Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More
Many outlets are reporting on Apple's iPad event today. Highlights include:
- Apple pay will launch Monday.
- WatchKit -- a way for developers to make apps for the Apple Watch will launch next month.
- iOS 8.1
- Messages, iTunes, and iWork updated and many more new features in OS X Yosemite.
- You can send and receive calls on your Mac if you have an iPhone with iOS 8 that's signed into the same FaceTime account.
- iPad Air 2: New camera, 10 hour battery life, 12x faster than the original iPad.
- iPad mini 3.
- iMac with Retina display.
- And a Mac mini update: Faster processors, Intel Iris graphics, and two Thunderbolt 2 ports.
I've been thinking about giving the OSX another try... I've been messing around with it at work.
The mini wouldn't be a bad way to go... it's not that expensive and I can still use my 27" monitor.
The iMac Retina... no. Besides not wanting to spend that much now, I'd hold off on a first generation rig like that.
Just because you don't understand what it's good for, doesn't mean it is important to others.
Considering that my Black MacBook (2006) lasted eight years, it was a good investment.
For those of you who are a fan of customizing the colors of message bubbles in Messages.app and don't like that Apple removed this ability as part of the iOSification of Yosemite, there's an app for that: https://github.com/kethinov/Bu...
I made this during the developer previews because I don't like the default puke green for most of my IM conversations. Hope this helps some people. Source code also available.
You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
Yosemite Sam was the hootinst, tootinist, shootinist bobtail wildcat in the west!
The iMac has come a long way from being a cute plastic toy. A 27" 5K display and quad-core i5 for $2500. That's pretty impressive.
I have a few questions before I start digging into my couch cushions, however:
1) What is the performance and refresh rate of the display?
2) Can it act as an external display for other computers, like some older versions of the iMac?
About time desktops caught up with better screen resolutions after the whole 1080p marketing hype ruined everything.
I just hope it doesn't have the stupid ghosting problem.
This has been my experience, too. They make good quality hardware, and you will save in the long run, even if they make an insane profit from you in the short term. I'm sure someone on here can point out similar quality PC hardware, but I find other manufacturers to be very uneven. For instance, I got my mother-in-law a high-end HP in 2004 and she is still using it. But some HP machines are absolute garbage.
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
Considering that my Black MacBook (2006) lasted eight years, it was a good investment.
My XPS from 2006 is still with me, but the equivalent Macbook would have been far more expensive. What is your point?
The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
What is an XPS?
What is yoir point?
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
You can send and receive calls on your Mac if you have an iPhone with iOS 8 that's signed into the same FaceTime account.[emphasis added]
How else would you expect it to work? Would you rather Apple force you to sign your Mac up to register a phone line with AT&T or Verizon so you have one number for your phone, and another number for your computer?
http://instagram.com/thephotographer
"an ipad 12x faster than the "original ipad"
faster doing ... what?
At least the Google 9 was mildly interesting if for no other reason than its been a few years since the 10 came out. Apple seems to be on a 6 to 12m hamster wheel of speedbump upgrades. Yawn indeed.
Except that it doesn't
would that be a fair comparison, a quad 3.9 with a FSB running well over 1GHz against something with a 400MHZ FSB and only two cores?
(I don't know what the original iPad had in it nor do I know what the new one has, but I suppose you could extend my argument to cover that as well. Is it 12x faster for having twice the core running at three to four times the core speed, or is there some strange benchmark going on here that takes advantage of some extended instruction that the older chip doesn't have? It can only be one or the other or both; in either case, you can't make a fair comparison unless you're running exactly the same benchmark on exactly the same platform (right down to the kernel) which I'm pretty damn sure isn't happening here).
Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
I spent $1,200 on my Black MacBook and got eight years of use ($150 per year). Prior to that, I spent $1,200 on a Dell laptop that gave me three years of use ($400 per year). Do the math.
and my XPS fell apart (hinges failed and the body start cracking) while I'm still running my 2008 MacBook.
Who cares?
SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
I don't know if I'm the only one and to be honest the way I use OS X doesn't make this such a big deal, but at 5K unless they do automatic font scaling. I'm going to need to be able to divide my monitor up in to virtual monitors. That way I can resize zones where if I click the magnify/maximize button it doesn't waste the entire real estate of my monitor. I really enjoy the snap feature in windows 7 enough I use a program called sizeup on OSX to emulate it, but once I start buying 27 and 30" monitors I really would like my desktop tp let me arbitrary subdivide it in to multiple monitors for behavioral reasons.
Anyone have an app for that?
Momento Mori
"iMac with Retina display"
What does this mean? Is Retina is a technical term that should convey some specific meaning now?
-Lod
The way I understand it is that this isn't "really" a x.1 version, it's "8.1" because it's the version that adds Apple Pay and support for the new iPads.
Basically iOS 8.0 was released missing features that the couldn't finish in time for launch, and 8.1 will be the originally intended 8.0 with all the features iOS 8 was supposed to have from the get-go.
Which, uh, really doesn't instill much confidence either, now that I think about it.
You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
Your two data points have me convinced.
niche uses like most all video cameras.
Just because you don't understand the actual use, doesn't mean it's not useful to transfer data at 20Gbps.
There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
I'd expect it to work more like Google Voice, where instead of having a phone line for your cellphone that gets forwarded to your computer, you have a phone line for VoIP that gets forwarded to your cellphone, computer, and whatever else you want.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
That kind of thing doesn't instill a lot of confidence.
Never mind that iOS 8.1, 8.2 and 8.3 were in testing after iOS 8 got released. So many new products, so many updates.
XPS is/was a high end Dell laptop specification and branding touted as being the ultimate in desktop replacements (also marketed with the Alienware badge). The series started in the Dimension line of desktop machines when the Pentium first hit the market (source: have owned a Dimension XPS P60 desktop (since scrapped) and an Inspiron XPS 8200 laptop (which I still use because it's got 2GB RAM and a 1600x1200 screen)). The trademark for the laptop line is a lit "XPS" logo running down the left and right sides of the lid in red or blue, on rare occasions in green (mine has the standard lid because I managed to break the XPS badge). On the show Stargate Atlantis, XPS laptops were rebadged with the fictional logo depicting them as "SGI" laptops (SGI have NEVER made a laptop) but for anyone who's ever owned an XPS, Inspiron or Latitude the chassis were pretty recognisable. The biggest selling point for me with the Latitude/Inspiron PPx chassis wasn't the XPS badge on the high end machines but the fact that they're pretty much completely modular. You can switch batteries, optical drives, hard drive caddies, internal cards, graphics processors etc, among almost the entire line from the lowliest PII/233 up to the P4/2.0 - knowing this because I've been doing it since 2002.
Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
I'm glad it worked for you. But depending on where you're going with that statement, you might be committing the Texas sharpshooter's fallacy.
Still no new macbook pro...
