The chassis of the iBook is already made of magnesium, the skin is clear (painted on the inside) polycarbonate. Like polycarb impact resistant glasses, it's strong, but scratches a little too easily.
If the iBook remains a G3 but with a 933 or 1GHz processor, would it effectively trump the new 12" PB?
You may lose out on some features, but a lower price would make the iBook the better value. Just make the 14" display with something higher than 1024x768.
<strong>If the iBook remains a G3 but with a 933 or 1GHz processor, would it effectively trump the new 12" PB?
You may lose out on some features, but a lower price would make the iBook the better value. Just make the 14" display with something higher than 1024x768.</strong><hr></blockquote>
You seem to be going on the assumptions that the laptops will continue asynchronous update times. I imagine, though, that the next update (somewhere between may and sept. who knows with apple) to laptops will update them all at the once
Comments
You may lose out on some features, but a lower price would make the iBook the better value. Just make the 14" display with something higher than 1024x768.
[ 01-25-2003: Message edited by: michaellong ]</p>
lesson learned: read before you write
[ 01-25-2003: Message edited by: michaellong ]</p>
<strong>If the iBook remains a G3 but with a 933 or 1GHz processor, would it effectively trump the new 12" PB?
You may lose out on some features, but a lower price would make the iBook the better value. Just make the 14" display with something higher than 1024x768.</strong><hr></blockquote>
You seem to be going on the assumptions that the laptops will continue asynchronous update times. I imagine, though, that the next update (somewhere between may and sept. who knows with apple) to laptops will update them all at the once
[ 01-25-2003: Message edited by: Flounder ]</p>
[ 01-25-2003: Message edited by: Flounder ]</p>