
Why would anyone buy DRM-crippled hardware from Apple when there are so many Linux and Free Software friendly manufacturers that sell desktops and laptops pre-loaded with the GNU/Linux operating system and the KDE desktop environment?
Get computers and accessories from Linux-friendly manufacturers
but it's not a drop-in replacement for UNIX.
It is a drop-in replacement, because it *IS* UNIX! Your precious proprietary Linux binaries might not work, but most everything open source can be recompiled with few or no changes.
Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
I just wonder how people like you manage to survive in this beastly horrid world, where some computers only have one button (but work well and have built in support for almost all two button scroll mice like the logitech cordless I'm using right now on my Mac).
As for 64 bit, well I'm sure you need it to play your games so why don't just go ahead and buy that amd anyway, since you're obviously such a power user that you inform yourself about product details before spouting shit off on the internet.
Yeah, you can recompile, if you have the time and patience. You can even use Fink or DarwinPorts, which requires less time and patience, but not much.
In the end, even with lots of time and patience, you still only get a small fraction of the software that comes standard with a Linux desktop distribution, and it ends up working nowhere near as well, among other things, because Apple's X11 implementation isn't very good. And even to the degree that it does work, OS X applications won't interoperate well with X11 applications.
Running UNIX and Linux apps on OS X is a stop-gap measure, it's not something you want to do day-to-day. I've tried, and in the end, I erased all Linux ports from my Mac--I'd prefer many of them to their Mac equivalents, but they just don't work well enough under OS X to use regularly.
And people complain when Slashdot posts point updates of Linux, yet here it's something that doesn't even exist!
Look out!
Are you modeling the universe? Mapping the human genome? Folding proteins (and I'm not talking about 'folding@home').
I hate to break it to you, but 64-bit isn't 'faster' than 32-bit...
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
It's called control clicking on a Mac and it's almost as fast as using a two button mouse. OR you could get a BT mouse and use an external. Most people I know don't seem to like the trackpads anyway and wind up using an external mouse.
IBM would call it the MacBook Jnr.
Microsoft would call it the MacBook 360.
Sony would call it the MB3 (and ship it at approximately the same time as the heat of the universe).
Nintendo would call it the MacBook Wee (but they'd spell it funny).
I've had and used a Powerbook for 2 years. When I use friends' Windows laptops, I find that I have lots of trouble clicking the buttons under their trackpads -- I seem to left click 50% of the time and right click the other 50%.
x t". When I need a contextual menu I control click. I even control click when I use my wireless mouse, which definitely has two buttons. =|
See, I've gotten so used to the one-click interface that I just "press-under-the-trackpad" instead of "left-click-or-right-click-depending-on-the-conte
As for Merom, it looks way better than the current offerings, so like you, I will wait. Maybe they'll have a native MacOS Photoshop by then, or OS 10.5...
I have a 20" Cinema display with my PC (along with a 15" secondary monitor and a 19" tv for tertiary), and i love it, but some people who use my computer say its just too big (not me though). Plus even now (i bought it when it came out), its still too expensive. My friend just bought a 24" dell display for less than the Apple costs, and its got multiple inputs, hubs, a card reader and is adjustable. Not to say that the apple doesnt have classy simplicity, but its still too damn expensive. Apple would do good releasing a companion display for mac-mini, a 17" widescreen priced at about $300. We know they have them, since the old iMacs, and the powerbooks and now macbooks have them. This would put together a complete mac system for $1000, which is the perfect price point for most people for such a quality machine. Although as someone else mentioned that if the margins on iMacs are much better, then theyre not going to do this and continue to use mac-minis to upsell iMacs.
"Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
Parent and none of the sibling posters seem aware of it. Did i dream it? Oh, guess i didnt. And in fact, its a 5 button mouse.
"Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
Intel dual core? They'll sell tons...
It'll be the new "Standard" by which all laptops are measured.
Bye, bye 12"PowerBooks!
After rumors of temperatures approaching 95C on the macbook pro I hope they use a Pentium M processor.
I would pay more for it as it would have a longer life than the duo heat sink.
http://saveie6.com/
No, wait...
It's called control clicking on a Mac and it's almost as fast as using a two button mouse.
Which is purely a software feature in OSX, and nothing more. Control clicking in Windows XP is NOT the same as right clicking.