Thats it, I'm out. I'll just get a Nexus 9 and a keyboard and move to the cloud.
-- Senior Software Engineer, Attorney appearance services, locallawyerapp.com.
Thunderbolt networking requires a $30 cable to achieve 10Gb ethernet connectivity without spending several hundred/thousand dollars on switches, HBAs and cabling.
Yeah, that's kind of my point. If you're releasing a major version a month or so before you launch new products, you'd hope you have the OS for those products squared away.
This sounds like they pushed out iOS 8, ran into problems and released iOS 8.0.1, and apparently 8.0.2, and then 8.0.3.
And now they're rolling out 8.1.
That is a lot of churn in a relatively short period of time. Which tells me I'm still going to wait a while, because I expect 8.1.1 or 8.2 to appear within a month or so.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Your understanding is incorrect. The transaction only hits the banks. Apple is not informed of the location, value or time of the transaction.
Maybe they are thinking X-ray photoelectron spectroscope?
There are only a few choices, and one seems more obvious than the others.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X...
Someday a Slashdot ID of 177180 will mean something.
Also have to give them credit for the bit at the very start where they proudly reiterated their very new widget and Intents features.
You know, cutting edge stuff that no one's ever seen in a smart phone before.
You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
For many of us, it's not a good investment. But if someone can afford (and wants) to replace his computer every few years, it could make sense.
For my wife's photography business, we considered a Mac, because color calibration is a huge deal. In the end though, we decided that Windows' color management was close enough to OS X's, that we preferred the low cost and at-home-repairability of a Windows box.
There's the tokenization too. Instead of using your card number, you get a one-time use number for that transaction from your bank to process that transaction.
well the release of ios 8.0.1 was a joke with the bugs, but 8.1 makes sense since the main reason for the release is to include apple pay (if it was just bug fixes would be 8.0.3)
The Texa WTF Fallacy?! Never heard of it. ;)
On two different occasions I sold 5 year old MacBook on Craigslist for $500. I don't know what the expectation would be for an hp or whatever, but I was satisfied with this.
The point is that its 12x faster than an ipad 1. That's several generations ago, and pretty much obsolete.
When a new Porsche 911 comes out, the interesting question for buyers is how it compares to last years 911, not the original one from 1963.
I spent $1,200 on my Black MacBook and got eight years of use ($150 per year). Prior to that, I spent $1,200 on a Dell laptop that gave me three years of use ($400 per year). Do the math. This is known as a Return of Investment (ROI).
The current value of my Black MacBook with a busted CPU fan, a 32-bit CPU and unable to run current software is a paperweight in my dead tree inbox.
your understanding is incorrect. Apple has explicitly stated that the transaction is 100% between The Merchant, Your Bank, and you. Apple does not receive a copy of the transaction, they don't know who you've shopped with, and that they don't know that any specific transaction has happened.
The only thing Apple does is act as the facilitator to getting the device-specific account number in to the phone. So Apple could know which credit cards you have setup in your device and that's about it.
Apple's "Excel competitor" that sells for £13.99.
Yosemite Sam was an angry Hessian.
Source for this? I haven't read anything about apple's access to information, and would be very interested if they cut themselves out of the loop by design.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=xps+compu...
Also, my understanding is to call from your Mac, your phone must be on the same wifi. Am I wrong?
What is table transposing?
Same as matrix transposing?
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
My XPS had the keys on the keyboard fall off, suspiciously close to the time the warranty ran out.
As always, YMMV.
And is free on new Macs, you buy.
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
When the netbook craze began (2008), I bought a 9" Acer Aspire One, for roughly US$400. That was my main laptop (and, during vacations, my main computer. Yes, I work at a university, so six weeks of vacations every year).
One year ago, I decided it was time to renew. I bought its sucessor, the 10" Acer Aspire One. For US$350. And it's my main computer outside of my office. I am really happy with it.
I have just bumped up its memory (2GB6GB). Besides that, I'm more than satisfied with what I got. I have recommended it to my family — Nowadays, my wife has one, and I have taken three more to her family (mother and two brothers). We are all quite happy with them (except for the sister that insisted on keeping Windows 8).
So, yes, US$400 for a good five year use... Is about US$80 per year. Quite acceptable!
i have one too and it still kind of works. not any useful but works
to bad today's mac's are cheaper than comparable windows laptops
I have to assume you and the original poster didn't watch the keynote.
The main processor is 12x faster than the original iPad (which, I still own and use). Graphics are 140x faster with the new graphics processor.
However, what the original poster DIDN'T say is gain in 2x+ performance over last year's iPad Air and the drop in pricing for comparable versions. The demonstrated photo processing apps were seemless. They also didn't indicate whether the new devices have more RAM or not. 1 GB has worked well. But, there were rumors of 2 GB.
No NFC either. Apple Pay is for "internet" purchases and not POS.
Nothing stood out to me as a "gotta have" this time around. While the iMac Retina has been improved and the screen is amazing, my 2009 iMac still works great (thought, I might replace the HD with an SSD). My iPad still works but pisses me from time to time when trying to load a web page that requires too much memory. My next "upgrade", when and *if* I can afford it, will be for the new iPad Air 2 as the original is something I still use every day.
any ecosystem is a lock in
windows apps run on windows
android on android
ios on ios
osx on os x
I'm not entirely convinced that Touch ID is worth the extra $100. Hopefully the IHS teardown will indicate if there is anything else of value between the two.
Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
Great, my old DOS(Box) games will now be the size of an icon. :D
How doesn't it? My understanding is that instead of paying by your credit card, your Apple Account gets hit for the charge and Apple pays the vendor and then Apple charges your linked credit card, just like for existing in-app purchases. Since it's your Apple Account doing the purchasing, Apple is in the loop and sees every transaction that you make.
Except that's not how it works. There's a special chip in the new iPhone that talks to an NFC payment terminal and presents itself as a virtual credit card. The terminal sends that information for example to Visa. Visa works together with Apple and figures out that this virtual credit card actually matches your real debit or credit card, and everything is done as if you had used your normal credit or debit card. The chip is locked away from the OS, even Apple couldn't read what's inside it.
The advantages are a minor bit of convenience (you pay by putting a finger on the fingerprint reader on the iPhone), but a big advantage in security because nobody knows your credit card number and therefore cannot lose it to hackers, and crooked employees cannot read it either.
I can understand why some would like it but it could definitely be improved upon.
Hey Thunderbolt, the 80's called, they want their daisy-chain back.
Hey PC user, the 90's called, they want their boring large beige boxes back.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
I suggest you read up on the technology. You could take a look at Swipe as I think it's probably the closest pre-Apple Pay implementation to what Apple Pay is (Swipe, IS an Apple Pay provider, however). Banks are jumping onboard now that the technology appears secure. Apple claims another 500 banks have joined since last month.
