PPC 970 Powerbooks and Powermacs in Production? 492
Thadddius_Brinks writes "MacWispers.com
is reporting here
that apple is currently in production of a redesigned single processor PowerPC
970 Powermac system and a 15.4 inch Powerbook. They (MacWhispers.com) are also standing by
their earlier claims about the speed of the new processor."
This article consolidates many of the major rumors surrounding WWDC including
the rumor of a new case for the Powermacs, but it raises the ultimate question: 17" Powerbook, or PPC 970 Powerbook?
SCOOP: PPC 990, "G6" on the Way now! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:SCOOP: PPC 990, "G6" on the Way now! (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, the PPC980 is in the IBM roadmap, it's to the Power5 as the 970 is to the Power4.
WWDC? (Score:2, Funny)
"What would jobs do?"
it's only fitting, all things considered!
PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:3, Interesting)
Needless to say... drool!
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:2)
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't get too far out, now. The PPC970 isn't expected to be better than an Athlon64 at non-AltiVec tasks. (At least, comparing spec scores would suggest that. Also the Opteron & Athlon64 have an on-die memory controller, which the PPC970 lacks).
I'll be in line for a dual-proc PPC970 PowerMac later this year, for sure, but it's not because I think it'll be the fastest thing on the block. I think the Athlon64 will have that title, though not by much.
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:3, Interesting)
Also note, with the Athlon64 & Opteron, you're not forced to use the on-die memory
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:4, Informative)
You've got that backwards. Macs use the carriage return, decimal 13 (0x0D) as their line break character. Unix uses the line feed, decimal 10 (0x0A). DOS (and therefore Windows) uses the asinine CR-LF combination, which is also the standard marker for line and command endings in most text-based internet protocols, such as SMTP.
For those youngsters not in the know, these "control" characters really did control things. On a paper teletype machine, a carriage return would move the print head back to the left side of the carriage. A line feed would advance the roller one line. The combination of the two would prepare the teletype for printing another line, so in a way Windows does it right.
In reality, using two characters to mark an end of line is a major pain in the ass. I wish everyone would standardize on using just an LF.
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:3, Interesting)
I once met Matthew Modine (the actor who plays the main character in Stanley Kubrick's "Full Metal Jacket"). I had with me my graphite iBook. Seeing it, he pulled his tangerine iBook from his bag. It had a HUUUUUUGE hole in the upper casing. Obviously I asked him "where did you get that". He said he was sitting in a restaurant and working on his laptop waiting for dinner. Waiter has lit a candle - and he didn't notice. He felt the smell of burning plastic, but he didn't think
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:5, Informative)
OK, that might addmittedly not be for the same audience as a 64-bit powerbook, but still... drool indeed!
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, Quark has just announced that it is shipping for OS X any day now. Lack of a native version of Quark, along with a sluggish market in publishing, has kept a lot of the tower buyers (ie print shops, etc) from upgrading. Quark is ready to ship, and publishing seems to be on its way to recovery. Those are two big pushes on the demand side.
Also, it would seem silly to have the 970 in the towers and not in the XServe, so expect them there as well; that would further reduce the supply side even further. In fact, I suspect that the 970 in the XServe might drive XServe sales higher, thus reducing the pool of 970s available for laptops.
A 970 Powerbook will be here, just don't expect it within the next couple-three months.
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:5, Interesting)
right?
BTW, a 64 bit processor means more than just the amount of ram you can stuff in it... Think virtual.
--jeff++
Re:PPC 970 Powerbook (Score:3, Funny)
"Those arn't pillows!
No need to click, article text.. NOT a karma whore (Score:2, Informative)
We have no software information sources; all information we receive comes from people working in various positions in and around plants in Taiwan that actually supply parts or perform hardwa
Mod parent up, please (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No need to click, article text.. NOT a karma wh (Score:3, Funny)
Hmmm...and this was posted as an Anon Coward. Trying to tell us something Taco?
