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iMac Businesses Apple Hardware

Ars Technica Reviews Intel iMacs 662

Milton Waddams writes "Ars kick off what I'm sure will be a torrent of reviews of the of the new Intel iMac. Overall it looks like it's a bit faster than the iMac G5 and a bit slower than the PowerMac G5 dual core. I'm sure it will surprise many slashdotters to find out that Jobs' statements about the new iMac being twice as fast as the iMac G5 as being slightly over optimistic. AND it doesn't run Windows...yet..." I'm still waiting for the most important benchmark: frames per second in molten core combat.
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Ars Technica Reviews Intel iMacs

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  • by Space cowboy ( 13680 ) * on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:52PM (#14491231) Journal

    To be fair, Steve's statements were absolutely 100% accurate (assuming the figures are accurate, which I expect them to be). For that benchmark, the intel machine is 2x-3x faster. If anyone really expected them to provide not-the-best-benchmark-results, can I have some of what you're smoking ? And I have several bridges to sell you too...

    My point is that the story write-up makes it sound like SJ is lying, and he's not. He's just presenting the best set of benchmarks he can, which is pretty much what I expect from the CEO of the company...

    As for the multimedia-style benchmarks presented in the review, I think you can expect those to improve as Apple gets its collective head around SSE3. I would have thought the G5/G4 implementations would have been altivec'd to hell and back, and SSE doesn't have the immensely useful 'permute' operation, so the transform operation will have to be rewritten to SSE's strengths - I doubt that has happened yet...

    Simon.
    • by conteXXt ( 249905 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:56PM (#14491266)
      not to mention the intel GMA900 graphics processor isn't exactly the speediest thing around.

      1000fps in glxgears? I can beat that by a good 50% with a 4 year old NV GE440 go in my compaq laptop

      watch what happens when there are nvidia drivers and ATI drivers available.

      P.S. ATI 800 series cards do work (fully accelerated) on the development platform.

      I'd post a link but the lawyers are loose.

      • UPDATE:

        sorry I can beat that by a lot more.

        1908 fps in glxgears.

        That being said people using osx on an intel D915GAG mobo (very close to the imac and FULLY supported)
        report that the gui is faster than xp on the same hardware.

        I am fairly sure that the apple boxes feel even slicker.

        And I am NO apple fanboy (my girlie won't even let me buy the intel board cpu combo :-(

        and yes I am whipped.

      • While the dev systems uses intel GMA900 integrated graphics, both the MacBook and new iMac use ATI Radeon X1600 chips.

        The iBook and mini may use integrated graphics, but they will probably use newer chipsets with graphics faster than the GMA900.
      • by Bun ( 34387 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @04:47PM (#14493585)
        not to mention the intel GMA900 graphics processor isn't exactly the speediest thing around.

        Don't mention it, then. Especially since the iMac Core Duo uses a PCI-Express ATI Radeon X1600. [arstechnica.com]
    • To be fair, Steve's statements were absolutely 100% accurate (assuming the figures are accurate , which I expect them to be). For that benchmark, the intel machine is 2x-3x faster. [emphasis mine]

      You've really just shown your bias haven't you? Absolutely 100% accurate, oh, unless they're not accurate.

      Steve Jobs may not have been lying, but he was most certainly being deliberately deceitful.

      I don't see such a huge moral gap between the two.
      • You've really just shown your bias haven't you? Absolutely 100% accurate, oh, unless they're not accurate.

        I think you've missed his point. This is a common industry practice used for just about every piece of hardware and software on the market. To single Steve Jobs out for this practice rather than accepting it as the "norm" shows a distinct anti-Mac bias.

        Steve Jobs may not have been lying, but he was most certainly being deliberately deceitful.

        It's hard to be deceitful when it comes to something as nebulous as benchmarks. Every benchmark you run will tell a different story. The result is that you can pull a variety of different conclusions from the benchmarks depending on how you spin it. Given that Steve Jobs is the CEO of Apple, we can expect that he will spin the benchmarks positively. On the flip-side, we can expect that the Mac haters will spin the benchmarks negatively. The ones to really listen to are the moderates who tell us whether we're generally being delivered what we're promised or not.
        • "This is a common industry practice used for just about every piece of hardware and software on the market."