Your card details are stored within a secure chip on the iPad. When you make a purchase, the card info hits the CC provider and a token is returned for THAT transaction. That is passed to the vendor who completes the charge and sends it to the CC processor. The CC Processor sends back a response to the vendor that transaction is completed and then a response is sent to the customer.
You can manually enter your CC info or take a picture of it using the iOS device. That image, is verified by the bank/CC company and then the information is loaded into the secure chip.
The beauty is that your CC info is only exchanged with the bank.
If your device is stolen, you can immediately render the CC info stored in it useless by logging into your iCloud account (I would assume, you have 2 factor authentication turned on - which I think Apple is now requiring).
I don't know how this compares to PayPal or Google Wallet as I don't use them. I do know that Apple has made it easy to add Apple Pay to apps and websites, and the user experience counts provided the security holds up. PayPal still looked a complex mess when I viewed the API last month.
Is Apple so embarrassed by their lack of meaningful CPU performance improvements that they feel the need to compare the latest iPad to a 5 year old obsolete brick to impress me? I think that they think I'm stupid.
Does the Google 9 run Microsoft?
However, what the original poster DIDN'T say is gain in 2x+ performance over last year's iPad Air and the drop in pricing for comparable versions.
The original poster (me) didn't say that because it wasn't in the summary. That its twice as fast as the previous ipad air actually WOULD have been reasonably interesting. 12x as fast as the original ipad is meaningless marketing propaganda fluff.
I'm going to guess that you are comparing the "Mid 2010" Mac mini with the newly released low-end model.
Clock speed aside, the 1.4GHz i5 in the new Mac mini is a 22 nm, fourth-generation Intel Core processor. So if I understand Intel's generations correctly, that's a 4th generation i5 compared to a Core 2 Duo which makes this new Mac mini CPU at least five generations ahead of the Core 2 Duo.
Can anyone with more knowledge compare the clock speeds, cache, etc?
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
They've been selling Retina displays for a couple years, slapping it on the iMac isn't rocket science. I do think it's an unnecessary feature that will jack the price, but the iMac went from being the cheap mac to the not insanely expensive Mac some time ago, so meh.
Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
Also, my understanding is to call from your Mac, your phone must be on the same wifi. Am I wrong?
Yes, they do need to be on the same wifi. See below.
Sometimes when your iPhone rings, it’s not where you are. Maybe it’s charging in another room. Or it’s buried in your backpack. But your Mac or iPad is sitting right there. Now you can make and receive phone calls on those devices as long as your iPhone running iOS 8 is on the same Wi-Fi network. Incoming calls show the caller’s name, number, and profile picture. Just click or swipe the notification to answer, ignore, or respond with a quick message. And making a phone call from your iPad or Mac is just as easy. Simply tap or click a phone number in Contacts, Calendar, or Safari. It all works with your existing iPhone number, so there’s nothing to set up.
[source]
I spent $1,200 on my Black MacBook and got eight years of use ($150 per year). Prior to that, I spent $1,200 on a Dell laptop that gave me three years of use ($400 per year). Do the math.
Yeah and I have had a Toshiba laptop last 5 years at 400. Thats 80 bucks a year. Both of our accounts a merely anecdotal though.
---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
My Black MacBook is still working and I still use it.
(Ditto for my ancient Travelmate)
They weigh a ton though....
Bit envious of son's new MacBook :-(
The Cutter
niche uses like most all video cameras.
Just because you don't understand the actual use, doesn't mean it's not useful to transfer data at 20Gbps.
I understand the use. "Most all video cameras" don't fucking have Thunderbolt. "Most all video cameras" can't fucking sustain that bandwidth out.
For any professional gear, DisplayPort 1.2/1.2a/1.3 is the better choice. 17.28 Gbps of bandwidth as of the end of 2009, 25.92 Gbps as of now. Yes, it supports daisy chaining.
So fuck right on off with telling me what I don't fucking understand.
Spending lots of money on PC hardware is pretty silly, as far as I'm concerned. There's more refurbished/used hardware that one could shake a stick at and it's absurdly cheap. Buying expensive PC hardware is like buying really expensive disposable pens: It's a waste of money, usually.
I don't respond to AC's.
You bought a Dell laptop. Might as well have just taken that money out in ones and lit them on fire in your back yard. Would have been entertaining in a horrific way and at least you wouldn't have had any expectations crushed afterward. Dell makes OK servers and workstations, but their laptops are hit or miss to the point that we haven't bought them in years.
Buy a decent Lenovo or Asus laptop and you'll be far more satisfied.
Do the math.
But you already did it!
Anyways, Apple products can be pricey, but if you want excellent quality and usability, nothing on the market offers the same value.
My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
If you can't afford brand new Apple prices, check out the used Apple products at OWC.
One, the phrase is "return ON investment".
Two, the calculation normally involves some element of revenue.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
I assume this is the processor the new Mac Minis will use compared to the 2010 processor The clock speed isn't a much benchmark as it once was considering that the new CPU can ramp up to 2.7GHz. It's more of a powersave feature as the new processor has a 15W TDP as opposed to 25W. The newer chip uses a 2 x 256KB L2 cache and a 3MB L3 cache whereas the older chip only uses a 3MB L2 cache. The bus speed on the new chip is 5GT/s and the old one was 1.066 GT/s. The most important difference would be integrated graphics vs discrete graphics required on the older one.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
Moreso, the frequent and free OS upgrades that keep it modern and well integrated with other devices add considerable value. As does the fact that you don't need to buy virus protection, or to have said protection drain your system resources, particularly important as the system ages. And when you finally sell it, you get some real money. Macs in their base configs are good value. Although memory and storage upgrades are not.
My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
The summary is a list of bullet points?
Awesome.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
I'm surprised they're calling it "Apple Pay". I thought it would be "iPay".
Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
Why does article have an opinion tag?
I read the entire summary, and all it did was list facts. Not a single word of opinion is in there.
Now I can fully understand the reason for the iGarbage tag, as this is Slashdot, and no love of Apple products is permitted in any way, shape or form.
But opinion? huh?
Right. So why choose the ecosystem which offers the smallest amount of choice?
If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
cpubenchmark.net is these days quite useful tool for comparison. You get a rough number, which isn't applicable to all use scenarios, but is still worlds better than clock rate.
If the MTBA on a high-end PC is six years (though you can pick any number), and I buy a 3-year-old machine (again, pick any number), I've just doubled the time that I spend setting up a new machine. Honestly, I just don't enjoy that process anymore.
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
Try running the latest Lightroom, Photoshop CC, and After Effect CC on that machine, editing raw DLSR files and 1080p video, and you will suffer. Most of my hardware update is at foremost due to more demanding software, rather than hardware failure per-se.
I don't buy new stuff every year any more and I'm looking to replace an iPad2. I have been waiting for the Air 2. Fortunately in the actual presentation they showed a nice graph spanning all the generations.