Re:No need to click, article text.. NOT a karma wh (Score:2)
Were you just checking to see if we were paying attention? Or did the speed of the 970 seriously mess you up?
Performance claims need clarification (Score:4, Interesting)
Does anyone have any clarification on this? With the rumours that the 970 chip is actually less expensive for Apple than the G4 I was hoping for dual 970 boxes at price points similar to the current crop of PowerMacs.
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:3, Informative)
Memory bound (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You're right (Score:5, Insightful)
Pentium 4: 3 GHz
Xeon: 2.6 GHz
Pentium M: 1.6 GHz
Itanium 2: 1 GHz
Re:You're right (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You're right (Score:5, Informative)
The only problem with that argument is that the bus tops out whenever you're churning on a large dataset.. like video editing...
There's no doubt that the L3 helps, but actual memory bandwidth would help a whole lot more.
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Performance claims need clarification (Score:3, Informative)
It will depend on the specific app. From what I've read, the 970's Altivec unit is slightly less advanced than that of the current G4, but it will have a *lot* more memory bandwidth. So the 970 won't be any faster per-cycle at RC5 (which fits entirely in cache), but could easily be significantly faster when processing large Photoshop images.
My own bets (Score:5, Interesting)
2. The major OS Upgrade to 64 bits will happen in a few more months - either way, I expect that OS 10.3 will cost another $50 - $100 (depending on how they do it).
3. The G3 iBook line will be slowly phased out, and replaced with G4 based systems.
4. Dual processor systems by Christmas or so.
5. iTunes for Windows sooner than we thought.
6. Somewhere in this timeframe, new Xserves will start to appear with the 970 chip and the 64-bit server operating system (which should be interesting for folks running "big ass" database/graphical rendering farms.
So either way, I'd say we'll "see" the devices, a few "first adopters" will play with them, pass judgement, Ars Techana [SIC] will write a big ass article on them, and "everybody else" will pick them up later.
Hopefully somebody can convince Valve that Half Life 2 would really run rather nicely on these boxes so I don't have to spend money upgrading my old Wintel Game Box.
Re:My own bets (Score:4, Informative)
the 17" just took about 2 months to fully ramp up production.
Re:My own bets (Score:5, Interesting)
According to ThinkSecret, Panther is going to launch sometime in September. They also say that a special 64-bit version of Jaguar called 'Sméagol' is being built for the new PowerMacs (known internally as Q37). It could be finalized as early as WWDC. Why would they have a special version of Jaguar if they didn't have the 970's rolling off the production lines already? Seriously. If Apple thought that they couldn't get them to people quickly, they wouldn't bother recompiling the entire OS for them. They would just wait a month to release them. They don't want a repeat of the bad publicity they got as a result of the 17" slowness.
Apple is moving away from Motorola chips entirely. IBM still makes the G3. In all likelihood, Apple is going to keep the G3 in the iBook and just start using IBM chips instead of Motorola ones.
I sure hope so.
Again, I really hope so. I've been itching to spend all of my money at the iTunes Music Store, but I don't have a Mac.
I would imagine that the Xserves would use the real thing. The Power4 uses more power and produces more heat than the 970, but it also has an insane MTBF. Besides, you wouldn't need a dual Power4 since it's already two cores on a single die. Pretty cool design, really.
Re:My own bets (Score:3, Funny)
oooh ... We wants it! ... my precious ...
Re:My own bets (Score:3, Interesting)
If I'm not utterly mistaken, the rumored contract has not been confirmed by Apple or IBM officially.
In all likelihood, Apple is going to keep the G3 in the iBook and just start using IBM chips instead of Motorola ones.
That would be silly. First of all, as stable as IBM is, it's always better to have more suppliers than not. Apple's current predicament is precisely because their sol
Re:My own bets (Score:3, Insightful)
Eventually, they should upgrade the iBook (or more likely replace it with another model), but Final Cut Express is a $300 app. Not too many home users are willing to drop that kind of cash on a single program AND aren't willing to spend it on a better computer. Plus, I don't know too many people who do FCE level video editing at home in the first place. iMovie is powerful enough for the average home user editing video of the kids.
