Did anyone notice
the article on Macnn about steve jobs promising something 'revolutionary'?
you think he's referring to the next iMac?
I certainly Hope not, because unless it can be a digital hub,gaming station,graphics station, very very very intuitive deisgn and relativley cheap, its not revolutionary. the iMac WAS pretty revolutionary in its day, but then again it was basically just a remake of the performa or some other all in one, its just that people had forgotten that all in one computers had existed before.
I do hope that what jobs' was refering too is some sort of uber digital appliance, that really is a totally fresh idea and is executed right...etc.
but knowing apple i'm pretty sure it will just be a new iMac.
on another note I hope that the new iMac isn't THAT great because I really want pci expansion but I love the iMac so much that if a new one came out I might be suckered in again
you think he's referring to the next iMac?
I certainly Hope not, because unless it can be a digital hub,gaming station,graphics station, very very very intuitive deisgn and relativley cheap, its not revolutionary. the iMac WAS pretty revolutionary in its day, but then again it was basically just a remake of the performa or some other all in one, its just that people had forgotten that all in one computers had existed before.
I do hope that what jobs' was refering too is some sort of uber digital appliance, that really is a totally fresh idea and is executed right...etc.
but knowing apple i'm pretty sure it will just be a new iMac.
on another note I hope that the new iMac isn't THAT great because I really want pci expansion but I love the iMac so much that if a new one came out I might be suckered in again
Comments
All the Performas I knew of were box and monitor jobs.
<strong>When does something *stop* being revolutionary?</strong><hr></blockquote>
When everyone realizes that it was just hype, and that there wasn't really anything special about it.
Then the Segway most certainly is revolutionary. There are quite a few things genuinely special about it.
In fact, I don't like that definition at all. For something to be revolutionary, all it has to have is something special? In what sense? Are those pens with a little light in the tip revolutionary, just because they are more special than the average pen?
- Pook
It's been going on new for a couple of decades and it will be remmembered as important as impressionist painting and discovering the new world.
The difference with this one is that anyone with a $3000 computer and $40/month internet connection can be a renaissance person. No way my Father could have brushed up on quantum theory at lunch one day, advanced manufacturing technology the next day, and go into the weekend with some world class recipies, all the while listening to music and opinion from every corner of the world.
Now is the good old days!!
anyway, i am inclined to believe that he is NOT talking about the new imac, because he knows everyone has been expecting such a thing since this summer.
does anyone remember if steve (not phil "the shill" schiller, who belongs on info-mercials) called the ipod revolutionary? it would help as a point of reference to figure out how big this is...
I'm sorry, but a revolution comes from a new idea. Something no one has thought of before that changes the world. A flat-panel iMac is not such a change. Nor is a firewire digital camera or a networked PVR.
If it's a true revolution they intend to give us, I sincerely hope we don't have a word for it yet.
-- ShadyG
<strong>The all in one form factor had ended with the Color Classic (and TAM, I suppose) in the consumer market. After that the AIO models were education only.
All the Performas I knew of were box and monitor jobs.</strong><hr></blockquote>
No, there was a Performa model (575 or something like that) that was an all-in-one.
Looked pretty cool, actually.
[Edit] Okay...wow. Just found these at <a href="http://www.everymac.com:" target="_blank">www.everymac.com:</a>
<a href="http://www.everymac.com/systems/by_casetype/allinone.html" target="_blank">http://www.everymac.com/systems/by_casetype/allinone.html</a>
Apparently there were quite a few AIO Performas, although they seemed to share one of 2 or 3 body designs.
Some of those are kinda cool!
[ 12-20-2001: Message edited by: pscates ]</p>
<strong>
Apparently there were quite a few AIO Performas, although they seemed to share one of 2 or 3 body designs.
Some of those are kinda cool!
</strong><hr></blockquote>
I had the AIO G3, I was in college at the time and it was education only. It came out a few months before the iMac. It had a 15 inch screen and 3 PCI slots! I loved that machine. It was heavy as hell though
I sold it and bought a G4.
<strong>When does something *stop* being revolutionary?</strong><hr></blockquote>
When Steve tells us?
<strong>This is what I want it to be.
[/IMG]</strong><hr></blockquote>
However transmogrified into a Newton shape it'll be, it's going to be a Mac, running a MacOS. If it weren't, they would've said so, just like they did last time with the iPod, "Hint, it's not a Mac".
<strong>Am I remembering correctly, or was it the last time Steve Jobs used the word "revolutionary" (perhaps it was "groundbreaking") that he released an mp3 player?</strong><hr></blockquote>
In the invitation to the iPod release, Apple said "groundbreaking" - the press hyped it into something revolutionary before they knew what it was.
as for revolutionary, I believe that the iPod was not revolutionary, but it does have some really ahead of its time features(why aren't all HD based mp3 players firewire?) syncing with iTunes is a really cool feature, cuz then if you know your iTunes playlists it will be that much easier to navigate around in your iPod.
that gyro scooter is kind of revolutionary, but more in the sense that the gyro technology that it stablizes itself with can probably be used in other more practical applications.
I don't think that the next iMac can really be revolutionary, unless it converts over 10 million pc users to mac(thats quite a revolution if you ask me
and raises apples stock by 50 points, and pays for steves next big toy(how about a super luxury mega power boat)
on the television there is an ad about a motorized wheelchair dealie, and the way they set it up some people are talking about how they wish their parents could have made it, then the grandma or grandpa is all of a sudden there and says "surprise!"
:cool:
1) It changes purchasing habits by offering a product that replaces one or more of something a consumer already has, which in turn begins a complete change in the marketplace.
2) It offers the same old product in a very new way: new design, features, implementation, etc. This new product spawns product changes in other companies.
3) It fixes a need that a consumer has needed to fix, all with maximum efficiency and reasonable cost.
EXAMPLES of revolutionary items in the past 10 years:
-- From APPLE: iMac, G4 Cube, Firewire, Superdrive, Cinema Display, OS X, and yes iPod (though we haven't fully seen its effects yet)
-- From OTHERS: Hybrid cars, DSL & Cable internet, e-Commerce, DVD, TiVo & related, touchscreen technology, genetically altered food, and yes Ginger (I think we've seen just the tip of the iceberg there)
<strong>
No, there was a Performa model (575 or something like that) that was an all-in-one.
Looked pretty cool, actually.
[Edit] Okay...wow. Just found these at <a href="http://www.everymac.com:" target="_blank">www.everymac.com:</a>
<a href="http://www.everymac.com/systems/by_casetype/allinone.html" target="_blank">http://www.everymac.com/systems/by_casetype/allinone.html</a>
Apparently there were quite a few AIO Performas, although they seemed to share one of 2 or 3 body designs.
Some of those are kinda cool!
[ 12-20-2001: Message edited by: pscates ]</strong><hr></blockquote>
the all-in-one performas were rebadged LCs. exact same computers
<strong>I don't think anyone has really noticed, but we are living in a renaissance.
</strong><hr></blockquote>
I thought we were living in a recession.