Of-course numbers are for enthusiasts and real life is different but I expect I'll feel a big difference.
Yes, the operation could be described like this:
(a, b) -> (b, a)
Exactly. A $400 dell is OK for a year, then slow after that.
My father used to get a new $400 Dell box every other year because the old Dell box would slow down from all the naughty bits he downloaded off the Internet. He refused to properly maintain his PC by defragging the hard drive and updating the AV scanner. Meanwhile, his old Dell box became my newest FreeNAS file server.
So is mine, except now with 4 times the RAM, a brand new battery, and a brand new SSD, all bought within the last 4 months.
How easy is it to replace a Mac battery 8 years on? Actually how easy is it to replace it 8 months on?
Did the math, my Dell laptop has outlived any Apple device I own. Plus I can still get replacement batteries and upgrade it with RAM and SSD at will without paying extortionate prices for the privilege of doing so.
They didn't say it was never seen before, only to the platform and that's often how they spin it. Fair enough.
Everybody borrows ideas, Android too and that's great because it benefits the consumer. If it causes you constipation that companies borrow and have marketing departments; most products in your home will send you to the pharmacy but be careful because the fibre supplement manufacturer's marketing dept. may have been a bit hyperactive concerning the benefits suggested.
Laptops, like most other hardware has it's quality rise and fall. One year Dell is good, the next year it's Asus, and so on and so on. I used to be a big fan of the Dell Latitude D630C laptop with a business class extended warranty, oops it fell out of the back of the truck and put a big crack in the LCD while i was unloading luggage at the airport, no problem sir, we'll get that fixed right away are there any other items on the laptop that are cracked / broken / missing screws, etc. Things change over time, a company that gives great support today, might be absolute shit in a years time due to budget cuts, etc.
Do you have a cite for this? I'm pretty familiar with how Google Wallet (with and without a hardware Secure Element) works, and I *know* that CC info is presented to the POS in order to make the transaction.
Any of the hundreds of articles about how Apple Pay works. Here's one that explains that the device gives the credit card terminal a 16-digit randomized token and a unique one-time-use CCV. Payment processors use the pair to identify the credit account to bill.
In short, your actual credit card numbers never leave your device. Google for "apple pay token" if you'd like to dive into further detail.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
Defragging the hard drive and updating the AV scanner? I thought that wasn't even necessary on Windows anymore.
Considering that my Black MacBook (2006) lasted eight years, it was a good investment.
My XPS from 2006 is still with me, but the equivalent Macbook would have been far more expensive. What is your point?
Today that price difference is not nearly as much. Looking at (as best I could find, not exactly) comparable systems, a Dell 15" XPS laptop is $0.99 MORE than a MacBook Pro 15". The Dell has a touch-screen but the MacBook Pro has an SSD and other differences. Perhaps if you took more time than I just did to build as close a system as possible the Dell would be cheaper, but I didn't find that.
Yes.
Actually they are both pretty meaningless. 12x faster at .. what? 2x faster at .. what? 12x faster at a NOP loop? 2x faster a drawing the screen (1ms instead of 2ms?)
And what is it (other than some very poorly written apps) that requires continuous speed bumps? Are we still not drawing webpages fast enough? Are mp4s still stuttering at full screen? I suppose games might be an issue but most of the ones I've seen run pretty much fine already.
We seem to have hit (or are nearing) a point in mobile devices where increments just dont matter anymore. 500dpi? really? Most people can't tell past 250dpi. 3GHZ vs.. 2? 32 cores vs.. 4?
Plus I can still get replacement batteries and upgrade it with RAM and SSD at will without paying extortionate prices for the privilege of doing so.
For my 2006 Black MacBook, I maxed out the RAM to 2GB by using cheaper memory modules from Other World Computing (OWC). I popped in a OWC 120GB SSD for less than a $100 last year. Although Apple still charges $129 for replacement batteries, I can get them for $75 through OWC or $35 on eBay from China.
I don't know how this compares to PayPal or Google Wallet as I don't use them. I do know that Apple has made it easy to add Apple Pay to apps and websites, and the user experience counts provided the security holds up. PayPal still looked a complex mess when I viewed the API last month.
The difference to Google Wallet is that Google Wallet transactions are visible to Google, and Apple Pay transactions are not visible to anyone (except the bank paying and the merchant getting money obviously).
faster doing ... what?
I have a theory why people buy tablets ... or better to say, why men buy tablets: Porn. I believe they buy them so they can watch porn while sitting on the toilet. That's why tablet sales are so high. The remaining alleged 'purposes' are just excuses. It's just a theory, of course.
Now regarding women who buy tablets, I have no idea why they would do that. Do they buy tablets? If so, that's perhaps because they are sleek and handy and you can watch Sushi advertisements on them. Or whatever.
On two different occasions I sold 5 year old MacBook on Craigslist for $500. I don't know what the expectation would be for an hp or whatever, but I was satisfied with this.
While I congratulate you on that sale, I really don't get it. You can get a refurbished MacBook Air, 13", latest model, better in any way imaginable and as new, with a year warranty, for $849. Why does anyone pay $500 for a five year old Mac?
Dell's equipment service life is 3 years. The difference between your XPS is the Black Macbook is that the guy was still using the macbook for daily tasks. Your XPS is probably on a shelf somewhere.
My late 2009 i7 iMac is unfortunately still going strong, with 16gb of ram and a 4TB fusion drive. It'll last for another few years. I have a mac mini 2009 that's been cranking away in a colo 24x7 for the last 4-5 years with no issues.
You can see the difference between Apple products on eBay every day. I've been trying to pick up a old Mac Pro, and Mac Pros from 2009 are going for $1k+. It's unreal and sort of ridiculous.
Even the prices for iDevices are crazy. Look on glyde.com: the 3GS is still $48, $100+ for a 4s. These phones are ancient. You can't give old cellphones away that aren't iPhones.
How easy is it to replace a Mac battery 8 years on? Actually how easy is it to replace it 8 months on?
Eight years on: You buy a battery, either from Apple or on eBay. You need a coin to unlock the battery and swap it out.
Eight months on: Doesn't matter how hard, because it will be under warranty.
A bit older: Very easy. You take your MacBook to the Apple Store, hand over your cash, and they put in a new battery.
For my 2006 Black MacBook, I maxed out the RAM to 2GB by using cheaper memory modules from Other World Computing (OWC). I popped in a OWC 120GB SSD for less than a $100 last year. Although Apple still charges $129 for replacement batteries, I can get them for $75 through OWC or $35 on eBay from China.
Yeah that was back then, you can't do that anymore. The MacBook was replaced by the MacBook Air in which the battery and RAM are soldered-in components. Not sure if these new just-announced models have the SSD soldered in now.
Direct link to the comparison of both CPUs mentioned.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
the low price trend started only recently. My 2009 15" MBP cost $1700 new.
