Closing the book on Apple's Mac mini

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  • Reply 401 of 575
    aegisdesignaegisdesign Posts: 2,914member
    I still think you're all nuts.



    You're arguing over a computer that costs less than the cheapest laptop, about it including massive drives, superfast cpus and graphics.



    It has a niche - people who don't care about the above.



    Those of you complaining about it are in the über-niche...



    "People who want blood from a stone"





    Meanwhile I'll continue using them for what they're really good at - tiny, small OSX application servers for small business use. Carry on trying to get blood out of your stones.
  • Reply 402 of 575
    idaveidave Posts: 1,283member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I have nothing against the Mini. For what it is, it's fine. But, Hd's are rarely purchased for it. That doesn't mean that companies don't have some good products available. But, Apple has now sold over a million of them, perhaps more than a million and a half. I'd bet that no more than about 10 to 15% of those people have bought external Hd's.



    No offense, but you must be pulling these numbers out of your wazoo. I've never heard any definitive numbers on how many minis have been sold, much less numbers of external hard drives to use with them. How could you possibly know and state it with such certainty?
  • Reply 403 of 575
    jeffdmjeffdm Posts: 12,951member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by aegisdesign View Post


    I still think you're all nuts.



    You're arguing over a computer that costs less than the cheapest laptop, about it including massive drives, superfast cpus and graphics.



    I don't think it's that hard for an inexpensive desktop to be more powerful and with better storage than a notebook that's only a little more expensive than the desktop. Notebooks have a lot of requirements that generally don't apply to desktops. The only thing I consider to be unrealistic is the graphics expectation, though that can be improved just by using the new chipset.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iDave View Post


    No offense, but you must be pulling these numbers out of your wazoo. I've never heard any definitive numbers on how many minis have been sold, much less numbers of external hard drives to use with them. How could you possible know and state it with such certainty?



    There does seem to be too many models of mini-based external hard drives to wave it off as an item that's rarely purchased.
  • Reply 404 of 575
    sequitursequitur Posts: 1,910member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iDave View Post


    Forgive my ignorance. What's a NAS?



    I don't know if anyone else answered your question, but, if not:



    Network Attached Storage



    "Network-attached storage (NAS) is the name given to dedicated data storage technology which can be connected directly to a computer network to provide centralized data access and storage to heterogeneous network clients."
  • Reply 405 of 575
    sequitursequitur Posts: 1,910member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by iDave View Post


    Forgive my ignorance. What's a NAS?



    There is also another type called SAN:



    "Storage Area Network (SAN) is a high-speed subnetwork of shared storage devices. A storage device is a machine that contains nothing but a disk or disks for storing data."
  • Reply 406 of 575
    carmissimocarmissimo Posts: 837member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I'm talking about the next couple of years. People who don't follow the progress in Hd technology are in for a surprise!



    The price of Hd's is dropping almost as fast as that of flash. They are all ready up to 250 GB per platter. That's going up to a terabyte per platter in a few years.



    While Vinea, and others have made a good case for flash sizes to rise quickly in small devices such as phones and music players, so that we may see the amounts double in 6 to 9 months, it's different for a desktop unit.







    Well, price is one area that I said that a flash drive wouldn't be competitive. Are you willing to add $200 to the price for a drive that's one third the size?



    And, while you might not mind the clutter, many Mini users have bought it for that very reason.







    I would never compare a totally outdated computer with even a fairly new one. The only fair comparison is to something recent. If your Mini is about the same as a dual 500 MHz G4, that's not saying much. You're comparing it to a machine about 6 years old.



    I may as well compare something to my 950, bought in early 1992, which cost me $6,000, plus another $189 for the keyboard. I had to add my own CD-ROM for another $700. That's USA dollars. Fiqure out what that's worth in Canadian today. Then add the $3,000 monitor, $2,400 for 64 MB RAM, etc.



    But, what does that all mean today? Nothing.







    I have nothing against the Mini. For what it is, it's fine. But, Hd's are rarely purchased for it. That doesn't mean that companies don't have some good products available. But, Apple has now sold over a million of them, perhaps more than a million and a half. I'd bet that no more than about 10 to 15% of those people have bought external Hd's.







    Everyone would like to see an upgrade in its graphics. If Apple does keep the Mini around, we will see Intel's more capable integrated solutions available.



    There is a software upgrade from Intel that just became available to unlock the 3D capability that was not being used, in the current chipsets. I'm not sure if it will work in a Mac though.



    Apple could put slower chips in the Mini. Intel has them available.







    Maybe, in two years. But don't expect a lower price.







    It's not an expensive proposition, as you say. External drives are available for $100, and External optical drives for that as well.