Photoshop runs just fine on an iBook. Sure, the effects are
Re:My own bets (Score:3, Insightful)
There are really three classes of users here. There's the consumer, who indeed will probably be happy with a G3 and iMovie. There's the professional, who will demand the 970 be on the high end PowerBook, at least. There's also the pro-sumer (the folks who buy $1,000 video cameras that are too good for baby videos, but useless for profession
Re:My own bets (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't you also have a single hardware supplier if you go with Suns? Or with a lot of IBM boxes? XServe's are actually quite price-competitive in their market, especially due to their storage capacity and I/O throughput (disk network) combined with hot swappable dr
G5 Powerbook? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:G5 Powerbook? (Score:2)
40h bit, not 64 bit! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:40h bit, not 64 bit! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:40h bit, not 64 bit! (Score:5, Informative)
Shullbit (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides June production doesn't mean a June release or even announcement date. Apple likes to build up stocks of computers before selling them. Building and shipping computers in the same month would be a ridiculous strain on their resources. As for a June announcement, see the Osborne computer company.
WWDC isn't exactly a place Steve Jobs likes to announce hardware products, it is really the wrong venue for such announcements. MacWorld Expo is a much better place to do things like that and is only two months away. It's not really a secret Panther developer previews are going to be released at WWDC which will likely be SJ's keynote subject. MacOS and related software ought to be and typically is the subject of SJ's WWDC keynotes. Not hardware announcements.
Re:Shullbit (Score:2)
Afterall, Apple's really going to need their developers to start churning out 64bit code to really be able to justify/promote the new 64bit chips.
Re:Shullbit (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, Apple has already worked hard
Re:Shullbit (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Shullbit (Score:4, Interesting)
Er, no. Apple prides itself on having a low inventory (a couple of weeks, at the most) - all personal computer manufacturers do. If they had any more, they'd wind up in the December 2001 "5+ weeks of unsellable inventory" glut problem.
WWDC isn't exactly a place Steve Jobs likes to announce hardware products, it is really the wrong venue for such announcements. MacWorld Expo is a much better place to do things like that and is only two months away.
Except that Apple isn't going to be at MWNY this year.
Re:Shullbit (Score:5, Insightful)
this makes sense (Score:5, Informative)
Re:this makes sense (Score:2)
Re:this makes sense (Score:2)
Re:this makes sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:this makes sense (Score:2, Interesting)
Apple consistent history of rebates, is that it precedes new products.
MacWhispers... (Score:5, Informative)
To read more about how cool a guy he is, check out the MacTable report at Macintouch:
http://www.macintouch.com/mactable.html [macintouch.com]
Re:MacWhispers... (Score:2)
Jack Campbell (Score:3, Insightful)
It wouldda been good to see evil carrot's post further up the thread
If it is for real, great - considering the source, though, doesn't fill me with hope. The article was convincing with all the "inside scoop" from the part OEMs -
Oh, well - I just bought a dual 867 anyway
From the past... (Score:4, Insightful)
PPC 970 Single 1.4 Ghz shipping July.
PPC 970 Duallies shipping within 4 weeks of the single.
OSX 10.3 Late August... and I would bet my kidneys you WILL have to pay for it (~$129), but don't moan... apparently there is a LOT of new/improved stuff, and this is only the beginning as Apple have found that they can build on the code very easily *indeed* due to the quality and clenaliness of it... exactly the problem MS seems to have with Windows ATM.
PPC970 Notebook (Score:2)
Well, on the plus side I should get at least another year out of my 'Book before it becomes a YDL 'Book. The only issue is: how does Apple think they're going to sell more iBooks with such an option out there? I mean, pretty soon G3s won't be supported by developers..