Short answer - tokenization and eCommerce security.
Chip and Pin uses physical contact of the card to the payment terminal. The chip is very hard to duplicate so it essentially eliminates card cloning. The PIN provides a second factor to authenticate a trusted customer at the point of sale.
Apple Pay is a variant of NFC (near field communication) much like Google Wallet with PayPass. This is wireless (contactless).
The specifications for hardware (Level 1) and software (Level 2) for both contact and contact-less payment systems are managed by EMVCo; see http://www.emvco.com/. Apple has chosen wisely to work with existing industry standards with a couple of big improvements. These guys are smart and they got it right.
What is different about Apple Pay is that unlike PayPass and Chip&PIN which send the credit card account number through all links in the system (usually encrypted), a one time use token is created. If an Apple Pay transaction is exposed, only a useless one time token would be divulged. This is much like the DUKPT system used from other secure transactions. If you are curious about DUKPT see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derived_unique_key_per_transaction.
Aside from the technical superiority of tokenization for security over Chip&Pin for card present transactions, how Apple Pay is better is a matter of taste because both systems mitigate card present fraud. It will always be hard to argue that either will be faster than a swipe.
I'm sick of sitting on my fat wallet and if I could get rid of my cards that would be great. Unfortunately I'll still need my cards because most places wont take anything but mag stripe for years (its taken Canada 7 years to get to 90% Chip&PIN at the merchants). If I lose my wallet I have to call a bunch of companies, whereas if I lose my phone nobody is going to get my card numbers. Apps will proliferate that allow loyalty programs and discounts to be offered to me through mobile integration (e.g. Amex has already announced buying McDonalds food with points). Geofencing in conjunction with NFC will further promote targeted marketing and I like the idea of saving money in exchange for loyalty. NFC will also likely be used to do things like open doors, start cars so it will be very convenient.
Apple Pay also supports tokenization for eCommerce. This is huge because card not present is the area where credit card fraud is most persistent. Apple Pay and the variations that are sure to follow will knock the online card fraud guys out of the game.
Greed is the root of all evil.
You know my first thought when I saw the 5K iMac? "Jesus, making desktop wallpapers for that is going to create some HUGE photoshop files. " followed by "How many people own a camera that will take a picture that will actually look good as a desktop on that?"
I've decided to Diversify my Holdings. I've divided my cash between my left and right pockets, instead of all in one.
Also in one case the guy really needed a 32 bit computer so he could run whatever critical PPC programs.
> For my 2006 Black MacBook, I maxed out...
The newest Mac OS X 2006 MacBook can run now is Lion (to be honest - you CAN run Mountain Lion but it involves hacking the install media, some voodoo with kexts etc. - I would not be sure about stability of such system). Which is now 3 releases old. Not a big deal if you really want to run it (simply put - you have no money for newer hardware) but it will certainly give you compability issues like recent versions of software not working at all. With PC laptops usually you can pop in recent-decent version of Windows even on much older hardware. It will run slowly (such as Lion on 2006 MacBook with 2Gs RAM) but it will run your software. With Mac you can't do that.
That is similar to what is going on with PC laptops. Basically MacBook Air is an ultrabook in PC nomenclature. PC ultrabooks also tend to be less upgradeable and serviceable than bigger laptops. For example compare Lenovo ThinkPad 430 and 430u (u - as in ultrabook). The slim design just forces use of smalled perhaps nonremovable parts. IMO all PC laptops that match MacBook Air size are also as unupgradeble and unserviceable as MacBook Air - it is not a marketing choice by Apple but the size imples it. Also what is new that you can't upgrade or service your phone or tablet - any brand. Get over it.
"Doubled" doesn't mean much, when it's one afternoon every three years.
That is similar to what is going on with PC laptops.
So? We're talking about MacBooks, it was great that you could do it back then but now that those MacBooks have been replaced by the MacBook Air you can't do those things anymore which is a shame because it was so useful and you could keep an older system going for much longer before needing to upgrade.
I have a very nice Mac Mini latest 2012 with a 2.3 GHz Intel Core i7 Quad-Core processor with Eight logical threads. It has a 1TB disk and I put 16 GB memory to this machine, costing me around $900.
... No i7 quad, only dual core, and many i5. No more than 16GB two years later. The disk options are neither better. What they did was to add a less than 2 GHz CPU for the $499 version (yes, the i5 and i7 have more MHz in the "options" but applications are becoming more parallel, so the extra cores are important).
... etc.
Now I see the options
From my perspective as a developer, these machines are not state of the art. They are really becoming "mini" in the current menu of computing options, so what I think is that Apple is reserving "something else", maybe a Server or something that it is not yet published.
And I made a little exploration in Amazon, just for comparison:
Lite-On 24X SATA Internal DVD+/-RW Drive Optical Drive IHAS124-14 $20.16
Intel Core i7-3770 Quad-Core Processor 3.4 GHz 4 Core LGA 1155 - BX80637I73770 $299.99
2 WD Green 2 TB Desktop Hard Drive: 3.5 Inch, SATA III, 64 MB Cache - WD20EZRX $82.99
Corsair CX Series 430 Watt ATX/EPS Modular 80 PLUS Bronze ATX12V/EPS12V 384 Power Supply CX430M $49.99
Gigabyte LGA 1150 Intel H87 Dual LAN DVI HDMI UEFI DualBIOS Mini ITX DDR3 1600 Motherboard (GA-H87N) $111.22
Cooler Master Elite 130 No Power Supply Mini-ITX Tower Case- Midnight Black (RC-130-KKN1) $39.99
Crucial 16GB Kit (8GBx2) DDR3L 1600MT/s (PC3-12800) DR x8 ECC UDIMM 240-Pin Server Memory CT2KIT102472BD160B $178.97
TOTAL $866.30
This is comparable by price, but as a machine this is two times the capacity of the mini. A real i7 Quad, 2 2TB disks and a much better, although not so beautiful box. And the motherboard has 10 USB ports, 2 Net
I spent $1,200 on my Black MacBook and got eight years of use ($150 per year). Prior to that, I spent $1,200 on a Dell laptop that gave me three years of use ($400 per year). Do the math.
If you dont need a computer, a Dell lasts as long as any Mac.
However if you've got real requirements for a computer (I.E. work or gaming) then a Macbook goes out of date faster than a Dell because the dell is both higher speced and upgradeable.
Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
My '92 Sun IPX is still running. And I think I paid about $20 for it.
What does that even mean?
Between going to hourly contracting and having kids, I value my time more than ever. That afternoon is worth several hundred dollars IMHO. I was very different as a young man.
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
The free development environment in XCode, and reasonable, inexpensive general-purpose apps in Pages, Numbers, et al, make it fairly easy to set up to do most general computing tasks, without the Windows issues where many people prefer older versions to new, it still has drive letters, etc.
Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
Lightroom 1.0 and Photoshop CS3 run great on my 2006 Black MacBook, which was current hardware when those software packages came out. If I run anything demanding, I set up a script and let it run overnight.
You seem to miss the point. I want the latest software to speed up sorting/filtering/tagging/editing of a 250-to-multi-1000 shoot. And yes, I'm not a casual photographer.
buy Asus/Acer or even HP for Pete's sake. But Dell has been selling $1200 laptops with laughable specs for 10+ years now.
With a Mac you pay through the nose, but you always get the same thing. With a PC there's so many choices it's easy to drop that kinda money and walk away with something that on paper should rock and in practice it blows. I've got an i7 laptop for work that's like that, and it's the bane of my existence.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Modern digital SLRs have higher res than this. e.g. my mid-range Nikon D5300 does 6000x4000, and that's not a top end camera by any means.
A $30 cable, expensive Thunderbolt chipset, expensive peripherals, and you won't be getting actual 10 Gbps full duplex Ethernet through Thunderbolt, nor will it work a damn without an actual 10 Gbps Ethernet controller somewhere in the system. Keep on keepin' on, though.
Does being stupid come with being an Apple-Hater, or did you pay extra? http://www.macworld.com/articl...
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
Thank you for that explanation, which got me thinking: Apple Pay could remake the web, in some very good ways. Just expand Apple Pay into the micropayment system I've wanted for over 15 years.
If Apple can "scale this down" (even by losing some money on overhead and transaction costs) and make it painless and worthwhile for a website to charge as little as one cent for something, then many good things happen. I think a vast number of web users would happily click a "1 Cent Apple Pay" button to read the second half of an article or column, or hear a song or a podcast, or watch a funny cat video. If it's good, it's worth one cent. If it wasn't, it was only a penny.
Or think of it as $10 for every 1000 articles read/artworks viewed/songs heard: a trivial expense for weeks or months of web usage for most people, in exchange for the content without registrations, or subscriptions, or pay walls, and without advertising. You know, that annoying stuff you try to block. That stuff that Google sells. (Oh-oh...!)
But this would be much more than a way to drop a pipeline into Google's core revenue source. Creatives and publishers and entrepreneurs of all sorts could just add Apple Pay to a page like a social media button, and then sell or rent their work directly and affordably. One cent transactions may only add up to just a few dollars for some, but what are they making now? Web ads bring them little. Maybe they're happy selling songs for $1, but they might be thrilled by the number of people willing to pay one cent to listen to one song, once.
And it could scale up really well. Charities and activists could raise real money in tiny, painless increments. Even one cent per page view adds up to a big chunk of change for newspapers and magazines that now struggle to survive on advertising and/or subscriptions. I think the New York Times website would be thrilled if their 17 million page views a day made them one cent each: that's over $62 million a year. Or maybe some big players get "greedy," and decide to charge a whole five cents for that big story, or virtual art show, or for your first listen to that new song from your favorite band: a million nickels is $50,000.
Now think of ebook sellers who don't need Amazon any more. Think about PayPal, and streaming music services. And why not Bitcoin via Apple Pay....
I'm sure some of you will see this as a dystopian vision, but I think Apple could do a lot of good and (eventually) make a lot of money with my distributed digital free market daydream.
Q: What does the "B." in Benoit B. Mandelbrot stand for? A: Benoit B. Mandelbrot
"an ipad 12x faster than the "original ipad"
faster doing ... what?
Doing stuff you can't do on Android.
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
With that finely honed wit, I think it's fair to say that the Catskills would never have come calling for you...
They absolutely did, and they talked about it specifically when Apple Pay was announced during the iPhone 6 keynote.
The design of the system is that your credit card number is hashed together with the unique device ID of your phone to create a signing key (the card number itself is then never stored anywhere). You then activate apple pay with your bank so they have a way to verify your purchases. When you then use your device to buy something a transaction-specific token is generated from your signing key that is passed to your bank, who then verify it, and send back a yay/nay to the vendor. The bank then debits the money. Each transaction you make generates a new token that is passed via the vendor to your bank.
The key things that Apple pointed out were that a) Apple doesn't know what you bought or how much it was, b) the vendor you are buying from doesn't know what your credit card number is and c) your credit card number is not stored on your phone. If you lose your phone you can log into iCloud and invalidate the signing key.
If you want to hear that from the horse's mouth, Tim Cook spent several minutes on it during the iPhone 6 keynote.
It's not even "your card never leaves your device" - your card number isn't stored on the phone in the first place. Your signing key is made using your card number, but after that the phone doesn't store the card info, just the key generated from your card and your device's ID.
So does his Dad.
If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
Considering that my Black MacBook (2006) lasted eight years, it was a good investment.
You say that as if a regular laptop cant last that long. And I bet you paid more for that than you would of an equivalent specs windows based machine.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
What stopped you from using your Dell after 3 years? Did it break? Did Dell refuse to fix it?
I bought my white Macbook in 2007, paid $1200. One of my family members made the remark that they only ever buy the Walmart special, (whatever is on sale for around $300) and told me that $1200 for a computer was a crime and I was stupid to ever pay that much. In that time, the longest they have ever had a computer was 2 years meanwhile my Macbook is not only still kicking, it still works pretty damn well, though I did max out the RAM a few years ago, install Lion, and am on my third battery.
After all these years, it still works great as my portable computer, Software Radio terminal, and music server though my desktop PC is my primary computer.
Slow Down Cowboy! It's been 1 hour, 47 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment
Do the math.
But you already did it!
Anyways, Apple products can be pricey, but if you want excellent quality and usability, nothing on the market offers the same value.
Quality, fair enough. Usability is entirely subjective. For me using the mac at work is an exercise in frustration. Does look nice though.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
Considering that my Black MacBook (2006) lasted eight years, it was a good investment.
My XPS from 2006 is still with me, but the equivalent Macbook would have been far more expensive. What is your point?
Today that price difference is not nearly as much. Looking at (as best I could find, not exactly) comparable systems, a Dell 15" XPS laptop is $0.99 MORE than a MacBook Pro 15". The Dell has a touch-screen but the MacBook Pro has an SSD and other differences. Perhaps if you took more time than I just did to build as close a system as possible the Dell would be cheaper, but I didn't find that.
You can bet dell but an extra chunk of cost on just because apple showed them people will pay that much and apple overcharge because they know most people who buy one want the badge more than any actual feature of the machine.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
Yeah, like firewire isn't used in most video cameras still.
Thunderbolt is just 25x faster.
What else is it used in? Exactly, niche.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
What does that even mean?
That to mac users form>function.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
niche uses like most all video cameras.
Just because you don't understand the actual use, doesn't mean it's not useful to transfer data at 20Gbps.
Niche uses like 1 product type. I say that's pretty niche. Practically every keyboard (musical) has a MIDI port, but I doubt you'd argue that's not niche.
