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It's funny.  Laugh. Businesses Technology (Apple) Apple Technology

G5 in an iMac 89

babbage writes "I recently bought a Power Mac G5, and when I registered it with Apple, I was offered a free subscription to MacWorld. When signing up for the subscription, one of the questions you're asked is which Apple product you purchased most recently, and one of the items on the list was 'iMac G5.' Does the MacWorld marketing department know something that the rest of us don't?" Maybe they had seen the page that incognito writes about: "Over at AppleFritter, there's an awesome mod that changes an ordinary iMac into a mini version of the aluminum G5 tower. There were lots of details in the creator's work that leads to a very polished final product."
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G5 in an iMac

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  • Or maybe.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:02AM (#9138207)
    Or maybe it was a typo. Someone so used to typing iMac, that when it came time to type just "Mac" in this document, they put an "i" there by mistake.

    This being said, are there any technical reasons a G5 could not be stuffed into an iMac console?

    • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by kalidasa ( 577403 ) * on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:10AM (#9138285) Journal
      Current G5s run pretty hot. On the other hand, they're stuffing the newer ones into XServes, and the form factor of the XServe isn't ideal for air flow, so I don't think there's any reason they couldn't eventually stick 1 G5 into an iMac. But I'm expecting a Powerscale G4 for the next iMac revisions.
      • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:22AM (#9138441)
        "Current G5s run pretty hot"

        So, what you are saying is that you can cram G5 hardware into an iMac case. However, you should put metal trays below it to catch the rivulets of melting plastic so they don't damage the finish on your desk.

      • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:55AM (#9138798)
        Current G5s run pretty hot.

        While they do run warm (and certainly warmer than the G4s used in iMacs, eMacs and PowerBooks), they are still run cooler than most x86 chips, such as the Athlon XP and Pentium 4. The large heatsinks and elaborate cooling system in the PowerMac G5 are more to do with keeping the system cool quietly rather than trying to deal with some non-existent nuclear furnace CPU trapped inside the aluminium case. Remember, any kid with a screwdriver and $30 can keep a raging 3.6GHz Pentium 4 throwing out 100W of heat cool enough to run stably. However, it sounds like a cyclone.


        The challenge with the G5 was not keeping it cool...that's easy. It was keeping it cool and quiet. That is the origin of the G5's elaborate cooling system. Don't misattribute it.

        • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:3, Interesting)

          by kalidasa ( 577403 ) *
          Excellent post, but I was making the point that current G5s are pretty hot in comparison to G4s - since the iMac design currently works with G4s - not x86s.
      • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:5, Informative)

        by elmegil ( 12001 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @09:09AM (#9138993) Homepage Journal
        I'm sure an XServe has less concern about fan noise. The Cobalt RAQ I once used has a 1RU form factor, and no fan on the (900MHz) CPU. It made up for that by having a bank of small fans that ran very fast and very loud. You can do that in rack equipment, but you can't generally do the eqivalent thing in a desktop.
      • by MarcQuadra ( 129430 ) * on Thursday May 13, 2004 @11:44AM (#9140816)
        The G5 puts out a LOT less heat than a comparably-equipped Pentium 4 chip.

        The reason we don't have the G5s in everything is that it takes a lot of time to design, fab, and test motherboards for Apple's designs. Also, the 970FX is coming soon, and it's much cooler than the straight 970, so there's no rush to move to the current series of CPU.
        • True, but ... last I checked, those are G4s in the iMac case, not Pentium 4s. So the comparison should be between the G5s and the G4s, not the G5s and the x86s. If the current G4 is the max temp for the iMac form factor, then the G5 would be too hot (and the x86 too damned hot).
    • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:3, Interesting)

      by bhima ( 46039 )
      I've got an iLamp, and it doesn't get that warm.

      I suppose given the jet engine sound my G5 at work makes, it would be possible to fit all of that in a similar form factor but the sound would kill the mood.

      • Too lazy to google right now, but does anyone water cool G5s. I mean, if it makes that much noice, I'd think a water block would be a whole lot more quiet.
        • I don't know about water cooling, but I think the current G5 is fine to sit *under* a desk but not on it.
        • Given that my G5 doesn't make much noise at all, I figure the noisey ones must be in hot environments or in areas with bad airflow. It's not as quiet as a G4 iBook or a Cube, but it's very quiet.
        • It astounds me you were too lazy to google "water cool G5" - but felt at ease signing into Slashdot, navigating to the Apple section, clicking through to this thread, read some comments, posted your own, selected the options for that post, and hit Submit.