    But, it's like getting people to back up. It's not that much trouble, but they won't do it.



    It seems to me that it hardly matters that the mini is comparable to state-of-the-art from six years ago. It still has the capabilities that it has. The fact that there are much faster machines out there hardly renders the mini inoperable. It still does what it does and I find it can do quite a lot. Anything else is meaningless to me. I don't buy computers just to say I have a computer that can do A, B or C. I buy a computer to accomplish a given set of tasks. If the machine gets the job done, I'm happy. The G4 tower could handle a lot of what I wanted done and so too, by virtue of delivering similar performance, can the mini. And we're talking a 1.25 ghz G4 mini, not the current version operating on only 512 megs of RAM. I have no doubt that 1gig of RAM, soon enough, will become the minimum for the mini line. I can easily imagine that by year's end for well under $800 Cdn. I will be able to buy a mini with decent processor performance, the new version of OS X, 1 gig of RAM, and perhaps even the latest Intel integrated graphics. There's a real chance that hardware decoding for HD content might also be part of the mix.



    Why would I care that a Mac tower would blow such a machine out of the water? Am I buying the latest and greatest or am I spending less than $1,000 for a significant boost in computer performance, including what amounts to a new OS.



    My comparing the mini to the tower was intended to note that I feel like I got more of my money's worth out of my $629 mini than I did my old tower that cost me 10 times as much.



    Basically, slower machines of today like the mini, in absolute terms are pretty darn fast, which is why a computer like the mini makes a lot more sense today than it would have six years ago when you really had to have the power of the G4 tower to get anything more strenous than word-processing done in a reasonable fashion.



    And in regards to people not buying external components because it's too much bother, I would think someone with a desire to do something, will go out and acquire the technology to do it. If that technology that is inexpensive and easy to install (plugging it in, basically) isn't purchased, it tells me we're talking about someone who really didn't care if they did whatever the extra storage required.



    If there are a lot of people out there who don't care enough to go out and purchase a hard drve, who cares about them? They obviously don't need anything more than a basic computer that allows for Internet access and a few other tasks of similarly minor difficulty. There's nothing wrong with using a mini that way but it's a waste of a very capable machine.
  • Reply 407 of 575
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Carmissimo View Post


    It seems to me that it hardly matters that the mini is comparable to state-of-the-art from six years ago. It still has the capabilities that it has. The fact that there are much faster machines out there hardly renders the mini inoperable. It still does what it does and I find it can do quite a lot. Anything else is meaningless to me. I don't buy computers just to say I have a computer that can do A, B or C. I buy a computer to accomplish a given set of tasks. If the machine gets the job done, I'm happy. The G4 tower could handle a lot of what I wanted done and so too, by virtue of delivering similar performance, can the mini. And we're talking a 1.25 ghz G4 mini, not the current version operating on only 512 megs of RAM. I have no doubt that 1gig of RAM, soon enough, will become the minimum for the mini line. I can easily imagine that by year's end for well under $800 Cdn. I will be able to buy a mini with decent processor performance, the new version of OS X, 1 gig of RAM, and perhaps even the latest Intel integrated graphics. There's a real chance that hardware decoding for HD content might also be part of the mix.



    I do understand where you're coming from. The machine I use for most of my browsing is the one I'm typing on now. It's an upgraded Audio Mac that came with a single 733 MHz G4, which I upgraded to a dual 1.8 GHz board. I upgraded everything else as well, and for its purpose, it's a fine machine.



    The point I was making was that most people don't compare what they are getting now, with what they have from 6 years ago. They compare it to what's around now. New software almost always requires faster machines.



    Quote:

    Why would I care that a Mac tower would blow such a machine out of the water? Am I buying the latest and greatest or am I spending less than $1,000 for a significant boost in computer performance, including what amounts to a new OS.



    My comparing the mini to the tower was intended to note that I feel like I got more of my money's worth out of my $629 mini than I did my old tower that cost me 10 times as much.



    I'm not saying that you should compare it to a tower. But, you could compare it to an iMac. Depending on what size monitor you want, or have, that would be a sensible choice. But, I'm not telling you to make it either.



    Quote:

    Basically, slower machines of today like the mini, in absolute terms are pretty darn fast, which is why a computer like the mini makes a lot more sense today than it would have six years ago when you really had to have the power of the G4 tower to get anything more strenous than word-processing done in a reasonable fashion.



    You're right. No argument. But, even this machine would be hard paced to run certain software. It depends on why you bought it.



    I've recommended Mini's to people who would do well with one.



    Quote:

    And in regards to people not buying external components because it's too much bother, I would think someone with a desire to do something, will go out and acquire the technology to do it. If that technology that is inexpensive and easy to install (plugging it in, basically) isn't purchased, it tells me we're talking about someone who really didn't care if they did whatever the extra storage required.