Wanna buy a shirt?
https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
I have a customer with a MacPro (PowerPC). He can't upgrade the OS anymore since the Intel switch but its working still and is as fast as ever. The machine is 12 years old and still humming along. Sure he spent a lot of money on it but he's gotten his money's worth! In the past he would buy cheapo systems such as those retail discount PC's that are practically obsolete and cut a lot of corners to keep the price down. They would slow down to a crawl in a year, get infected with gobs of malware and then the hardware would fail and he'd buy a new one. The money he spent on all his previous computers exceeds what he spent on one Mac Pro and the life of the Mac Pro exceeded all the old systems. So in the long run he's saved a lot of money. This guy is very cheap, he's complaining about having to upgrade even after 12 years. I tried to explain that the system is way too old and its time to consider an upgrade. But he'll run this thing till it goes snap crackle pop and the magic blue smoke pours out. He's also had two hard disk failures but Time Machine saved his bacon. Within 2-3 hours he was up and running like nothing happened each time. That includes the drive time to Best Buy to pickup a new hard disk! When the MacPro finally bites the dust, he'll likely get an iMac as they have come a long long way from what they were 12 years ago. Also he saved countless hours of tech support and many dollars on AV upgrades and subscriptions. Sure he's got a few questions now and then but it's not really a problem. I just spoke with him last night and his problem was that Comcast was bouncing up and down including his TV service. No problems with the Mac.
The one-time-use token is very clever and backwards-compatible, too. It's a one-time-use credit card number, generated on the fly for that particular transaction. That way the merchants can keep using legacy infrastructure - they still deal with credit card numbers etc. Just that those numbers are ephemeral, and are useless when they get stolen/leaked (as they all eventually are, it seems).
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
It's already been pointed out to you that in the presentation they also compared with the last iPad. So the information you're whining about was there. Now it's interesting for some people to see how far we've come since the first iPad in 2010. Why are you so concerned that this additional statistic is suppressed?
In other words, Google Voice requires you to have a separate telephone number, that's not your mobile phone number. Depending on what services they want, people have to contact you on the two separate numbers. (Google Voice has limitation on SMS, international calling etc.)
Depending on which number they use, your ability to accept the call on a computer will either exist or not.
As a result of the complications, Google Voice isn't a big success.
As always Apple goes with a solution that cuts out all the confusion. One phone number, all services.
You are assuming that choice is necessarily a good thing. The paradox of choice says it's not.
Dell has far more choice than Apple. All of them worse.
Thunderbolt lets you do things that were never possible with firewire, even if we ignore the speed disparity. You can, for example, attach a card cage with PCIe (and PCI) slots for whatever specialized hardware you need. Then you hook this up to your laptop. Before thunderbolt, you had to have a laptop with expressCard slots, and use expensive (think $1k for one card bay for good brand name products), bulky, finicky and rather short range PCIe extender solutions. This wasn't possible at all with FireWire.
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
First of all, Firewire was never able to transfer arbitrary PCI traffic, thus you couldn't use it to attach external PCI/PCIe devices to your portable device. When PCIe "extender" solutions became available, they were expensive and bulky. The connectors were huge, and the cable thick, and sometimes it would just refuse to work in a particular setup. Thunderbolt provides this kind of functionality on a manageable, off-the-shelf interconnect that you can buy in nearby Walmart. A brand name thunderbolt single x16 PCIe card cage runs about $500, and you can buy off-brand ones for half that. This lets you pull off stunts like adding two graphics cards to your laptop. I'd say calling it a "bigger flop than firewire" is borderline trolling.
Connecting "directly" to PCIe for expansion/extension purposes is setting the clock 10 years back - if you have any PCIe to attach to begin with. Fewer and fewer laptops have expressCard slots, and some high end laptops rightfully (IMHO) got rid of them. I don't really miss expressCard on MacBooks. Thunderbolt is much easier to deal with.
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
A buddy of mine is evaluating a design of a small 32 node HPC cluster with nothing but thunderbolt as point-to-point interconnect. So far the results are very positive, and it's a huge bang for the buck. I don't think you quite know what you're talking about, because the presence of an ethernet controller "somewhere in the system" would be immaterial.
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
No, Google Voice requires you to have a Google Voice number [full stop]. It doesn't matter whether you have a mobile phone number or not. Even if you do have a mobile phone number, nobody ever has to know it or call it, because they can reach your cellphone anyway (either by you setting up Google Voice to transparently forward to your mobile phone number, or by using a [VoIP] data connection with Hangouts). If you continue telling people to call your "real" cellphone number after signing up for Google Voice, you are proverbially Doing it Wrong.
You could cancel your cellular service entirely and use your phone with Google Voice over wi-fi, or get a plan where you only care about the data part and the "voice" minutes are irrelevant. For example, my T-Mobile plan costs $30 and has 5GB of 4G data (which is equivalent to about 4000 minutes of VoIP) and a measly 100 actual-voice minutes. But that's okay, because I use exactly 0 voice minutes because all my calls are routed over Google Voice. Since I don't come anywhere close to using all 5GB each month, I could probably even switch to a provider like Ting, select a data-only plan, and pay even less.
And by the way, Google Voice does in fact have SMS and international calling (the latter has some non-zero per-minute cost, though). I don't know how you imagined it didn't.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Why would I care? :)
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
Apple hardware is uneven too. The first generation products are kind of notorious, but even more mature ones regularly have issues. Overheating CPUs, ghosting on LCDs, failing logic boards, failing charger boards, failing optical drives, failing nVidia chipsets, failing batteries etc. Not that Apple is particularly bad or anything, other high end manufacturers have the same issues.
I'd say proper Thinkpads (not the Lenovo consumer stuff) and Panasonic Let's Note (Toughbook in some markets) are just as reliable, and definitely more repairable. I have found NEC business laptops to be extremely robust too.
HP are awful, not least because they were one of nVidia's biggest customers so were hit the hardest by chipset failures that happened around the 18 month mark. Fortunately in the EU that's still in warranty.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
Uh, you just did the math - why should I duplicate your effort?
Except that in practice nobody does that, and if someone does, it will never get mainstream. It could be useful to attach a high end graphic card to a laptop, but: 1. such a case would be very expensive and bulky (power supply) 2. bandwidth is still too slow for high end graphic cards There was nothing wrong with express card. You could get a cellular modem, wifi, ethernet, usb2, sound card, eSATA card in that format. It was cheap and covered pretty much every use case except, again, graphic cards, for the same bandwidth reason. What killed it is that laptops had pretty much all these functions built-in so there was no need for external cards. Plus laptops keep getting smaller so that slot unused by 99% of us had to go. In practice the main selling advantage of Thunderbolt is that you save one cable (against using DVI/HDMI/DP + USB3) to connect a monitor.
I don't know how you imagined it didn't.
I said limitations.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G...
It doesn't matter how real those limitations are. If there's any complication or limitation at all, real or perceived, people won't use it.