Rumors, Rumors, Rumors (Score:3, Interesting)
I find it hard to know what to believe here. It seems a lock that Apple will introduce PPC970 based Macs at WWDC, but the question as to when they will be availble for shipment is something that is probably only known to his Steveness.
As far as a PPC970 based Powerbook goes. I doubt it. The peak energy consumption is low enough, but I don't think it has any powersave features built in. The increased complexity of a whole new chip in a laptop...seems dubious.
However, There is one thing that makes me think a Powerbook G5 might be released: Apple has not updated the 15" Powerbook since November, not even to bring it up to feature parity with the 12" and 17" models (Bluetooth, FW800, and DDR memory, Aluminum enclosure). It does make me think that maybe Apple has been waiting for the next major uprade to update the 15" models and switching to the PPC970 would certainly qualify.
Mac rumor sites vs. Slashdot (Score:4, Interesting)
To top it off, the person who runs Macwhispers is completely morally bankrupt, and is most likely fabricating the entire story.
I'd like to see some real competition for high performance CPUs as much as the next guy, but let's not lose our heads to con artists like this guy...we will know for sure in about 2 weeks
Everyone seems to misunderstand MacWhispers (Score:5, Insightful)
"Oh, I'll believe it when I see it."
Obviously. MacWhispers has given up on making release date predictions. You'll notice that they have *not* given a specific timeframe for the release of these machines. They have said that they are being built.
So, now, when WWDC makes no mention of the 970, everyone will say "See! MacWhispers are a bunch of damn fools." and no one will remember, two months from now, when these machines surface, that it fits perfectly with MacWhispers' information.
If you take them completely literally, they are a valuable source of information. They cannot divine the future, and they don't seem to be trying to do so, either.
Re:Everyone seems to misunderstand MacWhispers (Score:5, Insightful)
Predicting something that everyone knows will happen eventually is not so significant as correctly predicting *when* it will happen.
Re:Everyone seems to misunderstand MacWhispers (Score:3, Interesting)
Predicting something that everyone knows will happen eventually is not so significant as correctly predicting *when* it will happen.
Obviously. That is why everyone seems to be denying these nonexistant predictions. That doesn't change the fact that they are not making those predictions.
Also, I'll point out that
New Product Lineup (Score:3, Interesting)
1) PowerBook gets the yummy new PPC 970 chip (it IS the year of the laptop afterall)
2) iBook then gets the current G4 chip. The last of the lineup using G3s finally gets the upgrade.
3) iMac, eMac, PowerMac get new 970 chip because hey, we can't leave them out. Or can we? It's the year of the laptop...maybe let the masses go nuts over the laptops as they continue working on the new IBM chips and then blow the doors off when they're ready to be put in the desktop models.
Re:New Product Lineup (Score:3, Interesting)
Personally, I'd be willing to be that the XServe an
I doubt the speed predictions at least. (Score:5, Interesting)
Specifically:
Unlike the G4, where the AltiVec unit is integrated rather nicely into the issue unit, and can issue several types of vector instructions in parallel, the 970 can only do a permute in parallel with another instruction. Hence, for some tasks, I would expect the G4 to be almost twice as fast as a similarly clocked 970.
They make a similar claim about the non-AltiVec speed, which I tend to believe. The compiler has to be a little smarter (but Apple did add a bunch of G4 optimizations to gcc anyway), but the 970 can do more per clock the the G4 can, under many circumstances. Not only can it have more instructions in-flight, but it has a much more advanced reordering unit than the G4.
Oh yeah, and when did /. just copy over Apple rumor stories? </obligatory>
Re:I doubt the speed predictions at least. (Score:5, Insightful)
the real reason G4's don't perform is that they are usually waiting on data... the G4's may be fast and have great AltiVec, the whole issue of still running (essentially) PC133 memory is the bottleneck.. no matter how fast your CPU is, if you can't get it lots of data - not just the data in the L2 cache - its just gonna sit there.
the 970 systems should, by any means, at least keep the CPU(s) busy. that alone will greatly enhance the performance of the new machines when doing things like 3D rendering, video transcoding, etc.
