Blazing Review of the New iMac 150
boxturtleme writes "Despite the sometimes lackluster reviews of the new Intel iMac over the past several weeks, what with speed tests and hardware bugs, the New York Times sure seemed to like it. And beyond the blazing review, the Times seems fully confident that someone will soon have Windows and OS X dual booting."
MSN (Score:5, Funny)
*giggles like a little girl*
Re: (Score:1)
Why Dont you people wait. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why Dont you people wait. (Score:1)
Re:Why Dont you people wait. (Score:2, Offtopic)
I could say that my Favorite Text Editor is... And I will get a bunch of people saying how much my Text Editor sucks compared to theirs.
By being able to complain about something makes them think they are smart because they knew enough about something to come up with a retort.
Re:Why Dont you people wait. (Score:1)
Oh please, only stupid people (unlike me) use this excuse.
Re:Why Dont you people wait. (Score:1)
And unless you said TextMate on mac, they would be right
Re:Why Dont you people wait. (Score:3, Funny)
(Slow down, Cowboy!)
Re:Why Dont you people wait. - Jobs Do Wrong (Score:1, Flamebait)
I don't think you're going to see much in the way of faster processor speeds over the next year. Yes, the Intel chips will still be dual core, and move from 32-bit to 64-bit processing, but don't look for a faster processor to bail you out.
You sound a bit like an Apple Apologist. Apple releases a system that isn't that good, but just wait until the next one arrives. Frankly, Jobs didn't have to release anything at this time. Nothing was promised until June 06. The fact that
Re:Why Dont you people wait. - Jobs Do Wrong (Score:2)
I would be nice to have a 64-bit processor. Hopefully Intel gets on that. I suspect Intel will make faster processors over the next year too. You know, like they (and everyone else) have done since the microprocessor was invented. Those will probably be translated
Re:Why Dont you people wait. - Jobs Do Wrong (Score:2)
What is this? [outrage] You actually like the people you work with???
Re:Why Dont you people wait. - Jobs Do Wrong (Score:2)
Hi everybody!
Re:Why Dont you people wait. - Jobs Do Wrong (Score:2)
You miss the point, as expected. The issue is 64-bit software regardless of the amount of memory installed. Can every company afford to support a 32-bit port of their flagship products simply to run on the few iMacs and MacBooks sold in the first half of this year? Consider that the window of 32-bit Intel Macs is only 6 months wide, which isn't much of
Re:Why Dont you people wait. (Score:1)
There are exactly zero top-level comments above this one that complain about the Intel Macs. Additionally, as I post this, I don't believe any of the responses to said comments complain about the Intel Macs. I realize the standard Apple geek knee-jerk response will get lots of attaboys, flames, and positive mods, but I'd appreciate it if you'd respond to what people are actually saying, rather than making things up.
In fact, you s
Re:Why Dont you people wait. (Score:2)
"Are you saying they got PAID for this review?"
No, I think he means it was in the food section.
web pages (Score:2, Insightful)
I might be wrong here but wouldn't the speed that a page comes up have nothing to do with whether your processor is a little faster and more to do with how many people are using broadband in your neighborhood at the time of the test?
Re:web pages (Score:5, Insightful)
This is because of the actual cost of laying out and rendering the page, which is something that can be affected by CPU performance. (If I have a Pentium 233 and a Pentium 4 on the same network link, both running Firefox 1.5, pages will still come up faster on the Pentium 4 than they do on the Pentium 233.)
I suspect that this was what the NYTimes reviewer was referring to, even if he wasn't really *clear* about it.
Re:web pages (Score:1, Troll)
Re:web pages (Score:3, Informative)
There is Download speed, then there is rendering speed, and then there is JavaScript speed.