          You ought to be smacked!

          And yes.. watercooling is inherantly quieter - but requires annoying and expensive pH tests and monthly chlorine flushes.
      • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:5, Informative)

        by batobin ( 10158 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @12:14PM (#9141215) Homepage
        You're kidding, right? Every G5 I've used was incredibly quiet, much more so than my G4 tower. Unless the side of the case is off and the fans turn to full, my impression of these computers has always been that they are very quiet.
      • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:3, Informative)

        by jo_ham ( 604554 )
        If your G5 sounds like a jet engine there's something wrong with it.
      • you have a G5 at work. are you hiring?
    • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:4, Informative)

      by thatguywhoiam ( 524290 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:18AM (#9138395)
      Or maybe it was a typo. Someone so used to typing iMac, that when it came time to type just "Mac" in this document, they put an "i" there by mistake.

      The current (official) name for the iMac is "iMac G4", to differentiate from the original G3-based iMac, so the typo probably happened with that number right next to the 4.

      • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:1, Redundant)

        by babbage ( 61057 )

        The current (official) name for the iMac is "iMac G4", to differentiate from the original G3-based iMac, so the typo probably happened with that number right next to the 4.

        Yeah. That's it. [slashdot.org].

        I don't know what's going on here, but there's more to it than a simple typo. This was done deliberately; whether it was thought-through or accurate is a different matter, but it wasn't done on accident.

    • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by babbage ( 61057 ) <cdevers@cis.usou ... minus herbivore> on Thursday May 13, 2004 @10:43AM (#9140125) Homepage Journal

      The form was a dropdown list, the HTML source for which was:

      <option value="" selected class="formText01" SELECTED>(Pick From List)
      <option value="99" >iMac G5
      <option value="01" >iMac G4
      <option value="02" >iMac G3
      <option value="03" >iBook
      <option value="04" >PowerBook G4
      <option value="05" >PowerMac
      <option value="06" >Server G4
      <option value="07" >Cinema Display
      <option value="08" >Studio Display
      <option value="09" >iPod
      <option value="10" >Airport
      <option value="99" >Other
      </select>

      This doesn't seem to have been a typo.

      I'd post the URL, but I can't tell if they have my information encoded in it, so I'd rather not.

      As a substitute, I'll leave up a screenshot [homeip.net] for a little while. Astute readers will pick up on the fact that the URL is on a buysub.com server -- I have no idea who they are, but that's the URL that Apple's subscription invitation sent me to, and it seems to be legit.

      (Now, i'm trying to be generous here, but please don't melt my puny server. If the load gets too bad I'll have to shut it down, so if there's interest in seeing that screenshot, mirrors would be welcome.)

      • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:5, Informative)

        by pudge ( 3605 ) * <<slashdot> <at> <pudge.net>> on Thursday May 13, 2004 @10:46AM (#9140173) Homepage Journal
        Even if you selected iMac G5, they'd never know it, since it is the same value as Other.
        • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:3, Interesting)

          by babbage ( 61057 )

          A good observation, but one I'm not sure how to interpret. They want it to appear on the form, but they aren't actually gathering the data if you select that. I'm not sure why they would do that...

      • Re:Or maybe.... (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        I think it IS a typo...

        Notice what's missing from that list? What if I wanted to choose a PowerMac G5?

        Anonymous Joe
      • It might be just a psych-out to get you to specify. If it comes up "Other", people might not bother to change it to what it really was. But if it comes up something definite that is actually wrong it may increase the likeliness that they'll choose a proper answer.

        The only thing I have in support of this is that the value for Other is the same, so they wouldn't know which you chose.
      • Perhaps the "iMac G5" choice is a filter to mark users too dumb/lazy to choose the product they actually bought. That choice is then used by the help desk folks to gauge how to deal with the person when they call.

        Caller: My printer won't work.
        Help Desk: I see you have an iMac G5; have you taken the computer out of the box yet?
        Caller: What? What box? It's in a box?
        Help Desk: Let me transfer you to someone who specializes in printer issues.
      • Missing iBook G4...
      • by joel8x ( 324102 )
        That list is just phony. Server G4? That's not even a real product name. And you can no longer even buy a G3 iMac from Apple. Also, where the heck is an eMac option and why not iBook options if your going to list out dated iMac options?

