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Apple

Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More 355

Many outlets are reporting on Apple's iPad event today. Highlights include:
  • Apple pay will launch Monday.
  • WatchKit -- a way for developers to make apps for the Apple Watch will launch next month.
  • iOS 8.1
  • Messages, iTunes, and iWork updated and many more new features in OS X Yosemite.
  • You can send and receive calls on your Mac if you have an iPhone with iOS 8 that's signed into the same FaceTime account.
  • iPad Air 2: New camera, 10 hour battery life, 12x faster than the original iPad.
  • iPad mini 3.
  • iMac with Retina display.
  • And a Mac mini update: Faster processors, Intel Iris graphics, and two Thunderbolt 2 ports.
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Apple Announces iPad Air 2, iPad mini 3, OS X Yosemite and More

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  • Maybe a Mini (Score:4, Interesting)

    by kannibal_klown ( 531544 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @01:28PM (#48161419)

    I've been thinking about giving the OSX another try... I've been messing around with it at work.

    The mini wouldn't be a bad way to go... it's not that expensive and I can still use my 27" monitor.

    The iMac Retina... no. Besides not wanting to spend that much now, I'd hold off on a first generation rig like that.

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      I've been thinking about giving the OSX another try... I've been messing around with it at work.

      The mini wouldn't be a bad way to go... it's not that expensive and I can still use my 27" monitor.

      Aside from the Mac Pro, the Mini was the only Mac that you could easily change the hard drive and memory yourself. I just had a quick look at the specs of the new mini and I can't tell if you can still do that.

      I'm worried that the mini may go the way of the iMacs and head into being a totally sealed/pre-configured device and have no user changeable parts.

      • by sribe ( 304414 )

        Aside from the Mac Pro, the Mini was the only Mac that you could easily change the hard drive and memory yourself. I just had a quick look at the specs of the new mini and I can't tell if you can still do that.

        Memory, yes. But changing the hard disk was not a task for ordinary mortals. (Been there, done that.)

        What concerns me is the lack of any mention of dual-drive configurations. If I can't mirror the boot drive, then it just became much less useful as a small server.

        • Re:Maybe a Mini (Score:4, Interesting)

          by NatasRevol ( 731260 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @02:02PM (#48161777) Journal

          6 screws & a paint scraper. Follow the step by step. Isn't very hard.

          • by rgbscan ( 321794 )

            Didn't even need the paint scraper if you had a kitchen spatula :-)

            I even did the dual deck CD to SSD upgrade with the special tray on my '09 mini.

            • by spoot ( 104183 )

              The newer unibody models don't need a paint scraper/spatula. The chassis slides out. There is a "special" apple tool for service providers to slide it out, but it can be done by mere mortals. And there is a second hard drive kit available.

              https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/I... [ifixit.com]

        • Well, depending on your application (and I'm assuming here it's not too demanding if you're using a mini as a server), you could always stick an external HDD and schedule Carbon Copy Cloner to dupe the boot drive over every now and then and the data portion rather more often. That'll give you a bootable volume in case of primary failure. It's not a raid 1 but for home or small office purposes it would probably do the trick just fine.
        • by LDAPMAN ( 930041 )

          It has Thunderbolt. Attach as many drives as you like.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        I'm worried that the mini may go the way of the iMacs and head into being a totally sealed/pre-configured device and have no user changeable parts.

        The mini started out that way, though now the unibody ones have a huge rubber root that can be twisted to remove it and exposing the RAM and innards. RAM swap is easy. hard drive swap requires a bit of work but the /. crowd should have the requisite skill to do it (

        About the most "proprietary" part is the PCIe SSD, but it has a SATA port too for regular spinny ha

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by macs4all ( 973270 )

        I'm worried that the mini may go the way of the iMacs and head into being a totally sealed/pre-configured device and have no user changeable parts.

        What? The iMac is anything but sealed.

        True, you aren't going to find a dozen choices for a replacement mobo on the shelf at Fry's (anymore than you would for, say a Dell or HP AllInOne); but there are at least some commodity, replaceable parts in an iMac.

        And as far as accessibility for repair being a bit tedious, again, I refer to other AIO designs. I would hazard a guess that changing a bad Power Supply in ANY AIO would be a painful experience. But it can be done.

        So, "no user changeable parts" is sim

    • The mini wouldn't be a bad way to go... it's not that expensive and I can still use my 27" monitor.

      Was thinking the same. The good specs and lower price make the new Mini quite attractive desktop.

    • I look forward being able to buy a used new mini for running linux :p

    • They've been selling Retina displays for a couple years, slapping it on the iMac isn't rocket science. I do think it's an unnecessary feature that will jack the price, but the iMac went from being the cheap mac to the not insanely expensive Mac some time ago, so meh.
      • Because this is their first REALLY BIG Retina display? Apple's first attempt at something unique often has issues, hence the mantra of "avoid any Revision A Apple product."