    If there are a lot of people out there who don't care enough to go out and purchase a hard drve, who cares about them? They obviously don't need anything more than a basic computer that allows for Internet access and a few other tasks of similarly minor difficulty. There's nothing wrong with using a mini that way but it's a waste of a very capable machine.



    Most people buying a Mini, or even an iMac, for that matter, do not go out a purchase another Hd. Most people never back-up either. And, I'm talking about most people, not everyone.



    But, this whole discussion originally revolved around one point. Whether it would pay to get a Mini with a small flash drive for more money, and then buy a large external drive, or to buy a Mini with just a large internal drive.



    We seem to have gotten off track.
  • Reply 408 of 575
    carmissimocarmissimo Posts: 837member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I do understand where you're coming from. The machine I use for most of my browsing is the one I'm typing on now. It's an upgraded Audio Mac that came with a single 733 MHz G4, which I upgraded to a dual 1.8 GHz board. I upgraded everything else as well, and for its purpose, it's a fine machine.



    The point I was making was that most people don't compare what they are getting now, with what they have from 6 years ago. They compare it to what's around now. New software almost always requires faster machines.







    I'm not saying that you should compare it to a tower. But, you could compare it to an iMac. Depending on what size monitor you want, or have, that would be a sensible choice. But, I'm not telling you to make it either.







    You're right. No argument. But, even this machine would be hard paced to run certain software. It depends on why you bought it.



    I've recommended Mini's to people who would do well with one.







    Most people buying a Mini, or even an iMac, for that matter, do not go out a purchase another Hd. Most people never back-up either. And, I'm talking about most people, not everyone.



    But, this whole discussion originally revolved around one point. Whether it would pay to get a Mini with a small flash drive for more money, and then buy a large external drive, or to buy a Mini with just a large internal drive.



    We seem to have gotten off track.





    I do agree with you that the decision to go with a cooler form factor at the expense of storage capacity was the wrong one. A somewhat larger mini with a standard hard drive that would be both 7,200 RPM and able to hold more data would have resulted in a higher value package.



    But that ship has sailed. There's no way now that Apple would bring out a mini that was less mini. That's just not the Steve Jobs way and fault him though you may, the man does have a great flair for developing cool, ground-breaking products. The computer industry owes him big-time on that front.



    Looking ahead, I see flash memory in the 40 to 60 gig range in an even smaller base mini with a basic optical drive. Supplementing that product would be a stripped down mini that has no internal storage or optical drive. Not only would the ultra mini be amazingly compact, it would give comsumers freedom to add whatever optical drive and storage they wanted. The advantage, besides having such an improbably tiny computer, is that one could upgrade optical and storage technology without doing a thing to the basic computer at the heart of the system. Provided the ultra mini was powerful enough, I could see it being a machine that would be useful for a very long time.



    Even if it were true that a lot of mini owners haven't made a point of adding external drives (don't know if that's the case), I could certainly see a market for a flexible product like the ultra mini. I for one would be able to buy such a machine and be up and running without spending a dime on any additional products because I already own them. And even if I didn't, for roughly $300 Cdn. I could certainly purchase external hard drives and optical drives to be up and running. If the ultra mini itself checked in at let's say $499 Cdn. I would have the following for a total cost of $800 Cdn. A 320 gig 7,200 RPM drive, a DVD Burner, aka a superdrive, and the specs from the base mini.



    Compare that to the mini as it sits. The base model with a 60-gig, 5,400 RPM drive and an optical drive that burns CDs but not DVDs, costs $679 Cdn. while the step-up model with a faster processor, an 80-gig, 5,400-rpm drive and a superdrive costs $899 Cdn.



    Now imagine if there was a base ultra mini at $499 Cdn. and one with a faster processor retailing for $649 Cdn. If you went for the faster processor, it would cost $949 for that plus a superdrive plus a 7,200 RPM 320-gig hard drive. Right now, $899 gets you 80 gigs at 5,400 rpm. Which would you prefer? Imagine my delight at being able to have the superdrive, nearly 500 gigs, and only pay $649 to step up to the new mini with the faster processor (assuming of course that Apple will soon make 1 gig of RAM the base spec).



