Macintosh
  Nav Menu
Site Search

Find any page
SiteMap

Feedback
[email protected]

 Info on the best personal computer available.
 Detailing a history of Macintosh greatness and advocacy.
 Free advice on Mac hardware and software.
 A wide variety of URLs for the Mac link connoisseur.

  

 Previous
2001
July–December
Next 

 

 December 23, 2001

 
I got my first hands-on with Microsoft's Windows XP yesterday, and I'm happy to say that I think it's just more Windows crap. It's got the same kludgy Start menu at the bottom and still violates any number of design principles. In many ways XP feels like somebody's applied a nice paint job to Windows 95. I fiddled with a number of built-in control panels and such and wasn't very impressed.

And here I was worried that Microsoft might actually churn out an OS that was half-way decent. Silly me.

XP purports to be more stable than 95, 98, and Me, but that's hardly a difficult achievement. Those systems are widely regarded as utterly horrid from a stability perspective, and even Microsoft would be hard-pressed to do worse. XP didn't crash in the short time I used it, but that's not saying anything.

One spot where I think XP does very well is speed. It is a very snappy OS (when running on the latest hardware), and Apple would be well-advised to get a similar level of performance out of MacOS X before too long. In most ways—particularly the fit and finish—there is no comparision between the two: MacOS X is a significantly better operating system in everything I've tried except for speed, where XP wins hands-down. I'm betting this gap will narrow as Apple fine-tunes their OS.

Unfortunately, Microsoft continues their long-standing tradition of really not giving a damn about operating system security. Already a "serious vulnerability" (to use Microsoft's term) has been exposed in XP. This flaw potentially allows a malicious hacker to take complete control of a user's computer over the Internet. There hasn't been much note of it, but Windows 98 and Me systems may also be impacted if certain features have been enabled. Minimally, we're talking about 3 million Windows XP systems, and Microsoft isn't even willing to send out an email (at the behest of the FBI) to alert consumers.

Instead Microsoft has issued a free patch for download, but the FBI has termed this inadequate and has urged consumers and corporations to just disable XP's "universal plug-and-play" features entirely. Microsoft is opposed to this as it significantly reduces the usability of XP with a variety of high tech gizmos. Read the full story here, and see if you don't agree with me that these Microsoft guys are boneheads or evil-hearted or both.

In contrast to XP's problems, Apple MacOS X has been a notable example of how to do things right from a security perspective. That is to say, that all features which might enable security vulnerability have been turned off. It is possible to turn them on if a user feels comfortable with that, but by default the OS has things locked down. Microsoft really ought to get a clue, but until the government decides to regulate this sort of thing (and they should), consumers will continue getting hosed by those in Redmond.

* * * * *

Two things worth noting about Mac OS X: First, Apple is now the world-leader in providing UNIX operating systems. Second, Linux is dead as a desktop operating system and maybe, ultimately, as a server OS as well. MacOS X achieves the pretty graphical user interface that Linux never managed (last market share report showed Linux usage at .2 percent), and MacOS X Server continues to make strides. Given the UNIX core, OS X is already among the most stable operating systems on the market. This is why the X is starting to gain momentum as the geek OS of choice.

 

 December 12, 2001

 
Last night's CMUG meeting with Apple User Group Head Honcho Garr Reynolds provided a good overview of MacOS X 10.1. Reynolds did polling throughout the evening. "How many of you have switched to X? If not, why not? What's keeping you from upgrading?" Stuff like that.

The results were interesting. Of the roughly 100 people in attendance, I would guess that about 7 have upgraded to MacOS X. Reynolds second question—and he's taking extensive notes with him back to Cupertino on this one—"Why haven't you upgraded?" received a variety of responses. Most had to do with the lack of native applications. Roughly a dozen people are waiting for a native version of Adobe Photoshop, for example.