Its like why my Powerbook rips mp3's from CD's at only 10x, while my slower desktop rips them at 14x... the desktop has a 52x CD-ROM drive and my Powerbook has a slow-as-ass Superdrive. I can't keep the machine busy because I can't get it the data. The bottleneck in that case is the CD read.
In the G4's vs. the 970's discussion, the bottleneck is the pathetic (compared to Intel mobos) G4 motherboard because the mobo's running the 970's are all around faster.
Re:I doubt the speed predictions at least. (Score:4, Informative)
The 1.8 ghz. PPC 970 should have a 900 mhz. FSB, fed by dual bank DDR400 (PC3200) memory it will really cook!
Re:I doubt the speed predictions at least. (Score:4, Interesting)
The Ars review used the CPU documentation to decide the 970's Altivec was slow. It might have missed something, like maybe the G4's Altivec is always memory starved and thus runs a 25% of it's maximum speed while the 970 has lots of memory bandwidth and thus while in thery is only 50% as fast as the G4's, that manages to be 2x what the G4 really does.
Of corse it may well be slower (or merely "about the same"), because I'm not able to tell you how fast a CPU is from the pre-release docs either (I thought the TI SuperSPARC would be fast, and the P-II would be slow). Basically I'm saying "who can really tell here".
Shenanigans! I Call Shenanigans! (Score:2)
There is no way they'd release it. I'd be willing to believe a G4 Powerbook 15.4" and a Power PC 970 based Power Mac Tower. but no way they'd do that with the Powerbook at this time.
(Re)Stating the Obvious (Score:5, Insightful)
Major changes that effect developers will be announced at WWDC. It's likely that whatever new directions in CPUs, APIs, or Market segments will be announced there because developers will have to react to the news. That doesn't mean anything will be available for sale or even that we'll get the whole picture of what cases, prices, user interface changes, or iApps will be released. Not only don't developers need to know this stuff, but traditionally they've been a very conservative, non-spontaneous, purchasing crowd where such surprises would be wasted.
People keep talking about having the whole Mac product line refreshed at WWDC and nonsense like that. My guess is far more conservative. We may get a timetable to expect new PowerMacs, but we probably aren't even going to see the new machines in final plastics.
During the transition from 68000 to PowerPC, Apple bent over backwards to give developers access to emulators, test labs, and even loaned machines to big developers. But they didn't start commercially selling anything until eight or nine months after the WWDC announcements.
I don't think Apple will wait quite that long to introduce new chips if such plans are really on the horizon, but I think there will be some non-trivial lag from WWDC to new consumer-marketed debut of new hardware.
Next from Apple... (Score:3, Insightful)
OK, my predictions:
Re:Next from Apple... (Score:3, Informative)
I think the days of the one-button mouse may be coming to an end, at least partially. Apple's consumer systems recently started shipping with new keyboards and mice. I don't remember if they did this with the keyboard, but what once said "Pro Mouse" on its underside now says just "Mouse." The only other discernible difference between the two are
Re:Next from Apple... (Score:4, Interesting)
I was not slamming/mocking Apple for only shipping a single-button mouse. I'm typing this post on my G4. [spymac.com] All I was saying is, based on their nomenclature changes they might be about to ship one with their new towers.
~Philly
No 64-bit OS for some time - my prediction (Score:5, Interesting)
SO... that being said... my WWDC announcment predictions along with what Apple has already stated
- New Macs with PPC 970
- New PowerBook 15 with PPC 970 (the 15" PowerBook is the workhorse of the line, always will be, sorry)
- Preview of Panther
- Macintosh Roadmap Roadmap showing the future... and this is the big-ass news that everyone's been talking about.
Roadmap steps will look something like this...