So in some cases say a large slashdot discussion, with many threads it may take a second or two to get all the data. But then it could take 2 - 3 more seconds for the browser to render the tables and fill the content, put the images in the correct spot. Follow rules for transparencies, If you have many images of the same type then you need to check to make sure you already have the image and only get
Re:web pages (Score:1)
Just my 2
Your neighborhood? (Score:1)
Uh, oh... (Score:5, Funny)
I know the new Macs are fast, but does that mean the new CPUs are smoking (i.e., Oh God, oh God, the CPU is on fire and we all gonna die!). That would be bad.
Re:Uh, oh... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Uh, oh... (Score:2)
Re:Uh, oh... (Score:1, Redundant)
No, no, Intel has ABSOLUTELY no heat problems. Steve Jobs said that was IBM's fault!
PowerBook (Score:1, Funny)
Did they mean the iBook?
Re:PowerBook (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook (Score:2, Funny)
Re:PowerBook (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook (Score:2)
I'd imagine the iBooks won't get updated until later in the year.
Re:PowerBook (Score:3, Informative)
Re:PowerBook (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:PowerBook (Score:2, Informative)
Er... PowerBook 100, 140, 170, all the way up to the 540C used 68000 to 68040 processors and were called *POWER* even before the first PowerPC chips had been released.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook (Score:2, Informative)
Re:PowerBook (Score:2, Informative)
PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2, Funny)
I suspect that the PowerBook was renamed to remove the association with PowerPC that the word "Power" in the name provided. This leads me to beleive that the PowerMac will be renamed once the Intel switch reaches it.
Place your bets on what it will be named!
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:1)
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
Mac Pro, or Pro Mac.
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:1)
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:1)
Before the MacBook (no man of woman born will harm the MacBook!!), all the desktops shared the "Mac" name. But the notebooks didn't. I can imagine there was some confusion among the lesser-geeky who looked at Apple computers. An Apple laptop? Is it a Mac? Does it run the same programs? Can you plug in the same devices to it? Does the lack of "Mac" in the name mean it's crappier?
Then there is "OS X". I predict that Apple will
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
Can you use that in a sentence for me? Pod tends to mean an enclosure or casing. Seed pod. Escape pod. Foward Looking Infrared pod.
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
I've heard the "Internet" thing, but if you look at what Apple was trying to do, with both the iMac and iPod, the idea of something that really lived up to the label "personal" seems more relevant. I can't find an authoritative reference, but even if it did start off as shorthand for "Internet", I think the idea of "I" must've been prevaili
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook != PowerPC (Score:2)
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
And after that, will it be getting someone lost in a TomTom commercial?
Re:PowerBook : MacBook ::PowerMac : ???Mac (Score:2)
Of course it's a blazing review! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Of course it's a blazing review! (Score:2)
Hardware bugs? What hardware bugs? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or did I miss a memo somewhere?
Re:Hardware bugs? What hardware bugs? (Score:1)
Ah, the fabled list of Core Duo/Solo errata. Given that such a list is typical of every processor, and previous Slashdot discussion has noted that the Core Duo/Solo errata list actually shorter than most, it almost seems irrelevant...
*shrug*
Well... (Score:5, Insightful)
A damn good reporter nonetheless (Score:4, Insightful)
Is he knowledgeable? Yes. Hugely. Author of several very popular and very well respected Mac books. Knows the technologies, their histories, the players, knows how to write, and knows what folks are interested in reading.
Is he a rah-rah Mac fanboy? No.
He, like Walt Mossberg, has been quite good about calling out Apple on their failures. Any number of times he's pointed out when the emperor has no clothes, that a great-leap-forward ain't necessarily so, that Apple hasn't gotten something right.
Does he claim not to like the Mac platform? No. Does he present himself as some sort of unopinioniated ideal, absolutely agnostic on the subjects he writes about? Not at all. He is completely clear about his appreciation for the Mac and then goes ahead and reports about it rather fairly and honestly.
So, partial or not, he's a damn good source of news and reviews about the Mac platform and certainly a heck of a lot better then either the fanboys and the not-without-a-2-button-mouse cranks.
Read the review, then judge it by it's content, decide for yourself if Pogue's fondness for Macs makes him unsuitable to report on 'em.