        This story might be relevant as a Macrumors page 2 article.
        • by babbage ( 61057 )
          The list may be bizarre, but I didn't make it up -- someone else in this thread verified that he saw it too, a couple of months ago. I don't know why the Macworld signup page is so bizarre, but it is as I submitted it, and it seems worth considering.
        • Actaully, my office uses a G4 as a server (we call it Frontier), so I guess you can have a G4 Server. It's unofficial, I think, but it's certainly a G4 Server.
  • by Fortunato_NC ( 736786 ) <verlinh75.msn@com> on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:03AM (#9138220) Homepage Journal
    It's not that there is a G5 iMac now, they just don't want to have to update their survey when one comes out (hopefully) sometime around WWDC in June.

    WWDC should be interesting, since the G5 boxes are overdue for a speedbump, and the iLamp, er, iMac LCD, is also overdue for a refresh. However, since the current iMac's motherboard is based on the powerbook's, I'm not 100% positive that there will be a G5 iMac announced in San Francisco.
  • Probably True (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    iMacs are due for a revision

    http://www.macrumors.com/pages/2004/05/200405100 53 824.shtml
  • by rlthomps-1 ( 545290 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:41AM (#9138650) Homepage
    ... that they don't know where the '4' key is
  • it's a typo (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:53AM (#9138780)
    this story has been mentioned several times at rumor sites, such as MacRumors (www.macrumors.com). it's a typo. it was there when G5 was announced for a PowerMac - no way iMac G5 was even a thought back then.

    G5 iMac will happen sooner or later, perhaps WWDC next month. but there's nothing here... it's simply a typo.
  • It's pretty simple (Score:3, Informative)

    by transient ( 232842 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @09:05AM (#9138942)
    Does the MacWorld marketing department know something that the rest of us don't?

    No.

  • by Johnny Mozzarella ( 655181 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @09:09AM (#9138994)
    The popularity of miniATX boards and Shuttle's mini PC are a proof that Apple was on the right track with the Cube. People want small powerful computers but not the attached LCD screens in the iMacs.

    This is exactly the type of product Apple needs a scaled down version of the PowerMac G5. The full size machines should all be dual processor and the PowerMac G5 mini should be single processor.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Headless G5 iMac! My credit card is ready!
    • The popularity of miniATX boards and Shuttle's mini PC are a proof that Apple was on the right track with the Cube.

      And yet the dismal sales figures say... not so much.

      Some people want a Cube, obviously, but not enough of them to make it worth Apple's while.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by huchida ( 764848 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @12:19PM (#9141284)
        The Cubes failed because they were too expensive-- they weren't a "headless iMac", they were a luxury item that cost more than the stock G4 while delivering fewer features. It wasn't a bare-bones Mac box, it was a costly conversation piece,

        Plus, they had a few well-publicized flaws that made them unappealing... A hair-trigger on/off switch and a lucite case prone to cracks.

        Apple could do well to make a low-end "cube", a cheap and portable desktop without the screen. Include iLife and a Superdrive and it could be sold as a multi-purpose media box, a component of the home entertainment system.

        • Plus, they had a few well-publicized flaws that made them unappealing... A hair-trigger on/off switch and a lucite case prone to cracks.

          I don't buy it. The whole G4 series and the currently shipping monitors have these. (Well, the G4s have the same mechanical power switches the G5's have, but the monitors have touch-sensitive switches, and when the monitor's plugged it, its switch controls the sleep/wake behavior of the computer, just like the mechanical switch on the computer itself does.)

          Apple could do well to make a low-end "cube", a cheap and portable desktop without the screen.

          Don't buy that, either. Remember, in order to be successful, Apple has to sell hundreds of thousands of units a month of whatever products they're making. The demand for the kind of niche box you describe just isn't there.
          • I don't buy it. The whole G4 series and the currently shipping monitors have these. (Well, the G4s have the same mechanical power switches the G5's have, but the monitors have touch-sensitive switches, and when the monitor's plugged it, its switch controls the sleep/wake behavior of the computer, just like the mechanical switch on the computer itself does.)

            Have you actually used a Cube? The button was on top, larger and more conspicuous... Waving your hand past it would shut the machine down.

            Don't

            • Have you actually used a Cube? The button was on top, larger and more conspicuous... Waving your hand past it would shut the machine down.

              The button on a monitor is right there, glowing invitingly. And it's also very sensitive, just like a Cube's. Maybe it's slightly less sensitive, but not in practical terms.

              How is an iMac or eMac without a screen a "niche box"?

              We're going around in circles here. Apple floated the idea: it failed. Why would they float it again? What in the marketplace has changed?