July 2003:
10.2.7 running on new 970-based Macs practically unmodified because the 970 handles 32-bit operation just totally fine. x.x.+1 updates between WWDC and October 2003. Developer-only release of 64-bit SDK which will not be ready for prime time, but will allow developers to make the swtich, if necessary (similar to Mac OS 9 -> Carbon transition)
October 2003:
10.3 release - all those cool updates in iApps, updates in performance and operation of Mac OS X UI that were shown at WWDC. Panther Will NOT BE a 64-Bit OS!! - why not? Does not need to be because there are no 64-bit apps! Where are the apps? They are still being worked on with the 64-bit SDK, see you at Mac World San Fran with first 64-bit apps.
Jan 2004 (MWSF):
10.3.5 release. Mac OS X will run 64-bit applications. Only apps that NEED to be recomplied 64-bit clean will be recompiled 64-bit clean (iChat, for example, does NOT need to be 64-bit). Finder will be first app to be 64-bit clean because it needs to be.
beyond that, its non-speculateable.
But i think that the real news at this WWDC is going to be the first major Macintosh Roadmap since we saw the Rhapsody one in 1997(8?). You will see where the Mac is going hardware-wise and software wise.
Apple is going to push into the small-medium server market in a hard way.... 64-bit XServes which can run horkin Oracle databases, huge fileservers, and be the backbone of big-ass renderfarms... all with Mac OS X moron-simple UI and none of the pain of cost with Windows servers or admin headache of Linus servers? Puhlease... Apple is going to kick ass and move in where Intel and AMD are just simply lagging behind.
(yes, half the guys in my wedding party have apple.com email addresses.. no, none of this information was gleaned from them.)
My predictions (Score:4, Interesting)
The low-end (1.4GHz?) model will be available immediately, or within two weeks and Apple will be taking pre-orders. The mid-range and high-end (dual 1.6 and dual 1.8?) models will be shipping within a month after that. Photoshop comparisons with the latest Compaq PC will be mind-blowing, for the types of people who get excited about Photoshop performance. USB2, Bluetooth, FireWire 800 and 400 and Gigabit Ethernet will be standard features, with a slot for an Airport Extreme card.
The Aluminum 15" PowerBook will be released. We will not see a PowerBook G5 before January '04 and maybe not until March '04.
The PowerMac G5 will ship with a hacked version of Mac OS X 10.2, which will not be fully optimized to take advantage of the new processor. However, the PPC970 is designed to run 32-bit code just as well as 64-bit code, so it will still be amazingly fast. Anyone who buys a G5 will be entitled to a "free" ($29 S&H) upgrade to Mac OS X 10.3, which will ship in September for $129.
The new OS will be 64-bit native, optimized for the PPC970, and compiled with gcc 3.3. Large chunks of the Finder will be rewritten for performance and better UI, and there will be a ton of little system-wide UI improvements (adding up to a significantly better experience). One convenient new feature will be support for multiple users being logged in locally at the same time, like Windows XP (go to a login screen without quitting all your apps, second person logs in, first person's apps stay running hidden in the background, can switch back and forth between users).
Mac OS X 10.3 will include WebCore, Apple's Aquafied version of KHTML, available for any application to use. Safari will be the default browser. I suspect Internet Explorer will not be included, although of course you can download it from Microsoft. Help Viewer will be replaced (thank god) with a version that uses WebCore. Now that WebCore is available, it'll be possible for Apple to support PAC and WPAD for automatic proxy server discovery, although I don't know whether these features will make it into 10.3.
Did I miss anything? We'll see how accurate my predictions are next month...
Re:My predictions (Score:3, Insightful)
For example, I think it was Mac OS Rumors [macosrumors.com] that said the G5 will not be called the G5, and I disagree with them. This issue was also mentioned [appleturns.com] by As the Apple Turns, who said that according to [appleinsider.com] AppleInsider, it would be called the PowerMac G5. I agree with them. That doesn't mean my prediction is based on theirs, merely that we both mad
From past experience... (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Supply chain starts drying up.