          Not necessarily. When AMD moved to their new speed rating system for the Athlon XPs, they *usually* performed equivalently to a P4 clocked at the "speed rating" on average. It did NOT reflect the peak performance of the CPU compared to a P4, but the average instead.
          • Well Duh. They used the average rather than the peak because that rating is what made their stuff look better than Intel's. What, are they going to publish a stat they makes their stuff look bad? No you just keep changing the test parameters until your stuff looks better.
          • EvilTwinSkippy is correct. AMD is practicing just as much deception with this scheme as the rest of the industy. I'd remind you that it was AMD who used started the MHz war by consistently clocking their CPUs higher than Intel's. Intel responded with the Pentium IV which was able to clock higher than the AMD chips even if the performance wasn't better. AMD responded with their "speed rating system" which is intended to trick consumers into believing that they are getting a faster clock rate than they are ac
            • by Andy Dodd ( 701 ) <atd7NO@SPAMcornell.edu> on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:49PM (#14491756) Homepage
              AMD set about dispelling the "myth of the megahertz", but they did it in a reasonable fashion. Let's face it - clock rate isn't everything (the Pentium 4 proves that without a doubt), and the public needs to stop thinking that the clockrate of the CPU is important. Yes, the AMDs are clocked lower. Despite that, they routinely kill P4s clocked at over 1.5x their clock rate in nearly all applications. Cases where Intel wins are the rare exception and not the norm. Hell, even Intel has had to move away from publishing actual clock rate in preparation for the Netburst architecture's imminent demise.

              Average performance on a wide variety of applications is an excellent performance indicator. Raw clock rate and peak performance on a single app (the former being a favorite of Intel and the latter being classic Apple) are both crappy methods of measuring performance.
        • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:33PM (#14491597)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • The Intel iMac isn't significantly faster than the iMac G5

            There's not nearly enough evidence to reach a conclusion either way. QuickTime export is one of Altivec's strongest areas, and Xbench scores are notoriously bad at having any relationship to reality. Let's wait and see how they do in real life; perhaps you'll find Apple really does have a clue.

            Indeed, if the iMac G5 had undergone the same revisions that the PowerMac line had a few months ago, the chances are they'd be faster than the Pentium equivale
            • '' There's not nearly enough evidence to reach a conclusion either way. QuickTime export is one of Altivec's strongest areas, and Xbench scores are notoriously bad at having any relationship to reality. Let's wait and see how they do in real life; perhaps you'll find Apple really does have a clue. ''

              One of the XBench tests where the iMac x86 gets "slaughtered" is the "User Interface" test.

              It turns out that the iMac x86 runs this test at 67 frames per second. Which is quite consistent with some newer Apple t
          • Jobs can't win.

            He never claimed the new iMacs were 2-4 times as fast. Watch the keynote. He claimed that on the SPEC scores, which he said were key indicators of performance, they were 2-4 times as fast.

            He then went on to say that the speed improvements won't be across the whole system, because other components (he singled out hard drives) aren't improved over the G5 models.

            I say that he can't win because for years he put up Photoshop numbers, and many people around here said "show us the SPEC numbers!"

            Now
        • by tpgp ( 48001 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:38PM (#14491661) Homepage
          I think you've missed his point. This is a common industry practice used for just about every piece of hardware and software on the market. To single Steve Jobs out for this practice rather than accepting it as the "norm" shows a distinct anti-Mac bias.

          Horse crap. Common industry practice or not, I think most slashdotters will call bullshit to these sort of claims whether it comes from Steve Ballmer, Steve Jobs or Linus Torvalds.

          It's hard to be deceitful when it comes to something as nebulous as benchmarks

          Well I don't know about that - seems pretty easy [macobserver.com] to be deceitful and called for it if you ask me.
      • by palad1 ( 571416 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:26PM (#14491533)
        He just momentarily bends reality to his will.

        He's Q, with a turtleneck and a pair of jeans.

    • Shut up! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:01PM (#14491313)
      Haven't you heard? It's cool to hate Apple now. It makes you '1337.