But the most interesting question and answer was this: "How many of you are planning to buy a Mac in the next 12 months and just move to MacOS X then?" The response was overwhelming. Probably 50-60 percent raised their hands, effectively saying, "Yep, that's how it will be for me." (I am among those.) If this informal straw poll is both accurate and representative, Apple will sell a lot of computers in the coming year and their worries about delivering a bulk of OS X-using customers to software developers will be solved.

In terms of X itself, the presentations was saw didn't deliver much new information. I will confess that I am moving much closer to installing X on Trinity, but that's at least in part because I have clients who will be wanting to upgrade within the next year, and obviously I need to get a handle on X and how it works before they do. The presentation highlighted some of the neat features, but given how many Classic applications I'd be forced to run, I'm not sure that an X upgrade makes sense for me from a usability perspective. Still, I definitely have to stay ahead of the curve on the MacOS, so I wouldn't be surprised if I did the deed within the next week or two. Or maybe I'll just wait for MacWorld SF 2002 and see what happens there.

 

 November 27, 2001

 
Yet another PC email virus is making the rounds. This one, BadTrans B, again only runs on PCs. Macs are, as usual, untouched.

* * * * *

Though I've written the goverment about it, I've not formally weighed in here on the proposed Justice Department v. Microsoft settlement. It will come as no suprise I'm sure that I think it's a thoroughly worthless agreement. The Bush Justice Department has punted, and, if approved, Microsoft will walk away having committed numerous blatantly illegal acts and having received no punishment. In essence, the agreement calls for Microsoft to not do (again) what they've already done, but it also leaves so many loopholes that Microsoft will be free to do whatever they want. It's a sham.

This was a politically motivated agreement, and my understanding is that the Bush White House politicos engineered the deal. Monopolies are bad for consumers, they're bad for industry, and they're bad for America.

My proposed solution: Fine Microsoft $30 billion, open source Internet Explorer and parts of Windows XP, and prohibit them from future monopolistic behavior—and tack on massives fines if they do wrong again. Trust me, this would solve the problem.

 

 November 26, 2001

 
Over the extended holiday weekend I picked up StarCraft, a Blizzard Entertainment title that was game of the year in 1997-98. I've not played it, but my understanding is that it's sort of like WarCraft II in space. Most notably, this StarCraft Battle Chest that I purchased included, StarCraft, the expansion StarCraft: Brood Wars, and two strategy guides—all for $8 at Best Buy.

 

 November 15, 2001

 
I installed Tales of the Sword Coast (TOSC), the Baldur's Gate expansion, and finished up the original Baldur's Gate game in short order. It was not nearly as challenging an endgame as I anticipated, but I do confess that by the time my party rolled around for a final battle sequence we were pretty much loaded for bear.

For continuity's sake, the Tales expansion takes place prior to the final battle sequence, so if you've finished the Baldur's Gate, well, you get to pretend that final battle never happened. Indeed, my understanding is that after you complete the Tales stuff, you can attempt the final battle against—only this time your opponents are much tougher.

So far I'm enjoying the new TOSC environment. There are a lot of little fixes here and there plus a bunch of new spells and monsters, but most importantly the experience point cap is raised to 161,000. New levels for everybody!

I bought Tales from Amazon.com for $19.95. That's $10 off the original list price.

 

 November 14, 2001

 
Apple released Airport 2.0 software and updated its $299 Airport Base Station. The software upgrade will take any Airport-card equipped Mac and add 128-bit WEP encryption, AOL compatibility, plus some other buzzword-heavy features which are irrelevant for most users. The Base Station adds an extra ethernet port, a built-in firewall, AOL compatibility, and 128-bit WEP encryption. The Base Station also now supports upto 50 simultaneous users.

For me, a guy who already uses Airport regularly (I'm on it now), this is more or less a non-event. After I see how the bugs shake out in the software, I probably will upgrade to 2.0 since it's a free download.