2. Apple allows upgrade makers to catch up.
On the supply chain i've heard conflicting rumors, but on the upgrade side both OWC and Powerlogix have now released 1.42Ghz upgrades, this matches the top of the line G4 desktops.
So there is definitely SOMETHING coming, whether it is a new 970 based machine or simply speed bumped G4's only time will tell.
Not Quite (Score:3, Insightful)
This statement casts doubt on the other claims of the article because it is simply not possible. A 970 Mac could not run stock 10.2.6 as it exists now because it doesn't include drivers for the 970, the new Hypertransport bus, or the new motherboard chipset. IBM stated that only minor changes would be necessary to operating system code for 970 support though, so my analysis is that there are two possibilities.
Either a. the OS they are running isn't stock 10.2.6 but a modded version that is being called the same thing
or b. there are no running 970 Macs as of yet so they aren't running any OS.
What we can expect (Score:4, Interesting)
I do belive that Apple will have some sort of 970 based machine for the developers to look at, as well as some benchmarks for us all to drool over.
So what can we expect? Previewing Panther on a 970 based system, probably an update to the developer software (64 bit Project Builder), benchmarks of the 970, overview of 970 based hardware. Probably annouce a PPC 970 based Powerbook in the near future...END OF YEAR? Possibly a Naming change to hardware lineup, and Adjustable Displays
What is less likely? Windows verison of iTunes, PPC 970s shipping, PPC 970 Powerbooks shipping, iCam,
What is NOT going to happen? Apple PDA, Apple Cell phone,
As for the whole product line being revamped, i don't think we'll see a whole new product line at WWDC, but i think that Apple is going to be moving all it's lines away from the G4/G3 based systems. I don't even see the iBooks being converted to G4 systems, as IBM's chip lineup is known to be 20-30% cheaper than Motorola's line...
Instead of seeing G4s as the low end chips, i'd probably wager that IBMs will develop a PPC off of the 750 chip and this will probably replace the G3 systems. But i wouldn't expect to see a PPC 750 until you see a 980 in a powermac.... I think if Apple is going to IBM processors, it would be prudent that they went to an all IBM chip lineup.
Re:I'm wondering... (Score:5, Informative)
The current design is long in the tooth to say the least and is highly associated with the G4 processor... yet I've heard nothing about new enclosures at all..
Dude, RTFA:
"- The new Power Mac has a new case design with "metallic look plastics," and a front panel "mostly made with the same anodized aluminum surface" as the newest Powerbooks."
Its only one short page. Its not slashdotted (yet). How hard was that?
Re:I'm wondering... (Score:3, Interesting)
Long on the tooth the current one is however it's still far more attractive (to me at least) than anything available on the PC side. In my opinion at least the mirrored drive door model was a mistake and the previous Quicksilver was the best looking of the bunch.
The current one looks like someone gave a Quicksilver to some PC case-
Re:MacWhispers and Macrumors etc (Score:4, Interesting)
Or the one in June 2000 that predicted that Apple was about to drop the entire PowerMac line and just sell laptops and all-in-ones?
Or the one in August 2001 that predicted Apple and AMD had collaborated on a "secret" CPU design code-named "Twostone", a 48 bit CPU with 16384 registers, that was going to replace the G3 and run it in emulation just as the PPCs had emulated the 68000?
Or maybe the one that, in September 2002, predicted Apple was about to release a cordless phone, FOR NO REASON WHATSOEVER.
I hardly would describe them as a dependable source of unfounded rumours.
Re:MacWhispers and Macrumors etc (Score:5, Funny)
What are you trying to say, they are a great source of unfounded rumours! Not to mention dependable!
Re:No question (Score:3, Funny)
Re:No question (Score:2, Interesting)
It runs cooler and draws slightly less power (19W for a 1.2GHz 970 vs 22W for a 1.25GHz 7455) and is significantly faster. A 1.2GHz 15" Powerbook G5 is quite believable, especially since the 15" is way overdue for an update.