      Anybody who says anything remotely positive about Apple, or especially about Steve Jobs, is a "fanboy." You don't want to be called a fanbody, do you? Then get with the program. Talk about how cheaply you can get a Gateway that's just as good as the new iMac or something, and insist that Woz is the only person who ever had anything to do with Apple worthy of any respect at all.

      Oh... and maybe Tog, if you are a UI nerd.
      • Re:Shut up! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @02:02PM (#14491886) Homepage Journal
        "Haven't you heard? It's cool to hate Apple now. It makes you '1337."

        [Warning: This is an OT rant, no hard feelings if modded down.]

        Wish I had known that before I made a not-so-nice comment about Apple which resulted in several mods going well out of their way to mod me down until I couldn't post on Slashdot for a couple of weeks. (From a certain IP, anyway. At least now you understand the origins of my sig.)

        If it has suddenly become a little too cool to hate Apple now, I blame extremist mods for it. Over the years I've made silly little quips about Apple that nobody on Earth should have taken too seriously and have been mod-bombed over it. I wouldn't be the least bit surprised if, out of anger, they were finally M2'd out and the replacements came in to even up the balance by shifting over to the extreme opposite view. (i.e. over-modding anti-Apple sentiment.) Too much zealotry will always lead to people with too much opposition to your view.

        This has already happened with regards to Microsoft. Go back a few years and ANY comment ridiculing or insulting MS would be modded up, but polite criticisms of Linux would be modded down. Even uninformed posts (i.e. there still seems to be some impression that Win2K was built on the same kernel that Windows 98 was) would get modded up. 2K is nearly 6 years old now, XP is 4, and the BSOD is virtually gone. Yet, the blue screen jokes STILL fly with full karma around here. The result? People stand up and say "uh, you guys need to get with the 21st century." People whinge about MS fanboys flooding Slashdot. Sorry, can't see that from my point of view. Fire is being fought with fire. My advice? Don't give Apple praise for being wrong or Microsoft scorn for being right.

        No, I'm not pro-MS or anti-Apple, I'm just tired of these karma-fueled battles happening every year. I appreciate Taco's desire to keep Slashdot 'democratic', but it's irritating that ordinary Homer Simpson'ish people are allowed to be cops.

        • Re:Shut up! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by nathanh ( 1214 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @04:44PM (#14493549) Homepage
          Wish I had known that before I made a not-so-nice comment about Apple which resulted in several mods going well out of their way to mod me down until I couldn't post on Slashdot for a couple of weeks.

          You hit the nail on the head, Nanogator.

          I have also noticed extremist Apple fanboy moderation around here lately. My Mac credentials extend back to the late 80s on System 6 and I've owned a half dozen Macs over the years. I'm even typing this from a Powerbook (running Linux admittedly). I'm a strong supporter of Apple and I love to read books about their history. Yet even the most mild criticism of Apple or MacOS on /. will result in my comments being moderated down as Flamebait, Troll and Overrated. I never get similar mistreatment for negative comments about Linux or Windows. It seems Apple fanboys have no qualms abusing the moderation system to ensure that only positive Apple comments are seen.

          Unfortunately this isn't new behaviour for Apple fanboys. As far back as I can remember - including the glory days of Usenet - the Apple fanboys have been the most intolerant, the least receptive to criticism, the most judgemental and often the least educated of all the enthusiast groups. The negative moderation of any criticism of the latest Macs is yet another example of this behaviour. Anybody who thinks Linux fanatics can be over the top has never seen an Apple fanboy in full swing. Even the Amiga users were never so extreme. That sort of stupid fanatacism is what led to one of my earlier sigs: "I love Apple hardware but goddamn I hate Apple users".

          The example at the start of this thread epitomizes everything I hate about Apple fanboyism. Steve said something that deservedly should be called out for being deceitful bullshit. If any other CEO - Gates, McNealy, Ellison - had said something similar we'd have people throwing figures around and using datasheets to prove that the CEO was a lying bastard. Even when a relative nobody from GNOME or Xorg attempts to massage the figures there will be 100s of /. comments crying "Bullshit". Yet when Steve does the same thing the Apple fanboys are rallying behind him, providing him with excuses, apologising for his behaviour, rationalising the lies, and moderating or shouting down anybody who points out that the emperor has no clothes. Apple gets "special treatment" and I find that despicable.

