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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. "

4 of 487 comments (clear)

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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)

    --
    For more information, click here.
  4. Re:Let me be the first to say: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Why, praytell, is this news?

    It's a freaking advert.
    --
    Free and easy DHTML Widgets. Get Wigitized [fordi.org].

    You have a freaking advert in your signature!