        Recall the various screen issues and defects they had 1-2 years ago with smaller Retina displays? Recall a bunch of issues they had with the 27" iMac (non-Retina) redesigned screen? Things looking blotchy, bad glue jobs, etc. Apple had done retina a bunch before those issues, and 27" Macs a lot too. But a large enough redesign and al

  • by Kethinov ( 636034 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @01:30PM (#48161435) Homepage Journal

    For those of you who are a fan of customizing the colors of message bubbles in Messages.app and don't like that Apple removed this ability as part of the iOSification of Yosemite, there's an app for that: https://github.com/kethinov/Bu... [github.com]

    I made this during the developer previews because I don't like the default puke green for most of my IM conversations. Hope this helps some people. Source code also available.

  • iMac looks cool (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 16, 2014 @01:42PM (#48161553)

    About time desktops caught up with better screen resolutions after the whole 1080p marketing hype ruined everything.

    I just hope it doesn't have the stupid ghosting problem.

  • I don't know if I'm the only one and to be honest the way I use OS X doesn't make this such a big deal, but at 5K unless they do automatic font scaling. I'm going to need to be able to divide my monitor up in to virtual monitors. That way I can resize zones where if I click the magnify/maximize button it doesn't waste the entire real estate of my monitor. I really enjoy the snap feature in windows 7 enough I use a program called sizeup on OSX to emulate it, but once I start buying 27 and 30" monitors I rea

    • by Bogtha ( 906264 )

      All they've done is double the PPI of the existing displays exactly. This is going to be like the transition from the iPhone 3GS to the iPhone 4 - everything will have the same physical dimensions, but applications that support retina displays will look sharper.

      I'm sure if you want to use your screen as something that's quadruple the logical size you'll be able to, but this is intended to be a visual quality upgrade, not a real estate upgrade. What you'll get by default will simply be a clearer version

    • This is a great idea. I use a similar app to snap a window to the left/right size. A cool feature would e to snap the window to screen quadrants.

  • by greywire ( 78262 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @02:03PM (#48161791) Homepage

    Still no new macbook pro...

    Thats it, I'm out. I'll just get a Nexus 9 and a keyboard and move to the cloud.

  • Touch ID for $100?? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Mr_Silver ( 213637 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @02:33PM (#48162139)
    If you look at this comparison chart [apple.com] you can see that the iPad Mini 3 is exactly the same as the existing iPad Mini with Retina Display (now called iPad Mini 2) with the exception of two things:
    1. It's got Touch ID
    2. It's $100 more expensive

    I'm not entirely convinced that Touch ID is worth the extra $100. Hopefully the IHS teardown will indicate if there is anything else of value between the two.

    • by starless ( 60879 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @02:48PM (#48162293)

      If you look at this comparison chart [apple.com] you can see that the iPad Mini 3 is exactly the same as the existing iPad Mini with Retina Display (now called iPad Mini 2) with the exception of two things:

      1. It's got Touch ID
      2. It's $100 more expensive

      I'm not entirely convinced that Touch ID is worth the extra $100. Hopefully the IHS teardown will indicate if there is anything else of value between the two.

      If there was anything else worthwhile, wouldn't apple be boasting about it rather than us having to wait for a teardown?
      I am convinced that Touch ID isn't worth $100 to me...

    • If you look at this comparison chart [apple.com] you can see that the iPad Mini 3 is exactly the same as the existing iPad Mini with Retina Display (now called iPad Mini 2) with the exception of two things:

      1. It's got Touch ID
      2. It's $100 more expensive

      Does the Touch ID imply that it also has an NFC chip for ApplePay? (Apparently it does, and the iPad Mini 2 doesn't.) That's an odd thing to leave off the comparison chart.

  • by Gordo_1 ( 256312 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @02:45PM (#48162249)

    Is Apple so embarrassed by their lack of meaningful CPU performance improvements that they feel the need to compare the latest iPad to a 5 year old obsolete brick to impress me? I think that they think I'm stupid.

    • by gnasher719 ( 869701 ) on Thursday October 16, 2014 @04:53PM (#48163481)

      Is Apple so embarrassed by their lack of meaningful CPU performance improvements that they feel the need to compare the latest iPad to a 5 year old obsolete brick to impress me? I think that they think I'm stupid.

      Lack of meaningful improvements? 40% faster than the iPad Air. Which was a lot faster than the iPad 4. And trying out how fast I could make that run, i got 7 GFlops out of an iPad 4 with plain C code.

      If you think that Apple showing the best possible numbers is a sign of "embarrassment" then you absolutely need your head examined.

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