    • by DietFluffy ( 150048 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @02:36PM (#14492278)
      What is the significance of arstechnica benchmarking the 3 macs with the following ram configurations:

      iMac Core Duo: 512MB
      iMac G5: 1GB
      PowerMac G5: 4.5GB

      Wouldn't such a large difference in the ammount of ram have a significant impact on benchmarks?
      • by ottffssent ( 18387 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @04:49PM (#14493612)
        That would depend on the working set size for the given app.

        512MB may be slightly cramping the style of the new imac, but it didn't look like any of Ars' benchmarks would need much more than that. Certainly 4.5GB isn't going to make any difference, and if you've been following Ars' articles, you'd know why that particular machine is so loaded. The CPU-bound, disk-bound, or graphics-bound benchmarks aren't going to notice the change in RAM amount. The photoshop test, being done on a fairly large image, might have seen some impact from the difference in available memory.

        Given how heterogenous the systems are already, I'm not too concerned with a slight difference in memory size. Given the different instruction sets, execution hardware, cache layout, and memory controller, I think having only 512MB rather than a gig is unlikely to show up in the benchmarks or in most users' usage.
        • I have to disagree. OS X 10.4, as wonderful an OS as it is, uses LOTS of memory. Dashboard is a notorious hog, as is the core OS.

          My G4/1.4 GHz is definitely much snappier at everything with a gig than 512.

          I think these benchmarks are a little off, because nobody in their right mind would leave this machine at 512 MB in this day and age.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:52PM (#14491232)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by daveschroeder ( 516195 ) * on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:54PM (#14491243)
    http://arstechnica.com/reviews/hardware/imac-cored uo.ars/7 [arstechnica.com]

    I tried to boot from a Windows XP installer CD. No dice. I then tried booting from a Vista installer DVD (Build 5270). Again, no dice. When holding down the Option key, the only icon that appeared was for the iMac's internal hard drive. Holding down the D key to try to force booting off of the optical drive failed as well. With the Vista DVD, the optical drive churned a bit and the iMac hesitated as though it were contemplating whether it wanted to boot the foreign OS. Soon afterwards, the familiar gray Apple logo appeared on screen and Mac OS X finished booting.

    The new Intel Macs don't have an EFI shell, so there's no way to directly get at the EFI. Someone is ultimately going to have to write and/or use an existing EFI shell to tell the EFI to boot from alternate media to get things going. Naturally, running Windows under virtualization [appleintelfaq.com], with technologies like Intel's VT/Vanderpool, which the Core Duo in the new Macs does support [appleintelfaq.com], are going to be the way to go for most users anyway.
  • by gasmonso ( 929871 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:55PM (#14491254) Homepage

    YouTube.com has a video of both systems booting. So if you're in to computer drag racing here ya go: http://www.youtube.com/?v=zmaAZwkhYeQ [youtube.com]

    http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]
    • by shippo ( 166521 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:59PM (#14491298)
      There's obviously something seriously wrong with that G5 if it is taking that amount of time to boot. My G5 boots in roughly the same amount of time as that Intel iMac.
      • by DECS ( 891519 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @03:14PM (#14492644) Homepage Journal
        MacWorld demo people, although trained not to demonstrate or allow rebooting the new Macs on display, did remark that they booted up really fast.

        In the video, the G5 likely had more RAM installed, which would make it POST considerably slower. The boot time, however, is probably very representative of how much faster the Intel iMac is at booting. Other reasons the Core Duo may have booted so fast compared to the G5:

        - Two processor cores!

        - Mac OS X is expressly designed to boot fast by bringing up as much as possible in parallel. That's part of the point of launchd: to identify dependancies and kickstart multiple things at once. This is also why Apple gave up on displaying what was being booted in 10.4, and now just shows a progress bar (which is unrelated to what's actually happening, and only timed to match the previous boot time as a relative indicator). Reporting what servers are being launched would take longer than actually starting them. This parallelism would clearly benefit from multiple processor cores in the Core Duo.