              Lo
              • by maggard ( 5579 ) <michael@michaelmaggard.com> on Friday May 14, 2004 @09:53AM (#9151415) Homepage Journal
                Have you actually used a Cube? The button was on top, larger and more conspicuous... Waving your hand past it would shut the machine down.
                The button on a monitor is right there, glowing invitingly. And it's also very sensitive, just like a Cube's. Maybe it's slightly less sensitive, but not in practical terms.
                There's a b-i-g gap between waving-your-hand-past a button to trigger it and slightly-less-sensitive poking it to trigger it. You can keep arguing the point or just be honest and concede that current monitor switches != Cube switches.

                It was kewl with the Cube your didn't even need to touch the darn thing. Then it got confusing. Then oftentimes annoying. (Note to Ives: Don't put proximity switches close to the CD slot...)

                As to why the Cube tanked there were actually two reasons, or at least, one depending on the other. Yeah, bang-for-buck it was lacking, unless you took your stylin' bang real seriously. The other was that it was a machine ahead of it's time, or more clearly, ahead of it's OS.

                The Cube was built to run MacOS X. And it didn't have it. Clearly it was meant to be the next-gen machine with the next-gen OS. Power switch? Why would you turn off a MacOS X box? At most you'd put it to sleep. Big empty box? That's so... "Wintel". Small, sleek, clever design, that's a unix workstation.

                Quick test: Ask a PC user which of a series of PC's on a table they want? Usually it's the biggest chassis with the most ports, slots, and drive trays in it. However ask an old unix workstation hound and they'll pick the smallest. In that world everything (at least 'til a few years ago) was getter smaller, and faster. Newer==smaller/better/faster.

                So yeah, it sucked that the Cube didn't have the OS it was designed for. Apple's hardware got ahead of their software. Or, more accurately, their OS development took a lot longer then they'd anticipated. So the Cube was half of a shiny pairing that never happened.

                Of course there were lessons learned too. Yeah, high price point and no expandability aren't a good combination. But look at the desire the Cube still creates in folks! There's still no PC design that inspires such comment or techno-lust. Clearly Apple was onto something, something they've since assiduously applied across all of their lines. Not just stand-out-from-the-crowd looks, but smooth, sleek, glossy vs matte, "high end". Technology as sculpture.

                Would a Cube Jr. make it in today's market? Possibly. Actually I'd more expect an eCube: small workstations schools and the like could use, booting off an X-Serve. Nothing terribly exciting feature-wise but field-maintainable, cheap, and very robust. Plug any junk monitor the school has sitting around, keep that investment, but replace the PC "big box" with something paperback book sized, quiet, and secured.

                There's probably a good market there. Same as the eMac; if it takes off it could be made a consumer product too. Heck, even an enterprise product paired with XServes (thin client, anyone?). Build for an assured market: .edu. If others demand it sell it to 'em too. As long as it pays back it's R&D, manufacturing capital, and doesn't seriously cannibalize other sales, yeah, go for it.

                (Expandability? Put support for peripherals being virtualized in MacOS. USB & FireWire ports redirected across the network so only a few well-cared-for devices are needed per room, or even per site. Not terribly hard but very impressive.)

          • by DarkVader ( 121278 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @01:42PM (#9142418)
            Well, the monitors have some of the same problems. The touch switches are not incredibly reliable (Apple has gotten much better with them, so they're not as bad as the Cube switches were in the beginning) and that does cause problems.

            The "cracks" were a myth. A few people who bought cubes decided that mold lines (which are present on just about all plastic products) were cracks - and the rumor spread.

            That rumor IS what caused the cube to fail in the market, though. They were selling like crazy at the Apple dealer where I work until that story broke, then sales dropped to almost nothing.

            I also think you're underestimating the market for a cheap headless Mac. If Apple were to ship something in the $500 range (with a useable configuration below $700) I think Apple could take a significant share of the home market. Many people want to pay nearly nothing for a computer, and Apple has no offering in that market segment - even though they've got the best value in the high end of the market.

            I think a $500 box with a G4 (or even a slow G5 - if you underclock them, they're cooler and cheaper than a G4) would sell well - the only problem for Apple would be capacity to build enough of them.
            • Many people want to pay nearly nothing for a computer, and Apple has no offering in that market segment - even though they've got the best value in the high end of the market.