My old Base Station is hooked into an ethernet hub already, so the extra port wouldn't really matter. I run firewall software, so that's covered too (though I concede it's a nice addition). AOL compatibility is similarly a non-issue for me (and, I would be tempted to argue, all right-thinking individuals). The 128-bit WEP encryption sounds like an impressive improvement from the previous 40-bit WEP encryption, but WEP's been hacked as a scheme, so frankly you're not truly secure no matter how high the bit-rate of your encryption key. (Airport is based on the 802.11b wireless standard and that standard specifies WEP encryption so until the standard gets changed Apple's kind of stuck here. Nonetheless, for home users like myself this really isn't a big deal.) Finally, the bump up to the 50 user limit is so far beyond the capacity at which I will ever run my Base Station that it, too, is unimportant to me.

So, the bottom line is that Apple's made some good improvements to their Airport wireless networking system. If you're interested in putting your Mac on a wireless network or in creating a wireless network at your office or home, now is a great time to jump in. The technology is useful, fun, relatively affordable, and fairly easy to use.

If you've already got your Airport hardware, the software update is free and likely worthwhile, and the Base Station isn't so much of an improvement that you need to dump your old one. In all, a win for everybody.

 

 November 4, 2001

 
Been playing some Quake III: Arena with Dave and Dennis over the Internet lately, and man does it rock! We played a 3 vs. 5 capture the flag game, and what a great time. There are a lot of bots to make it challenging, but as the Navy would say that's also a target-rich environment. Soon we'll probably scale back the number of bots and up their skill level. On most maps, we're kicking the bots up a tree, and no matter how fun that is initially, it gets old after a while.

I've ordered Tales of the Sword Coast (TOSC), the expansion pack to Baldur's Gate. The price finally dropped from $29.95 to $19.95 at Amazon.com so I signed up myself right up. In Baldur's Gate I've hit the 89,000 experience point cap, so I effectively abandoned the game before finishing. TOSC will up the cap to something like 161,000—enough that I can finish the game with my characters getting all the skill levels they deserve. TOSC also adds four new areas of adventure. I consider Baldur's Gate the best single player game I've ever played.

 

 October 25, 2001

 
So Apple introduces the iPod, probably the coolest MP3 player on the planet. The verbage from the PR department goes like this: 1,000 songs on a device that's the size of a pack of cards. It plays MP3s, AIFFs, and WAVs, and will auto-sync with Apple's free iTunes 2 software. It's got 20 minute skip protection. And since it's a 5 GB ulta-portable hard drive, why not use it that way? In addition to music, you can also store regular Mac files on it. It connects via FireWire, so you can put 1,000 songs on the iPod in about 10 minutes. By contrast, most other MP3 players use USB (described as "slow as a slug on Valium") and would take about 5 hours to transfer a comparable number of songs. It also has the best, easiest-to-use interface of any MP3 player on the market. Even the non-techno-saavy can make this thing rock.

So what's not to like? Well, the $399 price tag is a little high. If this were the perfect beast, I could stomach that, but I think the mass market would much prefer something in the sub-$250 range. I could be wrong about that, and I hope I am. I'd love for Apple to sell a zillion of these for Christmas.

The deal killer for me, though, is the hard drive size. I need more than 5 GB of MP3 storage. I've got an MP3 collection of 3.5 GB, and that doesn't represent even half of the music I own. I've got a whole lot more rippin' and burnin' to do. Five GB will not get it done for me, and I suspect the same is true for a lot of music-loving Mac-heads.

So I'll be waiting for iPod version 2.0 where hopefully the hard drive size is larger and the price smaller. I'll see if I can get my hands on one once they start shipping in November. I'll let you know if playing with it changes my mind.

 

 October 18, 2001

 
Apple announced quarterly profits of $66 million (18 cents a share) + $1 million of investment income on revenue of $1.45 billion. Year-to-year gross margins increased to 30.1% from 25% thanks to lower component costs. Apple shipped 850,000 Macs in the quarter, including some 251,000 iBooks. Every retail store is profitable, but overhead expenses of rolling out the stores are expected to result in a small retail loss for the year. Apple retains $4.3 billion in cash and short-term securities.