        - the G5 may have been booting for the first time, or they may have deleted the cache in an attempt to make the test "fair," not realizing that the cache has a huge impact on boot times. Among other things, Mac OS X caches the kernel extensions so that the next boot only stops to numerate which kexts to load if something in hardware has changed. If you wipe your cache files (/Library/Cache, ~/Library/Cache and System/Library/Cache), the next boot will take a lot longer while boot performance caching is rebuilt.

        - other hardware may have been unfairly compared: how fast was the G5's drive? was something wrong with it? was the G5's drive full, and struggling to find space for cache files? was it bound to a directory server, and stalling on boot while looking for the server? was it full of 3rd party software, kexts, startup items, etc?

        The video doesn't reveal anything about the demonstrators competence at setting up fair comparison, or their motivation, so we don't know.

        Recall the comparison of database servers running on OS X server vs Linux, where they intended to be fair but their assumptions about how to do so were actually really bad?

        Or look at the Ars review and benchmarks of the new iMac Core Duo vs the iMac G5. He does an array of benchmarks where the G5 has 1 GB of RAM, and the Intel iMac has 512MB! Sorry Ars, but that's just plain incompetent. Your benchmarks are WORTHLESS to even skim over. How about benchmarking the G5 iMac with 512 and 1 GB installed, and reporting if that makes any difference?!

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by maynard ( 3337 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:58PM (#14491283) Journal
    It doesn't surprise me that it still competes with Intel's latest offering. I wonder if it makes sense for Apple to continue supporting both x86 and PPC platforms long term. I'm sure Intel will -- in time -- crush the G5 in performance. But if Apple wants to dominate the HDTV editing workstation market, Cell looks like the most appropriate processor for that task. Are fat binaries really so obnoxious as to prevent permanent multi-arch support over the long term?
    • From what I understand, Apple has no intentions of supporting the PPC for very long. By the end of this year they will no longer sell machines that run on a PPC chip. They will probably continue to support Rosetta for backward compadibility, but gradually let PPC binary support die off. Apple practically gives away Xcode to software producers, and x86 native support only requires a recompile. It's not like the move from MacOS to X where the architecture had changed. Artsy types are going to buy the new Mac
    • by chipset ( 639011 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:17PM (#14491457) Homepage
      The fat binaries (or Universal) has been around for a very long time. NeXT first introduced them in this exact same format. Knowing that Mac OS X is the current incarnation of NextStep (the OS for NeXT machines), I assumed the Intel move would be relatively easy, if the had been maintaining the code.

      Now, in retrospect, it looks like they have for Mac OS X, but maybe not for all the other applications (iLife, FCP, etc).

      Now, given that the OS has a long history of multi-platform support, it is only a piece of the puzzle.

      Application level changes are a bit harder, especially in relying upon functions specific to a chip. Which, for some applications, is the case. Others should be able to do a direct recompile, if the application is still around in source form, the author is interested, etc.

      Back when I had acess to NeXT Cubes, I didn't have to worry about it. However, when I later bought NeXTStep 486, I had to. There were lots of applications for the 680x0 systems, I sometimes had to search for those 486 applications. I assume we are headed back into that world.

      So, can it happen? Yes. However, I suspect that Apple will move on with the Intel architecture. I assume the PowerMac G5 will be a well respected machine in the meantime, as it does great for video editing, something Widnows machines still work hard to do poorly.

      I suspect it might be like the Amiga. While the Amiga didn't get a lot of respect, those in the video editing world used it much longer than people antipicated.

      But, in the end, the new macs will be Intel. As a side note, I just sold my G5 DP to someone looking to do video editing with FCP. Even with them knowing the Intel systems were coming out, they still wanted it.
    • by Andy Dodd ( 701 ) <atd7NO@SPAMcornell.edu> on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:19PM (#14491489) Homepage
      It has insane floating point throughput capability which will help on some apps, but for most desktop apps the Cell is extremely slow. It was designed for a very specific set of tasks.

      Existing PPC binaries won't run fast on the Cell. In fact, they most likely won't run at all.

      There is no way we'll see a general purpose desktop system based on the Cell - it's just not designed for that kind of purpose. We might see some sort of Cell coprocessor board become available though.
  • FireWire 800 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by sg3000 ( 87992 ) * <<sg_public> <at> <mac.com>> on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @12:58PM (#14491284)
    The benchmarks from the article are useful.