Same reason people aren't using Android NFC.
If you continue telling people to call your "real" cellphone number after signing up for Google Voice, you are proverbially Doing it Wrong.
Problem is of course that everyone already has the mobile phone number. This would require getting everyone to change it. Which is hard enough if ever your mobile phone number has to change. Given that your existing mobile phone number will still exist, good luck trying to get everyone to call this other number instead.
And you want to biggest limitation of all? Absolutely real, and completely prohibiting most people from using it? Google Voice is a US only service. Apple's system works in every country.
I actually agree on the "old style" Thinkpads, but recent models look more and more like Lenovo's other stuff so I don't know how confidant I am. We all have Thinkpads at work and even the last generation was uneven, with the cheaper models acting... well, cheap. The old-school stuff was very high-quality.
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
Why would I run Lion when Snow Leopard was the most rock stable version of OS X ever released?
Well, what you do is port your existing number to Google Voice and get a new number for your cellular service. Admittedly, it's most convenient to do this concurrently with when you'd be changing plans anyway.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Cracked screen. Out of warranty. I didn't know much about laptops as I do now. Getting a replacement screen on eBay may have been a possibility.
I think it's the thing that Lotus invented in 1991 for NeXTStep:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L...
Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
I spent $1,200 on my Black MacBook and got eight years of use ($150 per year). Prior to that, I spent $1,200 on a Dell laptop that gave me three years of use ($400 per year). Do the math.
What is this, an Atari commercial?
"Set a man a fire, he'll be warm for the rest of the night. Set a man afire, he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
A $30 cable, expensive Thunderbolt chipset, expensive peripherals, and you won't be getting actual 10 Gbps full duplex Ethernet through Thunderbolt, nor will it work a damn without an actual 10 Gbps Ethernet controller somewhere in the system.
Keep on keepin' on, though.
Does being stupid come with being an Apple-Hater, or did you pay extra? http://www.macworld.com/articl...
Having a fucking brain necessitates being a Mac hater. If you think you're getting anything near the capabilities for full duplex 10 Gbps Ethernet over Thunderbolt without a true 10 Gbps Ethernet controller in the system, you're a damned fool. If you do have a 10 Gbps Ethernet controller in the system, just use it directly.
First of all, Firewire was never able to transfer arbitrary PCI traffic, thus you couldn't use it to attach external PCI/PCIe devices to your portable device. When PCIe "extender" solutions became available, they were expensive and bulky. The connectors were huge, and the cable thick, and sometimes it would just refuse to work in a particular setup. Thunderbolt provides this kind of functionality on a manageable, off-the-shelf interconnect that you can buy in nearby Walmart. A brand name thunderbolt single x16 PCIe card cage runs about $500, and you can buy off-brand ones for half that. This lets you pull off stunts like adding two graphics cards to your laptop. I'd say calling it a "bigger flop than firewire" is borderline trolling.
Connecting "directly" to PCIe for expansion/extension purposes is setting the clock 10 years back - if you have any PCIe to attach to begin with. Fewer and fewer laptops have expressCard slots, and some high end laptops rightfully (IMHO) got rid of them. I don't really miss expressCard on MacBooks. Thunderbolt is much easier to deal with.
Compare the adoption rate of firewire vs the adoption rate of Thunderbolt across peripherals.
Firewire was much more successful, and had an actual use at the time - it was much faster than USB when USB was a bottleneck for common uses.
Thunderbolt is faster than USB, but USB 3 and USB 3.1 are not bottlenecks for common uses. For high-demand uses, you should be using something like DisplayPort or PCIe, both of which are faster and cheaper (from controller to cable to licensing) than Thunderbolt.
I don't think you understand how Thunderbolt works - it's a controller that attaches directly to PCIe and then wraps some protocol shit around it so it can shunt USB, Ethernet, etc. over a single pipe. I would prefer to go over PCIe without Thunderbolt every single time.
You can port a mobile number to a fixed line number? You can't in my country. Only mobile to mobile and fixed line to fixed line.
But then again, as I mentioned Google Voice doesn't exist in my country, or any others other than the US, so this may be a moot point.
Hm, never needed such a thing :)
What are you doing that you need that so often that you consider it a useful feature?
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
It's already been pointed out to you that in the presentation they also compared with the last iPad. So the information you're whining about was there
Indeed. It turns out I'm only complaining about the slashdot summary, and reporting of the event, not the event itself.
I guess I'm not surprised. :)
A $30 cable, expensive Thunderbolt chipset, expensive peripherals, and you won't be getting actual 10 Gbps full duplex Ethernet through Thunderbolt, nor will it work a damn without an actual 10 Gbps Ethernet controller somewhere in the system. Keep on keepin' on, though.
Does being stupid come with being an Apple-Hater, or did you pay extra? http://www.macworld.com/articl...
Having a NO fucking brain necessitates being a Mac hater. If you think you're getting anything near the capabilities for full duplex 10 Gbps Ethernet over Thunderbolt without a true 10 Gbps Ethernet controller in the system, you're a damned fool. If you do have a 10 Gbps Ethernet controller in the system, just use it directly.
FTFY, and you just proved it. And you will never be able to tell, because you are so fucking stupid.
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
Thankfully, it acts as a PCIe bridge, too :)
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
Graphics cards really need bandwidth only for texture uploads, and if you're shuttling images between the CPU and the GPU. For many high-performance games, the bandwidth requirement for the CPU-GPU links is rather models.
A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
If you had watched the keynote, you would have seen this on the infographic that was displayed. The improvement in processing and, more specifically, the graphics processing is like the difference between light and day in mid-latitudes. Heck, my iPhone 5 can render things that my original iPad can't even load (probably, due to its limited 256MB RAM vs 1GB RAM of the iPhone 5).
But, yeah...12x over the original iPad doing what? That metric really didn't make sense...like saying my current desktop processor is 3K faster than my original 8088 in my IBM PC or 10K faster than the 6502. Funny thing...back then, they were considered blazingly fast. Software continues to grow more bloated and sophisticated to take advantage of the greater bandwidth and processing speeds. If not, my original iPad wouldn't crash when trying to load a javascript laden website. Today's development tools and languages encourage that behavior.
Yeah, that's kind of my point. If you're releasing a major version a month or so before you launch new products, you'd hope you have the OS for those products squared away.
This sounds like they pushed out iOS 8, ran into problems and released iOS 8.0.1, and apparently 8.0.2, and then 8.0.3.
And now they're rolling out 8.1.
That is a lot of churn in a relatively short period of time. Which tells me I'm still going to wait a while, because I expect 8.1.1 or 8.2 to appear within a month or so.
Well, that's nothing on Google. Supposedly Android 5.0 Lollipop will launch 11/3 - but 5.0.1 was already reported in the wild over a year ago: http://www.phonearena.com/news...
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.