Outlook for the next quarter is guarded given the economic uncertain surrounding the Christmas holiday shopping season. Initial guidance from Apple is to expect 10 cents a share on revenue of $1.4 billion.

Apple will introduce a new digital music device on October 23 which "isn't a Mac," according to the release received by journalists. Speculation is that it is a device which combines Apple's MP3 player iTunes with QuickTime away from the Mac, but which can sync to the computer to be updated. Perhaps it's a stereo component of some kind? Being Apple first non-Mac hardware foray in some time, this should be interesting. Personally, I'm hoping it will use Airport.

Apple has also revised the PowerBook and iBook lines in time for the holidays. The PowerBook G4 Titanium specs:

  1. 550- or 667-MHz G4
  2. 100- or 133-MHz system bus
  3. 20-, 30-, or 40-GB hard drive
  4. DVD-ROM or CD-RW drive
  5. ATI Mobility Radeon video card with 16 MB RAM
  6. 10/100/1000-BaseT ethernet
  7. Priced at $2,199; $2,999; and $3,299 depending on configuration.

A very good revision of the PowerBook line. The processor increases are substantive (up from 400- and 500-MHz), the extra hard drive space welcome (up from 10- and 20-GB), and the CD-RW drive option important. The new video card is much faster than the old one, and gigabit ethernet—a first for a portable—creates a "must-buy" scenario for some users. Pricing remains good. If there is a downside, it is only that Apple was unable to fit either a SuperDrive (a CD- and DVD-RW) or a Combo Drive (DVD-ROM/CD-RW) into the Titanium's 1" thickness. Long-term, that's a problem.

Apple provided a similar though not as dramatic revision to its iBook line:

  1. 500- or 600-MHz G3 (formerly only 500-MHz)
  2. 66- or 100-MHz system bus (formerly only 66-MHz)
  3. 15-, 20-, or 30-GB hard drive (up from 10 GB)
  4. 128 MB RAM now standard (an increase from 64 MB on low-end models)
  5. Slight price reductions to $1,299; $1,499; $1,599; and $1,699.

This is a nice revision of the iBook line, but not nearly as substantive because, frankly, Apple's already selling these things as fast as it can make them. I've been "hands-on" with them a couple times (most recently for a couple hours yesterday, in fact), and I have no qualms in saying these are amongst the finest portables Apple's ever turned out.

 

 October 12, 2001

 
The rumor mill is rife with reports that Apple will be speed-bumping the PowerBook and iBook lines within the next two weeks. Anyone considering a purchase of either of these types of machines should probably hold off until then.

Those looking for a desktop machine might want to explore the $799 iMac, pretty much the best bargain Apple's ever offered. If you're an education customer, it's even better at $749. Here's the specs: 500-MHz G3, 64 MB RAM, 20 GB HD, 24x CD-ROM, 10/100 Base-T Ethernet, 56k modem, 2 USB, 2 FireWire, VGA video mirroring, Harman Kardon speakers, Pro keyboard and mouse, AirPort-ready, Mac OS 9 and X. Order from the Apple Store and you also get free shipping.

Now it's obvious that 64 MB RAM is insufficient, but RAM is cheap nowadays. Data Memory Systems has 256 MB of iMac RAM for $26.75. This is much cheaper than buying RAM through the Apple Store. Indeed, if a person is willing to install the RAM himself, he can save lots of money buying the least RAM possible from Apple and ordering it from a third-party. (For comparison Apple wants $140 for 256 MB of RAM.)

The only disadvantage I see to the above system is the slot-loading CD-ROM. If a person's got their heart set on a CD-RW or DVD-ROM drive, well, it might be worth the $200 it costs to jump to the $999 iMac. Otherwise, for about $825 you can get one killer machine. (That's $775 for you Ed customers.)