    It sounds like from the review that Apple's pro apps aren't well suited for the Intel-based Macs until they have the Universal Binary versions (suggested to be in late March). Maybe that's why they left FireWire 800 off the initial MacBook Pro -- if you need FireWire 800, you're probably doing pro work. So Apple left it out to reduce costs until they have a complete system for pros.
  • Have you seen the new apple commercial? "...for years it's been trapped in a PC, dull little boxes doing dull little tasks"... Honestly I felt down the whole evening... How many people know the new macs actually ARE pc's? Of course they aren't, cuz there are macs and pcs right?... macs have this apple thingie on the top of the screen and ya now the pc's come with this colored flag and it says windows. Of course in the public mind, mac and pc's are opposed on the operating system side... this is really Mac O
  • It's Called A 'Lie' (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    "being slightly over optimistic"

    In the real world that is called a Lie.

    Jobs doesn't look like he even remotely concerned about even making -plausible- performance claims about the Intel stuff.

    Looks like Jobs is going to be doing a 'optimistic' spinning this year with the mess Intel's Roadmap(tm) looks to be in. He should have been less of a pain in the ass to IBM he wouldn't be in the mess Apple is in with their hardware.

  • Er, did they try using the "Startup Disk" control panel to tell it to boot off the optical? How about holding down the right key, namely "C"? (The Option Key... it does nothing...)
    • Holding down Option when booting does do something - on Open Firmware-based Macs, it presents a graphical list of the volumes you can boot from. (For example, with my iBook with the Mac OS X DVD in the drive, it shows I can boot from the hard disc, from the install partition on the DVD, or the Apple Hardware Test partition on the DVD). As the review says, it did a similar thing on the new EFI iMac, only it only showed his hard disc as bootable.

      Also, apparently on the new Intel-based Macs, one holds 'D' in

  • OC? (Score:4, Funny)

    by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:05PM (#14491354) Journal
    Can it be OCed?

    And by OC, I don't mean "The O.C."
    I mean Over Clocked.

    I realize it isn't in exactly the best form factor to start pushing out extra heat, but someone's going to try it.
  • by Luke PiWalker ( 946528 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:15PM (#14491439) Homepage Journal
    1) Doubles as reading lamp
    2) Automatically emails fan letter to Steve Jobs during start up
    3) If you cup your palms over the domed base, your hair will rise in air
    4) Sprouts set of cybernetic insectoid legs and scutters away when threatened
    5) Perfectly matches the iBlouse
    6) Screen is flat, which is good for some reason
    7) Special drool tray catches saliva from enthralled technogeeks
    8) Communications directly with human pineal gland by firing information-rich beam of pink light
    9) Wuvs you

    Stolen from The Onion of about 4 years ago but still true today.
    • but still true today.

      The "desk lamp" iMac design hasn't been around for a long while now. Yeah, boy, that flat screen sure is novel; nobody sees the advantages of that...

      The G5 model has no tray to catch drool in, even. Slot loading drive, on the side.

  • by G4from128k ( 686170 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:16PM (#14491446)
    Look at the history of Apple's processor switches. The first generation PPC machines (6100/7100/8100) were nice, but the second generation PPC machines (7500/8500/9500) were much better. The 2nd gen PPC machines had PCI instead of NuBus, a faster interleaved memory architecture, and a much improved dual-SCSI bus. With the first Macintel, it's obvious that Apple worked very quickly to put Intel Inside and I'm sure that some parts of the design represent a borrowing from PPC designs. I bet that second generation Intel machines are both faster, less likely to have flaws, and more likely to enjoy longer-term OS upgrades.

    I know its ungeek of me not to want to be on the bleeding edge, but I'm waiting for the second generation machines.
    • By all accounts, the new machine's insides are practically designed by Intel. Intel CPU's, Intel chipsets, probably Intel motherboards. While the SW for Intel will definitely get better over time, I doubt the HW will be less bug-prone (it's already very solid).