Re:And if Pogue rates a grain of salt... (Score:2)
(And I'm saying this as someone who's bought 6 Macs in the last 5 years...)
So the real question is (Score:1, Funny)
Re:So the real question is (Score:4, Funny)
Did you seriously hold onto that blog entry for SEVEN YEARS to post it?
Re:So the real question is (Score:5, Funny)
Blazing Review? (Score:4, Insightful)
He does note that some things are faster on the Intel iMac, and that some software will run natively, some will run with Rosetta, and some won't run at all. Anyway, hardly a review...
Windows on Mac (Score:5, Funny)
And like Jobs is still flogging startup time... (Score:2)
Sounds like we have yet another reviewer who is eager to run Windows on his Mac...
Also sounds like Steve Jobs was on his startup time hobby horse again, hectoring the engineers about startup time. He's had a thing about that since 1984; one of the "insanely great" traits of the first Macs was their startup time, from an OS on a single floppy no less.
(It's interesting that anyone notices, really, given how stable OS X is. I haven't rebooted since we
We lost 64-bit (Score:2)
In the end, maybe this doesn't mat
Re:We lost 64-bit (Score:3, Interesting)
Repeat after me : the iMac is not a Pro machine. The iMac is a consumer machine.
It's entirely likely that Apple never wanted to use the same chip in the iMac and the PowerMac at the same time, and were just forced into that situation by the dual pressures of increasing performance in the Intel world and no new developments in from IBM and Freescale.
While eventually the iMac might be 64-bit again some day, it'll be well after the Pro-level tower machin
Re:We lost 64-bit (Score:2)
Ok, there you go! You are the exception though, you must realize... and yea, this sucks for you.
If you have budget for it, buy up G5 iMacs now, would be my only advice. Apple won't have an Intel-based machine that's suitable for your use for at least a little while.
Then again, it's not as if Apple has announced that they'll discontinue sales or production of what they're now calling the "iMac G5", and they ha
Re:We lost 64-bit (Score:2)
Interesting... not really my area, so I hadn't thought about it, but I just read about a bunch of server manufacturers chipping in [com.com] ( ha! chipping in, get i... never mind... ) $10 billion to help Intel with Itanium somehow... and matching that with something I read the other day about future models ditching the extra silicon used for x86 backwards-compatability [zdnet.co.uk] ( which, uh, Apple might not need that, or would they ? ) and uh...
Who cares? (Score:1)
"what with speed tests..."? (Score:4, Informative)
For things that the intended users of iMacs will use, the performance is fine under emulation. Here's what I've observed, in comparision to my 17" G4 PowerBook, and my 1.8 GHz G5 PowerMac. I've got a Radeon 9800 Pro in the G5, and previously had a GeForce FX 5200 in it.
Word on the iMac feels faster than on the PowerBook, and comparable to the G5. (And Word on the iMac totally kicks the ass of OpenOffice 2 on my Athlon 64 Linux box...).
World of Warcraft on the iMac is faster than on the PowerBook, and faster than on the G5 with the FX 5200, and slower than on the G5 with the Radeon 9800 Pro. It is the video card that is the main factor here, not CPU performance.
As for native apps, such as Safari, Mail, iLife, they are much much much faster than on my PowerMac. X launches in about 1/4 of the time, for example.
Summary: for most non-pro users, the new iMac will be the fastest Mac they've ever seen.
Re:"what with speed tests..."? (Score:2)
Rosetta is the same as Classic on OS X was... a handy compatibility layer to get you by until native versions become available.
Has anyone noticed how Apple's about the only OS maker who manages to do these architecture transitions? This one, like the last one, seems to be VERY good considering that nobody else will even attempt it. It's pretty
Article: Will Macs run Windows? (Score:2)
http://www.roughlydrafted.com/Jan06.IntelMacsWin1
I always like corrections or comments.