 

 October 10, 2001

 
We've had a couple of weeks now with Apple's MacOS X 10.1 and various clients and friends have been wondering about upgrading. For those currently running 10.04 upgrading is a no-brainer. Version 10.1 signficantly outshines 10.04 in all respects. Plus it's a free upgrade for 10.04 owners until the end of October. (After that point, it'll likely be $20 for the CD.)

For users of MacOS 9.x or earlier, I am still advising a wait-and-see approach. Though the X operating system is now plenty usable, there are very few native software packages available. Before upgrading, a person would be well-advised to make a checklist of frequently used software and wait until the majority of it is MacOS X-native. (Most non-native Mac software will still run, it just won't have any of the special features of X, and it's something of a hassle to use it.)

Personally, I run so many different applications that I need to wait longer. Of all the software I have, only Quicken and StuffIt Deluxe are X-native. Most of the scuttlebutt has developers scurrying madly to finish porting their products to X, so I've hopeful that by MacWorld SF 2002 in January, not only will the work be done, but Apple may have also released MacOS X 10.2. That will probably be the point at which I jump on-board.

Another reason to wait, as has long been the case, is that new operating system upgrades can be flawed. Most recently MacOS 9.2.1 was delivered, and the rumor mill on the net is that it causes disk corruption from using the Sleep command. This is unconfirmed last I read, but it serves as a good reminder: Take your time with operating system upgrades if you can!

 

 September 25, 2001

 
Apple releases MacOS X 10.1 at Seybold SF. It features (among other things):

  1. Faster system performance (thank God).
    1. Most applications launch 2-3 times faster than 10.04
    2. OpenGL is 20 percent faster.
    3. Finder windows and menus much more responsive
  2. Improved Networking
    1. New Airport Admin Utility included
    2. Greatly enhanced AppleTalk and Windows connectivity
  3. Enhanced AppleScript system-wide
  4. DVD player/CD burning in the Finder,
  5. Aqua interface enhancements
  6. Improved graphics and printing, including 200 PostScript printer descriptions

See Apple's MacOS X 10.1 page for more details.

 

 September 14, 2001

 
I had the opportunity last week to do an extended hands-on with MacOS X 10.04, and I have a brief report. The test machines were the new QuickSilver G4 towers 733-Mhz and 867-Mhz. I am sorry to say that while nice, bright, and shiny, MacOS is dog slow even on these superfast G4 machines. I would absolutely hate to run it on my 500-Mhz G3 Pismo. Word from beta testers of MacOS X 10.1 is that it significantly improves performance, and I should hope so. In it's present form, I do not consider MacOS X usable for productivity applications. Tellingly, I don't consider any version of Windows usable either, but that's another issue.

Other than performance, X is full of very interesting eye-candy. Coupled with it's advanced features like protected memory, I continue to have high hopes that X will ultimately fulfill its promise as a truly great operating system. MacOS X 10.1 should be available in late September.

 August 31, 2001

 
Okay, I've updated everything in the Mac section except the old archives which are likely to stay old. The MacFAQ has some updated answers to older questions. If anyone wants to send in a new question or two, I'm happy to take a shot at them. The Mac Links section is substantially updated with all the broken links removed and a bunch of neat new nifty ones added. There are some great Mac sites out there.

I've been playing a bit of Evo 4 x 4 in the last few days, and as racing games go, it's pretty good. Off-road steering and braking take some getting used to, but probably not any more than Carmageddon did. The choice of trucks and SUVs is wide, and the ability to customize these vehicles really sets this game apart.

The tracks—of which there are a number—are well designed and interesting. I've only raced two or three, but it's a good time. The bot racers are fairly decent, too.

What I'm really looking forward to, though, is doing some LAN- or Internet-based racing. I think this game the potential to at least as fun as Carmageddon, and to do so with all the killing and swearing (which remain my big objections to that game).

For anyone who's interested, Mac-O-Rama has Evo 4x4 on sale right now for $20.