              Excuse me? What about the eMac? It is DAMN cheap to me an Apple, and here it stands out like the really, really, really good computer alternative in the sub 10 000 NOK (=1500 USD approx.) class. Weighing in at 1084,82 USD, that's not bad compared to the alternatives. Crappy Wintel boxes from no-name manufacturers or the low level Del
              • by DarkVader ( 121278 ) on Friday May 14, 2004 @12:50PM (#9153876)
                The eMac isn't the type of computer I'm talking about - it's got a built-in screen, and is large and heavy.

                I'm not saying it isn't near the price range that a headless cheap mac would need to be in, but it isn't quite there. I've sold several of them, but the problems with the eMac are:

                1. it's not headless. If there's a screen/analog board failure, the entire computer goes down. And screen/analog board failures are not nearly rare enough on eMacs. It's one of the most common warranty repairs we do at the Apple dealer where I work.

                2. it's not headless. the screen adds to the cost of the system, and some people like to be able to upgrade components without having to replace an entire computer.

                3. it has NO internal expansion capability. This isn't a problem for some users, but it would be nice for others to be able to add one or two PCI cards, and maybe a second hard drive.

                4. it's not easily serviceable. I've been inside enough of them to know this firsthand.

                5. it's just not cheap enough. Dell offers a configuration at $499 - yeah, it's garbage, but it's there. Apple REALLY needs to have something at that price point, even if it's a G3 with a CD-ROM drive and 17" external CRT.

                Apple's biggest problem at this point is marketshare - to get developers to the platform.

                You don't have to tell me about the lower TCO - I've seen it firsthand, I won't sell wintel, and I don't like having to service it. (I won't touch wintel if I'm not already in a location to work on a Mac.) But many people don't look at TCO, they just see the lower initial price on the low-end hardware and won't buy Macintosh.
        • Apple could do well to make a low-end "cube", a cheap and portable desktop without the screen

          I'm sorry... Apple should make a what?

          a cheap and portable desktop

          What was that first part?

          cheap

          Expensive?

          cheee -ap

          Ex-pensive?

          ...
          Joking aside, I really liked the Cube, but I don't think the expense (or the cracks - which I've never actually seen in real life Cube) was the whole story. I think people took one look at the Cube and just thought 'there is no way that is a powerful computer. It looks

        • by johnbeat ( 685167 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @08:26PM (#9146756) Homepage
          In our area, the cube was useful because of the small footprint and quiet; very much like a G4 iMac would have been.

          The problem was that the combination of a cube and an LCD screen was prohibitively expensive (at least in education); and buying a cube with a CRT monitor defeated the purpose.

          At the end of its lifespan, when the price of cube+LCD became more attractive, we bought (or at least ordered, I don't recall if we ordered them in time) several of them.

          Nowadays, the people who would have purchased a cube purchase an iMac. Not because the iMac is cheaper than the tower, but because it has a small footprint and looks nice on the desktop and isn't overly expensive compared to the tower.

          I'm not sure who in our area would want a headless iMac. The clients who want headless computers also want easy access to RAM, they want PCI cards, they want a tower.
    • The popularity of miniATX boards and Shuttle's mini PC are a proof that Apple was on the right track with the Cube.

      As a form factor, the Cube was good (although I hope any replacement would have room for a decent dized AGP card).

      However, they were stupidly priced, which is why they weren't very popular.

      People want small powerful computers but not the attached LCD screens in the iMacs.

      I think one of the smartest things Apple could do would be to make the iMac screen detacheable and simultaneously revamp their display lineup. The engineering behind making a single LCD screen that can either attach to an iMac or a base with ADC, DVI and VGA inputs (and a USB hub) should be trivial. Added to that, doing so would simultaneously reduce their overall production costs and widen their product line to fill a niche.

      • All Macs are priced stupidly. It's the law.
      • Won't work. (Score:2, Interesting)

        by crashcane ( 64138 )
        I think one of the smartest things Apple could do would be to make the iMac screen detacheable and simultaneously revamp their display lineup. The engineering behind making a single LCD screen that can either attach to an iMac or a base with ADC, DVI and VGA inputs (and a USB hub) should be trivial. Added to that, doing so would simultaneously reduce their overall production costs and widen their product line to fill a niche.

        But then they would have to design a base and sell it separately. And worry ab

        • Re:Won't work. (Score:3, Interesting)

          by drsmithy ( 35869 )
          But then they would have to design a base and sell it separately. And worry about the LCD-Base connector, and how it might break, [...]

          They have to do this for their desktop LCDs anyway.

          [...] and making it forward compatible to future LCDs

          Apple have never been particularly bothered with forward, backward or cross compatibility in the past - I can't imagine why you think they'd suddenly have to if they did this.