Yay! It's YetAnotherAppleProductLaunch time. Why aren't we bored yet? Moore's Law should have been something like "Every eighteen months twice as many product launches will occur". You might be interested now, but will you still be interested when there are a thousand product launches a day? Sooner or later people will turn their attention to the more interesting genuine innovations which occur more and more regularly (but which will inevitably be surpassed by something else). Leave the who-makes-what in the past and concentrate on the inventors who make it all possible. It's scary to think how so few young people are aware of what is happening in front of them. The trend towards ever-faster technological innovation has sufficient credence now to at least acknowlege that humanity as a whole is going to drastically change during in even short lifetimes. Why are so few young people aware of how much things will change during their life? I think the problem is always that the previous generation instills their own expectations onto the next. Most parents can't quite get to grips with just how different their children's life will be. Or not, as it is conceivable that some people well into parenting age may have no idea what their life expectancy is likely to be. It will be interesting to witness the loss of appeal of consumer product launches as their frequency surpasses our ability to keep track of it, and to see where people's attention will then turn. I hope our society is mature enough to adapt and come out healthier as a result. But already we see increasing numbers of people turn to old reassurances: war, religious fundamentalism, commercial and territorial expansionism. And little wonder we have so many people medicating themselves 24 hours a day just to cope with the demands of modern life. I have to go now. I've heard AMD is about to announce a new chip...
Right Clicking Problem, just left click + ctrl and voila, you get right clicking on a mac laptop. now go my child go get a macbookpro... :)
Nom de dieu de putain de bordel de merde de saloperie de connard d encule de ta mere.
Have you missed the fact that Apple made a (really excellent) mouse that has two buttons and also an innovative "scroll pea" that is far better than anything I've used in the past? Yes, the Macbooks will probably keep one button and control click to right click, but that's something I support -- those two buttons on PCs are dawg ugly. Much better to just use an external mouse if it's that much an issue to you.
You've got a friend in Japan: http://www.jlist.com
Yes, except if you want to use BootCamp and Windows XP. Control-clicking is a MacOS feature, not something done in hardware.... just try that in WinXP and you'll see why he's complaining.
I put up with control-click under System 7, under OS 8, under OS 9, and it's ALWAYS been one of the things that pissed me off the most about Apple... their declaration that one mouse button was enough for anyone, alongside this ongoing addition of extra mouse buttons on the keyboard. It's purely hypocritical... if remembering whether to use the right or left button is Too Hard, then remembering whether to use control, shift, command, or option is no improvement.
I'm often wrong on my Mac predictions, but I think Apple might offer a low-priced MacBook based on the new Celeron M CPU based on the Core Solo (Yonah) core (model number 420, 423, and 430). These Celerons differ from Core Solo by having less L2 cache (1MB), slower bus (533MHz), and no Enhanced SpeedStep. I think the lack of SpeedStep is the only thing a MacBook buyer might miss because it significantly improves battery life. However, many other parts of this CPU architecture and chipset were designed with power-saving in mind. If battery life can be made "good enough," these new Celerons should offer great performance for a low price.
I think it would make a lot of sense for Apple to offer a new $500 (or less) Mac mini using this new Celeron M CPU. SpeedStep is not needed on the Mac mini, of course. They also use the same socket as Core Solo/Duo.
TO START
PRESS ANY KEY
Where's the 'ANY' key? I see Esk, Kitarl, and Pig-Up...
try this: http://www.olofsson.info/
------- Oh damn.... the Sigfile escaped... -Great OM
Cool, good to know there is a solution, even a third-party one.
It's called empathy, because he has a pair. The best you could offer would be sympathy.
It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
Not really. Haven't you heard of paper cuts?
I had been fed up with XP for ages, and started playing with a few distros before going to the MBP. Originally, I was going to setup a dual boot too.
Though it's old and I haven't used in more than a year, the cpu and OS shows it, I have a dualboot DEC Alpha. It has WinNT 4.0 and Redhat. And I was going to setup the computer I'm using now as a dualboot machine, however there wasn't any drivers for the motherboard or other components. It's one of those computers with everything integrated on the motherboard. As for XP, MS's requirement that XP be "activated" is what drove me to decide to get a Mac as my next computer even with Macs costing more. I loved Macs to begin with but couldn't "justify" the cost, now I can.
Problem is- OSX is so damn great, I can't find any reason to bother now!
It'll take some tyme to become familiar with OSX, I used it a little bit but that was a few years ago. I did use Macs when Apple released them about 20 years ago but haven't used them much since. Back then I also used, and prefered, Amigas. Weird, but Amigas ran the Mac OS faster than Macs. They could also run DOS/Windows.
FalconShould there be a Law?
All praise the great and powerful Jobs. If he builds it we will buy it.
Ok, where's my Kool-Aid?
MATCHbook Pro?
Thats what I saw when I scanned the headline;)
I just dont get why they'd change one but not the other. Maybe to have mac in every name? everyone knows its a mac.
Conforming to non-conformity is still... conformity.
The Macbook Pro already uses a Pentium M processor. It houses a Core Duo (Yonah) chip, which is based on the Pentium M microarchitecture.
Core Duo 2 (Merom) on the other hand is based on the next generation Core architecture (Conroe)...it will be significantly cooler (at least as far as performance per watt)
Yes, I'm horny. What can I do?
There's that girl who wants to meet me (not sure about sex), but she's somewhere in Europe.
I guess I'll have to buy a flight ticket. Oh well. Got to renew my passport too...
There are third party utilities that will provide right-click capabilities, like SideTrack. Also, there's always ctrl-click.