 August 28, 2001

 
One of the games I play every so often is to go to the Apple Store and configure the next Mac system I'd buy if I were purchasing today. Since I'm pretty drawn to price/performance, this has typically meant either a super cheap system or something in the high mid-range (roughly $3000). My latest trip aimed along the lines of G4 tower system yielded good news/bad news in this regard.

The good news is that if you're an education customer you can pick up a G4/533 for $1148. Sure, you might want to add some RAM (I always recommend third-party RAM, btw, because Apple charges a fortune) or a bigger hard drive or what have you, but I probably don't need to tell you that this is a steal of a price. Fantastic doesn't begin to describe it.

The bad news is that even with educational discount the "power" machine I'd be looking at on the upper end would be the G4/800 MP. That's about $3300 before tweaking or monitor, which for me means somewhere in the mid-$4000s. That's none too good from a value perspective. Given that historically I've been able to have my "dream" machine in the high $2000s, this ain't all that great.

I'm hoping that in its next G4 tower revision Apple adds a lower-priced MP (multiprocessor) system, because if a G4/700 MP system were available for a thousand less, I'd happily jump onboard that bandwagon.

 August 26, 2001

 
Early reports on MacOS 9.2.1 seem to indicate a fair number of problems, so I thought I'd put up my standard operating system upgrade disclaimer: Don't friggin' do it! (Hehe.) Unless there's some absolutely essential item that you need immediately involved in an upgrade, patience is the order of the day. Let other people be your beta testers.

A few days ago, I mentioned upgrading to MacOS X in September. Upon further reflection this is just plain wrong. MacOS X 10.1 comes out in September; I won't be upgrading until October at the earliest. I'm giving others at least a month to troubleshoot the whole thing for me. As noted above, I'd advise you do the same.

In fact, I should probably make it clear that there's a good chance that I won't be upgrading to X even after 10.1 is out. I have a raft of applications that I use daily, and until the majority of those are Carbonized, I'm not sure that it's a worthwhile venture even if Apple fixes X up nice and shiny.

 August 21, 2001

 
Apple released MacOS 9.2.1 today. It's designed for MacOS X-compatible machines only and adds no new features. It's a bug-fix to 9.x mainly, though I understand it improves Classic performace under X pretty dramatically too.

It's also an 80 MB download, so I plan to wait until September (when I'm looking to switch to X) and get it as part of the X CD package.

 August 12, 2001

 
It's been over a month of on and off playing, but I've finally made it into Baldur's Gate (CD #5). Every character in my party is nearly topped out in experience points, so soon I'll need to order the Tales of the Sword Coast expansion CD. Baldur's Gate has been perhaps the best single-player game I've played. Certainly it wins in terms of hours of my time it's taken!

Now that I'm nearing the end, here's some tips for aspiring adventurers:

  1. Have a balanced party. You need a thief, a magic-user, a cleric, and at least a couple of fighters. My party consists of a magic user, a thief, a fighter/druid, a paladin, a ranger, and a fighter.
  2. Pause like mad during combat. Attack, pause, re-jigger your attacks, unpause, repeat process.
  3. Use range weapons (bow & arrow, Magic Missle, etc.) first in combat before engaging in close quarters melee.
  4. Having poison neutralization ability handy (antidote, spells, scrolls), especially if you're going to Cloakwood. By the way, if your antidote potion isn't held in a quick item slot, you'll die rummaging through your pack trying to find it.
  5. Take out opposing magic users first. You can heal your characters in the midst of battle, but if one of your party gets hit with a Dire Charm and you can't break the magic, you're hosed.
  6. Don't be afraid to drink potions or use scrolls. You'll acquire more of them than you can carry anyway. (In the case scrolls, though, attempt to write the magic into your mage book if the option is available instead of just casting the spell.)

