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Apple Unveils 24" iMac

beren12 writes "Apple today announced a new model in the lineup of iMacs, a new 24" HD model. It comes with a 1920x1200 LCD, 2.16GHz or 2.33GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor, 1-3 GB Memory, 250 or 500GB SATA Drive, NVIDIA GeForce 7300GT or 7600GT with 128MB GDDR3 Video card. Also posted is a new lower end iMac, which looks very similar to the education iMac. Also available is a small speed boost to the Mini line, which now sports a Core Duo 1.83GHz Processor. "

10 of 487 comments (clear)

  1. College Kids by NilObject · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The 17" iMac with 1.83GHz Core Duo processor comes in at $899. That's some seriously lucrative stuff for incoming college freshmen!

  2. Re:Apple made that mistake once by xjerky · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Um, I think that had more to do with the ridiculous price of the cube.

    The mini is today's version of a headless iMac, and it's priced more reasonably. It's also selling better, I'm sure.

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  3. Re:Man Mini was updated as well by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1.66Ghz Core Duo in the low-end, 1.83Ghz Core Duo in the hi-end. No pricedrop though :(.

    If you look at look at Apple's recent history, then you will see more often than not feature upgrades with maintained prices. Apple usually only drops prices on products they want to clear from the inventory. If you want a cheaper version of the Mac mini, they buying a recent one second hand is probably your best bet or seeing if anyone has discounted the previous model (assuming they have any left).

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  4. Re:All Mac Mini now have Core Duo inside... by Space+cowboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With regard to your complaints...

    Graphics: The onboard video chipset does *not* make HDTV playback a problem, it was the core SOLO that stuttered during playback. I have a core duo linked up to my plasma, and it works beautifully.

    CPU: The mini is the low-end machine, you can't expect the top-end processors in the low-end machines

    Simon

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  5. I'm a pretty big Mac fan, but... by ProppaT · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...I couldn't imagine buying a computer built into a 24" monitor. If I'm gonna make an investment in a screen that nice, I'd darn sure want to be able to hook it up to any computer I had and be able to use in in a few years when I needed a system upgrade.

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  6. Why the cube failed by mitchell_pgh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The cube wasn't an iMac without the monitor. It was a PowerMac packed into a very small case.

    Why it failed:

    Price... period.
    You could buy a cheaper and faster PowerMac for $200 less (with expansion bays [still important in 2000], space for a 2nd [or third] HD, space for a full sized video cad, etc. etc.) Benchmarks showed that the singe 400MHz PowerMac was faster than the 450MHz cube [Macworld]

    In my humble opinion, the cube would have sold much better if it had been $1199 ($100 less than the iMac of the time) while having the same feature set and a nice mini-tower type enclosure. It was VERY difficult to justify the price of the Mini in contrast to the PowerMac.

  7. Re:Wrong implication by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...so is it really worth an extra $1000 to buy the 24" screen and OSX?

    It all depends upon what you do with it. For me the cost savings from using OS X over Windows is significant. The cost of using OS X over Linux is very high, since I don't think I can do my job at all without software not available on Linux. I don't know the cost of a good 24" monitor and I'm indifferent to whether on not it is an all-in-one or not. The labor cost of my assembling it all, figuring two hours for assembly, installation, and drivers/troubleshooting is also pretty damn high, considering how much I make hourly. Combined with the cost of the labor every time I do an upgrade of installing an new OS, and moving all my settings, certs, software, licenses, data, accounts, etc. instead of plugging in a firewire cable and having it all automatically migrated easily combines to pay the cost difference (4-6 hours of work usually).

    Everyone has different cost/value propositions though.

  8. Re:No Link? by generic-man · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Old Mac mini: $500, Bluetooth and Airport for $100 more

    New Mac mini: $600, Bluetooth and Airport included!

    Brilliant!

    (Yes, yes, I know... the new Mac mini also includes other new features too)

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  9. Can we still not convince Apple to Users the BEST? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    NVIDIA GeForce 7300GT or 7600GT with 128MB GDDR3 Video card

    Why should Mac users have to settle for middle of the road Video performance, yet again. 1920x1200 displays, and yet 128mb Video cards from last year that will have trouble rendering a game at the monitor's native resolution. How does this make sense?

    Where is the industry leader that the Mac name was built on? Everyone waited forever for a credible OS like OSX, and now Apple's hardware lineup has gone to middle of the road crap. Why?

    Please, Mac users stand up and scream at Apple for something that can at least compete with a freaking 7lb Dell Laptop. These are Macs not glorified eMachines. Argh!

  10. Re:Let me be the first to say: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Why, praytell, is this news?

    It's a freaking advert.
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