      The only big change on the horizon is the switch to Merom/Conroe/Woodcrest in the second half. This will bring the eventual switch to a fully 64-bit OS X.
    • by asv108 ( 141455 ) <asv@@@ivoss...com> on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:28PM (#14491554) Homepage Journal
      That was my thought initially too, wait for the second generation. Its probably still good advice, but I think they fact they are using a widely implemented Intel product will increase the reliability of these first generation Intel macs. My first generation pentium-m is still a good performer today. Apple will be using the standard processors, boards, and components of the Centrino duo, which will have a long a lifespan. There is not going to be some earth shattering change in the Macbook components a year from now. Apple will be using the same Intel specs that every other major pc laptop manufacturer will be using, so we can probably through all the first-gen history out the window.
    • by Moby Cock ( 771358 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:31PM (#14491569) Homepage
      Of course the second generation of Intel Macs are going to bet better than this generation. The third generation will be better than the second. Maybe you should wait for them instead...
    • by geoff2 ( 579628 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:34PM (#14491606)
      I think the 68k-PowerPC transition is not quite apt. You are correct that the first generation of PPC boxes were not nearly as nice as the second generation boxes, which had much more extensive changes than just the processor. But I think there was a lot more room for improvement in the last 68K boxes versus the PC state of the art at the time than there is in the last PPC boxes versus the PC state of the art. The NuBus expansion card bus versus the PCI bus is just one example. Both the last PPC boxes and the first Intel boxes have the latest and greatest interfaces such as USB2 and PCI Express.

      In addition, the first Intel box is not a motherboard that Apple slapped together on its own, like it did for the first PPC boxes. It is a state-of-the-art Intel motherboard with all the latest doodads. Sure, Apple could stick in a fastre graphics card or hard drive, but the motherboard support chips are all modern. I think the next rev of the MacBook Pro will include Firewire 800, which I assume Apple couldn't integrate into the MacBook Pro motherboard in time to meet their ship date, but that's more of an incremental change than was included in the second-generation PPC boxes. (And don't forget the problems with the then-new PCI-bus Macs. Networking was so broken -- remember the Open Transport fiasco? The brand-new networking architecture that wasn't ready at the time the 7200/7500/8500 were released and which those new machines relied on, MacTCP having been deliberately obsoleted? It took several months after the boxes were shipped for *any* PPP dialing software to work at all with the Mac, and it took more than a year after that until most of the more significant networking bugs to be quashed.)
  • I'm still waiting for the most important benchmark: frames per second in molten core combat.

    Does anyone relly have any info on this? Even anecdotal evidence would be appreciated.
  • molten core (Score:4, Funny)

    by poot_rootbeer ( 188613 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:24PM (#14491518)
    the most important benchmark: frames per second in molten core combat.

    I'm pretty sure that if you overclock your Dual Core to the point where it becomes "molten", your FPS rate is going to be Zero.
  • Is this a 2x32-bit processor? The Intel PDF's on it (search Intel for 'core duo') don't seem to want to decode for me today.

    I can't believe Intel is building anything new these days that isn't AMD64, but I've already had a couple people tell me I'm wrong about Core Duo.

    If so, why would anybody buy it at these prices?

    • Yes, 32-bit... (Score:5, Informative)

      by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) * on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:36PM (#14491628)
      The 64-bit version are out later this year.

      Not that many people actually need 64-bit capabilitity, mostly for programs that need very large memory access. iMac users certainly will not, Macbook Pro users is more questionable - my guess is they will upgrade that line with the 64-bit chip at the same time they release the Intel Powermac equivilent.

      Hmm, that leads me to wonder what the new name for the Powermac will be... MacMac?
  • Spanning (Score:5, Informative)

    by ronanbear ( 924575 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @01:41PM (#14491690)
    The intel iMac supports spanning! I'm surprised Steve didn't make a big deal about this. There goes one more major reason for people to buy a powermac. Kudos for Ars for mentioning that on the first page.
  • Memory Anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by puppetluva ( 46903 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @02:08PM (#14491950)
    These benchmarks don't seem entirely objective.

    The older imac was sporting twice the memory, and the g5 desktop had 9 times the memory.

    Clearly the memory disparity was a factor in many of the tests.

    I would give more credence to a test where all three machines had the same amount of memory so that paging/swapping/caching would be more at parity.

    • Re:Memory Anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by 2megs ( 8751 )
      Clearly the memory disparity was a factor in many of the tests.

      Why?