 July 20, 2001

 
For those of you who, like me, use AOL's AIM for their instant messenger, you may want to check out AIMgadget. AIMgadget is a free utility which lets you easily review the AIM chat logs you have stored on your hard drive (assuming you have chat logs turned on in preferences). Sure, you can use a text editor to do the same stuff, but AIMgadget makes it more convenient. As a bonus, Aimgadget also will give you stats on how many buddies you've chatted with, how much space the logs are taking on your hard drive (2.1 MB for me), and so on. Neato.

 July 18, 2001—MacWorld NY

 
Apple CEO Steve Jobs had a variety of announcements including and demos:

  • According to World Wide Developer Conference surveys (2 months ago) 55% of Mac developers will have products on MacOS X within 6 months. We should see a lot of applications in the new 4 months.
  • Steve allowed various companies to come on stage and demo their MacOS X-based products:
    • Microsoft Mac Office 10 (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, etc.)
    • Adobe InDesign & Adobe Illustrator & Adobe GoLive
    • Quark Xpress
    • FileMaker Pro (already available) / FileMaker Pro Server (coming soon)
    • Connectix Virtual PC (running Win95, 98, 2000, NT—limited only by RAM and hard drive space)
    • IBM ViaVoice (the demo of which was very impressive!)
    • WorldBook 2002 Encylopedia ($59.95 and available now)
    • Blizzard's WarCraft III
    • Aspyr's Tony Hawk Pro Skater 2
    • AliasWaveFront Maya (which is incredible but also $8k)
  • Apple announced MacOS X 10.1 available in September. It's a free upgrade for current MacOS X owners. This will likely be the right time for many users to seriously consider upgrading to MacOS X. It features:
    • Faster everything: Performance, performance, performance!
    • Moveable dock
    • Configurable System menus
    • More personalization
    • iTunes bundled
    • DVD playback
    • CD burning in Finder
    • Better support for digital cameras
    • Supporting 200 Postscript printers
    • Improved Windows/Mac networking
    • WebDAV support built-in (including iDisk)
    • Ability to manage Airport BaseStations
  • Apple introduced three new iMac models. Importantly, after lots of speculation, these are CRT-based machines. That's the same old form factor, not the LCD display machines that many (including me) thought were coming. These are the best iMacs Apple's ever shipped, but dampened expectations may prove difficult to overcome. In summary, the machines are faster, have more RAM and more hard drive space. Worth noting that educational pricing saves about $100 off each of these models. The new iMac specifics:
    • 500-MHz G3 / $999 <-- Best value, and has FireWire and CD-RW
      128 MB RAM
      20 GB
      CD-RW Drive
      Rage 128 Ultra (16 MB RAM) video card
      10/100 Base-T ethernet
      56k fax modem
      15" CRT display
      2 USB / 2 FireWire
    • 600 MHz G3 / $1299
      256 MB RAM
      40 GB HD
      CD-RW
      Rage 128 Ultra (16 MB RAM) video card
      10/100 Base-T ethernet
      56k fax modem
      15" CRT display
      2 USB / 2 FireWire
    • 700-MHz G3 / $1499
      256 MB RAM
      60 GB HD
      CD-RW
      Rage 128 Ultra (16 MB VRAM) video card
      10/100 Base-T ethernet
      56k fax modem
      15" display
      2 USB / 2 FireWire
    • All systems come with both MacOS 9.1 and MacOS X preinstalled; iTunes, Apple's MP3-playing/CD-burning software; iMovie 2, for editing your own digital movies; AppleWorks 6, Apple's word processor, database, spreadsheet, etc. solution; Palm Desktop, a contact manager; FAXstf, fax modem software; Bugdom, Nanosaur, and Cro-Mag Rally (games); Quicken Deluxe 2001; Netscape Communicator, Microsoft Explorer, and Microsoft Outlook Express. All systems Airport-ready.
  • Apple announced three new PowerMac G4 Towers all in a very attractive "QuickSilver" casing. While they're not as fast as some had hoped, they're pretty speedy. Importantly, we also so the SuperDrive beginning to make its way down the lineup so that it's more available. (The SuperDrive allows users to read/write CDs and DVDs.) The specs on the new G4 Towers:
    • 733-MHz G4 / $1699
      128 MB RAM
      40 GB
      GForce 2
      CD-RW
      Gigabit ethernet
    • 867-MHz G4 / $2499
      128 MB
      2MB L3 cache
      60 GB
      GForce2
      SuperDrive
    • Dual 800 MHz G4 / $3499
      dual 2MB L3 cache -- 12 Gigaflops
      256 MB RAM
      80 GB HD
      Gigabit Ethernet
      Dual video card
      SuperDrive
  • Apple showed off iDVD 2 their state-of-the-art DVD creation software which ships in September.
    • Adds Motion Menus & background sound tracks
    • New built-in themes
    • Support for 90 minute DVDs (up from 60 minutes)
    • Runs in MacOS X
    • Free upgrade for current iDVD customers
  • Intuit announced Quicken Deluxe 2002 for Mac. It will begin shipping next month, and it'll run on Mac OS 9.x or X. I'll have more to say about this in a few days.