A quick review of my own. (Score:5, Informative)
The machine is beautifully constructed, it is very clear a lot of thought went into it. The screen is very, very nice, the latest Sony machines seem a little nicer but it is better than I am used to from flat screens. It took about 4 minutes to get from opening the box to up and running which is very impressive. However, one point to note, it is much heavier than you might expect. I had visions of moving it round to watch movies on, use in the living room etc and I am now having doubts about the practicallity of this.
Start up is fast, as notes in other reviews. Safari is blazingly fast. However, Safari seem to be an earlier build, my version doesn't seem to have any tabs. The build reports as 2.05, has anyone else noted this about the Intel build, I couldn't find anything on the Web.
A bought an Airport base station and it was up and running with my broadband router in about 10 minutes (would have been sooner apart from a basic mistake on my part). I was very impressed with the Airport integration, there are cheaper solutions but this was very impressive.
I downloaded and installed Firefox without any issues. I don't think this is a universal binary yet, start time was much slower than Safari but once up and running it seemed at least as fast at page rendering and it has tabs.
There seems to be a shortage of media players at present. No Windows Media Player for the mac and the flip4mac plugin for Quicktime explicitly states that it isn't ready for Intel Macs yet. I tried to get Real Player but was fustrated by their awful web site, again it wasn't clear if I ever found the free version if it would work on an Intel iMac.
Installing dashboard widgets was also a little hit and miss. Some worked perfectly, others didn't respond as you might expect (I think the main issue was those with embedded Flash).
I installed Google Earth and this was a revelation. Again, I don't think this is a universal binary but it is hard to tell if it is running under emulation. This proved superb, if you want a single application to demonstrate the quality of the screen combined with the data provided by a decent network connection this is it. I was completely hooked and spend the next few hours simply playing with this.
Overall the machine feels superb in terms of hardware construction, after 5 hours it was barely warmer than a standard flat screen monitor and the fan(s) are very quiet, hard to hear in normal usage. The OS feels fast and responsive and I like the new Mighty Mouse. However, the OS also feels like a work in progress, it feels sparse compared to my previous G4 Mac with Tiger and a number of tools and utilities simply aren't there yet.
However, I feel I made the right choice, after just 5 hours I am hooked in a way I didn't expect to be working with computers day in day out. The machine has a real "WOW" factor as you put it through its paces and I have yet to find an app (Office, Mail, Web etc.) which feels less snappy than its Windows equivelent.
Re:A quick review of my own. (Score:2)
Tabs aren't enabled in Safari by default, you need to go into preferences and switch them on. No, I have no idea why they don't just switch them on and have done with it.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:A quick review of my own. (Score:2)
Re:A quick review of my own. (Score:2)
How to find out if apps are Universal or not... (Score:2)
Do a "Get Info" on the application by either:
-Ctrl-clicking on its icon and selecting "Get Info" from the context menu.
-Clicking on it once to select it and then doing Command-I on the keyboard or File -> Get Info in the menu bar.
If the application is a Universal Binary, it will say "Application (Universal)" in the "Kind" field in th
Re:Well... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well... (Score:2, Insightful)
But still, the amount of time it takes for to pop up has little to do with an increase in processor power. If you want to give comparisons like that to lay-persons, thats fine. Its just that this one in particular doesn't prove anything one way or the other, and the fact that he even cites it proves his lack of any real technical prowess (therefore killing any authority he has in the first place).
A False Argument (Score:5, Insightful)
The comment would be legitiately "Insightful" if Pogue were using web pages as a measure of processor power. However for those who bother to read the article will discover, he doesn't. In fact engagebot [slashdot.org]'s argument is a straw man.
Pogue writes [nytimes.com]:Pogue is clearly describing how fast the new Intel-Macs feel doing things the the old Power-Macs do, but with the new Intel-based universal applications. No reference to the CPU here, none to megafoofoos-per-second, bajillions-of-fakestones, or other like esoterica. Not even the Intel processor makes these faster. Just that this new Intel Mac boots fast and runs these Intel-compiled apps just as well or better then the older Macs.