      Seriously, what makes it so clear to you that this was a major factor? If all the tests run could fit in 512 MB without swapping, going to 1 GB wouldn't gain anything, right? Is there something about current Mac platforms that I don't know?

      There were many differences between the machines. I'd be more inclined to point out that a significant minority of the benchmarks tested the graphics chips more than the CPU.
  • by yabos ( 719499 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @02:13PM (#14492013)
    The guy seems to be a bit confused in what he writes.

    "Rosetta runs in the same thread as the application, and translates blocks of code as they come up. "
    Then
    "...That allows the translation to run on one core while the application thread executes on the other core, meaning that the translated code will have a short distance to travel."

    So, which is it? Does Rosetta run in a separate thread or not? Maybe he meant it runs in the same process, I don't know.
  • by Jewdass ( 946382 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @02:26PM (#14492176)
    Who here actually watched the keynote? Show of hands? I know I did.

    Let's all go to www.apple.com/quicktime/qtv/mwsf06/ and load the keynote up to 1:07:00.

    Steve Jobs is completely up front about which testsproduced the numbers (SPECint_rate2000 and SPEC_fp2000) and outright says "Now, everything is not going to run 2-3x, the discs aren't 2-3x faster, etc." He makes it very clear that his numbers are based off of these two benchmarks. He claims they are the most important benchmarks of performance, which is debatable, but they are certainly a fair test of raw cpu power. Other than the chip and motherboard, the only other significant component that has changed is the GPU, going from a Radeon x600 to an x1600. Does anyone disagree that this is in the 2-3x faster range?

    All in all, people are making a mountain out of a molehill rather than checking the source of the numbers. god bless the internet.

    -justinb
  • by pyite ( 140350 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @03:34PM (#14492834)
    I get so annoyed everytime someone supposedly benchmarks something on a PC and includes no experimental error figures, no mean, no standard deviation. Maybe that's because when you only test things once, the sample standard deviation is infinite! Doing this in an engineering or scientific paper would get you laughed out of the journal or conference. Reading the following in the Ars discussion forum just reinforced my thoughts:

    XBench is not great for benchmarking unless you repeat it's tests about 10 times or more each... its results vary too much (even from one run to another on the same machine, never mind when comparing two different ones).

    Come on people, do many tests, compute the data, adjust with Student's t-distribution. This is elementary stuff yet no one does it.
  • by fupeg ( 653970 ) on Tuesday January 17, 2006 @04:15PM (#14493195)
    This comparison really makes me wonder about the Intel-based PowerMac replacement. What kind of processor are they going to put into that? The logical choice would seem to be the Conroe [wikipedia.org]. There are rumors [theinquirer.net] of a 3.3 GHz dual-cores being sent out later this month. Intel claims that Conroe will outperform Core Duo 2-1 on a performance-per-watt basis. So a 3.3 GHz Conroe might be as much as 3.6 times as fast (pure performance, it's ok for a desktop chip to consume twice as much juice as a laptop, right?) as a Core Duo. So if you take the iMac comparisons against the current G5s and extrapolate... well a PowerMac based on a Conroe could be a mighty beast. Give it 4 GB of RAM like the PowerMac in the comparison, and it should easily outperform the PowerMac (at least on non-Altivec tasks, but that's a different story.) Of course it's still going to have the stupid front side bus, albeit running at 1.0+ GHz with 4 MB of L2 cache.

    Another possibility would be for Apple to wait for the Extreme Edition of the Conroe, the Kentsfield. That would give them four cores, like the current PowerMacs. It won't be out until 2007, and Apple seems anxious to switch everything over ASAP. So they could go with Woodcrest, basically Conroe for servers. This might let them put together a dual-cpu/dual-core setup like they have with the current PowerMacs. This kind of setup was demonstrated by Intel [anandtech.com] last fall. There were also rumors [theinquirer.net] last year of Apple pressuring Intel to give them Woodcrest chips ahead of schedule.

    And of course there's the more mundane question of what will they call the PowerMac replacement? They seem to want to get away from the Power prefix, while stressing the Pro tie-in to their Pro apps. So maybe Mac Pro? Seems too short. Maybe bring out the whole name, Macintosh Pro. Whatever it is, can it make people as upset as "MacBook" did?

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