In summary, I'd call this a mixed MacWorld for Apple. Although they're the best iMacs Apple's ever made, the new iMac line is the same old form factor, and I'd say that just about everybody who wants one has one by now. They continue to be great machines, but they're rightly considered long in the tooth. At the same time, the new G4 Towers might not be quite as fast as I'd like, but they're pretty dang speedy just the same. Heck the formerly top-of-the-line 733-MHz is now the slowest thing in the line-up, and the Dual 800 with SuperDrive, well, that's awesome. And of course the really super news is that MacOS X 10.1 will be coming in September. I fully expect that this will be the release that allows me (and most people) to use X with confidence, and I couldn't be more thrilled.

Not a revolutionary MacWorld, but a very solid step forward.

 July 17, 2001

 
Apple announced a $61 million profit for the quarter. That's .17 a share, 2 cents above expectations. Revenue was $1.475 billion. While both numbers are down from a year ago, they're still impressive given the economic climate and gross margins remained strong at 29.4 percent. Apple shipped 827,000 Macs during the quarter including 182,000 iBooks which remain in very strong demand. (That's also more notebooks than Apple's ever shipped in any quarter)

Apple will have 25 Apple Stores open around the US by the end of the year. They have $4.2 billion in cash and short-term holdings.

 July 10, 2001

 
MacWorld NY is only a week away, so I thought I'd offer up some predictions of what we'll see:

  • New LCD-screen iMacs. It's pretty much a no-brainer since Apple's stopped making CRT monitors that they'll be moving their iMac line to LCDs. I would expect speed bumps as well. I don't know about pricing, but I hope they manage to keep at least one iMac at the $700-$800 range. [Note to self: Next time you call something a "no-brainer," make sure it really is.—7/18/01]
  • Speed bumped G4 Towers with a new enclosure. This could also come during Seybold (in September), but I'm really hoping that we see them at MacWorld.
  • Mac OS 9.2. Code-named "Moonlight," MacOS 9.2 will be a bug-fix release that improves compatibility with MacOS X.
  • Maybe a speed bump revision to the G4 Titanium PowerBooks.

I'm sure everybody's heard by now that Apple killed the G4 Cube. Stylish computer but I never did figure out what the market for the machine was supposed to be. I'm hopeful that Apple is able to make use of the Cube engineering work in some other product because there really was a lot to like about it.

I'm still going on Baldur's Gate, though I've not hit CD #5 yet. This is one seriously large game. The best advice I can give is: Always pause during combat, assign appropriate targets, re-pause and re-assign as necessary. You will either learn to do this or die very quickly. I know this from experience. Hehe.

 

 

Unless otherwise noted this web site and its content, including all graphics, text, audio, and video, are
© 1997–2001 by Ty Davison. All rights reserved.