In case anyone was too obtuse to clearly understand this the next paragraph makes this absolutely clear by spelling it out:
Pogue writes [nytimes.com]:"Speed". Not CPU speed, just speed. Indeed later in the article he takes care to point out all of the places where things run slower, and why, and how some won't run at all.
So, the only one "therefore killing any authority he has in the first place" is engagebot [slashdot.org] for setting up a completely false argument then using it to grind his own axe. And whoever so carelessly moderated his posting as "Insightful".
Re:A False Argument (Score:2)
Re:A False Argument (Score:3, Insightful)
How complicated an article is it to understand? Do you see anywhere references to CPU speed? No, it's all "How does the new Mac feel running different types of applications".
It's not a Tom's Hardware chip-head review, it's a general audience article on Apple's transition to the new platform and how successful it is; it's marveling that the horse sings at all.
Indeed, I think the /. crowd at least would understand that Apple's big
Re:A False Argument (Score:2)
You of course mean from Intel's boot process, Intel's faster bus, and Intel's bridge chips. Pogue does phrase that correctly, the computer is Intel-based (aka, a 'IBM PC-AT' or 'industry standard' architecture computer), not just Intel CPU-based. Which is a damning indictment of the end stat
Re:A False Argument (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, on /. mis-use phrases that have specific meanings, no matter how erudite they sound.
I owned an IBM PC-AT [wikipedia.org]. It replaced my IBM-XT [wikipedia.org] (mine was the 498th manufactured). The "T" stood for "Advanced Technology", which to IBM meant a '286 CPU, to everyone else it meant a '286 and a copy of the IBM bus & daughterboard layout. However the cloners wanted to stop referring to IBM when selling their IBM knock-offs (or in C
Re:A False Argument (Score:2)
The iMac does have an internal ISA (err, "LPC") bus hidden deep inside, and except for the missing BIOS, is certainly 100% IBM-compatible. It's politically incorrect, but true.
Re:A False Argument (Score:2)
Forgive him (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Well... (Score:5, Interesting)
David Pogue does have one big saving grace though: when he's wrong/muddled about something, he seems to have no problem admitting it his next column (after being informed of the problem by 23,347 email messages from slashdot readers
I think this sets a great example, and is indeed even educational for the average reader. It's certainly a refreshing change from typical tech-journal pundits (who will never admit error or change their position, despite being off in bizarro-land about 75% of the time).
Re:Well... (Score:2, Informative)
-Kurt
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Re:Hi, My name is David Pogue (Score:5, Informative)
In the existing x86 world, all 32-bit stuff is still stuck on the old legacy BIOS system, whereas all the 64-bit stuff has moved on to EFI (Extensible Firmware Interface). 64-bit versions of Windows will boot out of EFI just fine, but the 32-bit versions only support BIOS. Since the dual-core is a 32-bit CPU...
David Pogue's stuff is pretty hit and miss (I agree that he should be shot for 'Intellese'), but he's right inasmuch as someone probably
Re:Hi, My name is David Pogue (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hi, My name is David Pogue (Score:2, Funny)
Which speaks to his technical knowledge (FSVO technical knowlege) but not necessarily to any personal bias he may have towards Apple.
Re:Advertisement (Score:1)
Re:Advertisement (Score:1)
Like IntelliSense, IntelliMouse, or whatever else they have. 'Intelli-' as a prefix has already been decidedly Microsoft for a while.
intelli-prefix (Score:1)
http://www.intellivisionlives.com/bluesky/games/cr edits/colecoint.shtml [intellivisionlives.com]
Anyone remember the controllers!!!!
Re:intelli-prefix (Score:2)
you're getting it confused with Coleco's Colecovision, a separate console with better graphics but worse games (a few nice games, but lots of bad ones). I owned both (er, mom owned both)... and an Atari 2600 and Apple ][ in that era.
Re:Advertisement (Score:2)
Or perhaps the "i" of iMac stood for Intel all along?
Re:Moronic moderators (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Moronic moderators (Score:2)
Re:My name is Raven... (Score:2)