          The LCD mount on an iMac is very sturdy, and has to be since people manhandle it all day.

  • Doing a mod (Score:5, Funny)

    by SengirV ( 203400 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @09:09AM (#9138998)
    Now I know why I have no aptitude to do any kind of case mods -

    I used 2mm and 1mm thick Polystyrene plastic sheets. I got them in sizes of 2x1 metres from a local reseller and I use it to build accessories for my model planes and dioramas

    I'm not geeky enough ;)
  • by nbohemen ( 610864 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @09:51AM (#9139444)
    At MacWorld, they're so indoctrinated by Apple, they've made a script that puts an i in front of every word.
    • Newly announced line at MacWorld:
      - iSee Express, 'Blind even got blinder.'
      - iSee Pro, 'I see dead people'
      - i, i, i, And a bottle of iRum.
      - iFuckedup (Microsoft simulator)
      - iSpy (voluntary spyware for the Mac)
      - iGuess (If you really must run Microsoft Office)
      - iWon't (i386)
      - iCan (because I...)
      - iCowboyNeal
  • by brauwerman ( 151442 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @10:16AM (#9139777)
    The article shows a G3 in a Powermac-style mini case, not a G5 in an iMac. An impressive hardware hack, but not a G5.

  • by mark-ss ( 576434 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @11:05AM (#9140388) Journal
    The last time I registered a new computer (2 months ago), the same survey had the same error.
  • by dpbsmith ( 263124 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @12:44PM (#9141683) Homepage
    ...in which he's speculating about how the Schick razor company came up with the idea of the Quattro razor with four blades. He imagines some marketing executive reading about Gillette's introduction of the Mach 3 3-blad razor and saying "Quick! Set up a focus group to find out what number comes after 3!"
  • That is not the only site that hints of iMac G5's in the future...I found this [macnews.de] site, apparently some type of encoded announcement site for Apple that they call "macnews.de". Anyway, there is news about G5 imacs and I could also make out "G5 powerbooks". The rest was too well encrypted.

    Perhaps there is a code breaker out there who can decypher it.
    • by babbage ( 61057 ) <cdevers@cis.usou ... minus herbivore> on Thursday May 13, 2004 @01:34PM (#9142320) Homepage Journal

      According to Babelfish, it just seems to be a tech news site parroting a rumor. Here's the Babelfish version of the article [altavista.com], with mild corrections where I can [in brackets]:

      The last rumor: iMac G5 in the approach?

      Different rumor [sites] in Europe and the USA speculate at present upon possible G5-iMacs in June. Starting point is a report [altavista.com] of the [Taiwanese] hardware side Digitimes, Apple with the there OEM manufacturer Quanta computer for June new "Notebook models" ordered. The French Mac side MacBidouille means [altavista.com] now however, it can act possibly over iMacs, these for Apple by laptop manufacturers nevertheless already before produced themselves. (G5-PowerBooks are considered as rather improbabl[e] [altavista.com].) Independently of it announces [altavista.com] Mac Rumors with reference to anonymous sources, which are next in AC version as G5-Ausfuehrung planned and "at present in work". Acquaintance masses at the end of of June the next WWDC [altavista.com] is held, on which Steve job wants to present the next Mac OS ( 10,4, code name [altavista.com] "tiger" [altavista.com]). In the past year it used its WWDC Keynote still, in order to introduce the G5-Power Macs.

      11.05.2004 10:15 - Rumors - bs

      So, nothing to see here, no "codes" to break... :-/

  • iMac G5 a certainty (Score:4, Interesting)

    by DarkVader ( 121278 ) on Thursday May 13, 2004 @01:50PM (#9142544)
    I think we can count on an iMac G5 in the fairly near future. The only reasons not to do it are portable marketing and an abundant supply of the current G4 units. I'm not sure what the supply of G4 iMacs is right now, but I suspect Apple is near a replacement.

    The G5 is a less expensive chip, easy to cool if you underclock it, and should be a good choice for the iMac and eMac very soon.

    (think about it - it's quite possibly costing Apple more money for the iMac processor chips than the G5 tower chips. that alone is a good reason to switch chips.)
  • I got mine um, last week, yes, that's the ticket, last week. From my um, er, uncle. Yes, my uncle. I thought everyone had them by now! It's wonderful.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    check out http://www.appleturns.com/scene/?id=4458 appleturns.com did a story on this back in January.
  • an (original) iMac in a G5 (knock-off)

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

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