And 17"'ers have been shipping since April or so. they're just not selling terrible well (It's too damned big.)
Re:17" PBs have been shipping for some time (Score:2)
Just curious, why wouldn't you look for a tax free site before purchasing?
Heck, they're even available on eBay..for about $2800 last I looked (the 17" Powerbooks).
Re:Its about time... (Score:2)
You may have to buy an Intel machine anyway (Score:2, Funny)
Show me how an Intel laptop with similar specs is cheaper. I dare you.
Cost of Intel laptop: $1000. Half-Life license: $25.
Cost of Mac laptop: $1000. Half-Life license: $25. Cost of Intel laptop to play Half-Life on because Half-Life doesn't work on Macs: $1000.
s/Half-Life/any other Windows game whose copyright owner refuses to authorize a port to the Mac OS/g
Re:You may have to buy an Intel machine anyway (Score:4, Funny)
Cost of Mac laptop: $1000. Half-Life license: $25. Cost of Intel laptop to play Half-Life on because Half-Life doesn't work on Macs: $1000
Cost of a real life so you don't waste all of your time on a Pentium laptop playing Half-Life: Priceless.
Great setup, but you forgot the punch line: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yikes (Score:5, Interesting)
If not then you've got to ask yourself why is it that so many people care about what may or may not be coming along next from Apple and so few give the proverbial rats ass about the next offering from HP, Dell, or eMachines.
Apple seems to have perfected getting attention to an art. You can love them or hate them but almost nobody ignores them. That kind of PR is priceless.
PC Rumours ... (Score:5, Funny)
To determine what features will be on the leading edge PCs of the coming years, all you have to do is go to www.apple.com.
Egads, I've turned into a troll!
Re:Yikes (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a lot of speculation about AMD's chips, or new motherboard chipsets, or nVidia or ATI's new graphics cards -- probably just as much or more in total as that which surrounds Apple's products. Apple just has a lot of relative speculation surrounding it since it's the only provider for a particular platform.
Re:If they want to get our attention.... (Score:3, Interesting)
'Mac' would do bloody well to come up with *anything* considering it's a product name and not a company... have a lot of experience with Apple products do you?
I am demoing a shoebox AVID field editor that has 2 P-4 processors
I think you mean 2 P4 Xeon processors seeing as vanilla P4's are not SMP capable, and you are probably paying through the nose for this privilege, and it's likely not gonna be anywhere NEAR as portable as a notebook so you'
Re:If they want to get our attention.... (Score:3, Interesting)
This is dependent on your production environment using DVCAM or (for low importance work) DV or MiniDV since all the pro DVCAM and consumer cameras have firewire ports. If the camera has an I/O firewire port (some have out only due to a silly tax law defining it as a VCR if it has external video inputs), then you can master back to DVCAM and have the tape ready before you even get back to the office.
Nothing Apple makes
Re:64-bit laptop and gigabyte memory (Score:3, Insightful)
By far the biggest advantage of the 970 is simply that it's a much faster processor than the G4. If it were only 32 bits there would still be a good deal of anticipation. I doubt we'll see Powerbooks with 32 gigs of RAM anytime soon, but a PB 970 would still be a kickass machine.
Re:So is this The End of 32-bit Apple OS (Score:4, Informative)
64-bit PPC architecture can run 32-bit PPC code just fine as-is. Which is part of the reason that there are claims of stock MacOS X 10.2.6 being run on these PPC970 machines.
-psy
Re:So is this The End of 32-bit Apple OS (Score:3, Insightful)
Adding a kernel profile for a PPC970 is *not* creating a new operating system. Adding 64-bit support in the OS is *not* creating a new operating system.
And your claims that the underlying hardware is "different" are as valid as saying that a 486 and a Pentium are "different hardware". G