    It seems to me that Apple could take the mini's form factor to another level and you would still get what you want in that having the extra capacity and speed of a full-size drive would be just a matter of adding such a device in external firewire form. Opting for the slower processor (remember this is in Canadian funds) would mean 320 gigs and a superdrive for a total cost of about $799 vs. the $679 it costs for the base mini. The $799 package would be a far better deal, I think, in that $120 for all that extra storage and a superdrive would be well worthwhile. More importantly, for those who wouldn't want to go that route, something similar to the $679 package currently offered could still remain in the mix.
  • Reply 409 of 575
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Carmissimo View Post


    I do agree with you that the decision to go with a cooler form factor at the expense of storage capacity was the wrong one. A somewhat larger mini with a standard hard drive that would be both 7,200 RPM and able to hold more data would have resulted in a higher value package.



    But that ship has sailed. There's no way now that Apple would bring out a mini that was less mini. That's just not the Steve Jobs way and fault him though you may, the man does have a great flair for developing cool, ground-breaking products. The computer industry owes him big-time on that front.



    Looking ahead, I see flash memory in the 40 to 60 gig range in an even smaller base mini with a basic optical drive. Supplementing that product would be a stripped down mini that has no internal storage or optical drive. Not only would the ultra mini be amazingly compact, it would give comsumers freedom to add whatever optical drive and storage they wanted. The advantage, besides having such an improbably tiny computer, is that one could upgrade optical and storage technology without doing a thing to the basic computer at the heart of the system. Provided the ultra mini was powerful enough, I could see it being a machine that would be useful for a very long time.



    Even if it were true that a lot of mini owners haven't made a point of adding external drives (don't know if that's the case), I could certainly see a market for a flexible product like the ultra mini. I for one would be able to buy such a machine and be up and running without spending a dime on any additional products because I already own them. And even if I didn't, for roughly $300 Cdn. I could certainly purchase external hard drives and optical drives to be up and running. If the ultra mini itself checked in at let's say $499 Cdn. I would have the following for a total cost of $800 Cdn. A 320 gig 7,200 RPM drive, a DVD Burner, aka a superdrive, and the specs from the base mini.



    Compare that to the mini as it sits. The base model with a 60-gig, 5,400 RPM drive and an optical drive that burns CDs but not DVDs, costs $679 Cdn. while the step-up model with a faster processor, an 80-gig, 5,400-rpm drive and a superdrive costs $899 Cdn.



    Now imagine if there was a base ultra mini at $499 Cdn. and one with a faster processor retailing for $649 Cdn. If you went for the faster processor, it would cost $949 for that plus a superdrive plus a 7,200 RPM 320-gig hard drive. Right now, $899 gets you 80 gigs at 5,400 rpm. Which would you prefer? Imagine my delight at being able to have the superdrive, nearly 500 gigs, and only pay $649 to step up to the new mini with the faster processor (assuming of course that Apple will soon make 1 gig of RAM the base spec).



    It seems to me that Apple could take the mini's form factor to another level and you would still get what you want in that having the extra capacity and speed of a full-size drive would be just a matter of adding such a device in external firewire form. Opting for the slower processor (remember this is in Canadian funds) would mean 320 gigs and a superdrive for a total cost of about $799 vs. the $679 it costs for the base mini. The $799 package would be a far better deal, I think, in that $120 for all that extra storage and a superdrive would be well worthwhile. More importantly, for those who wouldn't want to go that route, something similar to the $679 package currently offered could still remain in the mix.



    I'll give you the nod for thinking it out so thoroughly.



    A lot of it does make sense.



    But, I'll tell you one thing, Apple will never sell a machine without storage containing a bootable OS—their own. That's just not the Apple "experience" they want to push.
  • Reply 410 of 575
    carmissimocarmissimo Posts: 837member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I'll give you the nod for thinking it out so thoroughly.



    A lot of it does make sense.



    But, I'll tell you one thing, Apple will never sell a machine without storage containing a bootable OS—their own. That's just not the Apple "experience" they want to push.



    Clearly such a machine would, even if there were no internal hard drive, come with the software to install OS X and being as it is such a marvellous OS, the odds of somebody buying the hypothetical ultra mini and not bothering to install OS X are slim and none. That's especially true considering OS X will come with boot camp, allowing the machine to also run Microsoft's OS. It would be quite easy for Apple to design this product so that the only way to operate the computer would be if OS X was installed, even if it was by the consumer. And besides, nobody would buy a Mac who intended to not run Apple's OS. What would be the point?



    I do think such an ultra mini would not be the best choice for someone who had little or no experience with computers. Installing the OS yourself isn't that hard but it isn't for everybody. Still, I could see that product having a lot of appeal for many potential customers.
  • Reply 411 of 575
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,510member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Carmissimo View Post


    Clearly such a machine would, even if there were no internal hard drive, come with the software to install OS X and being as it is such a marvellous OS, the odds of somebody buying the hypothetical ultra mini and not bothering to install OS X are slim and none. That's especially true considering OS X will come with boot camp, allowing the machine to also run Microsoft's OS. It would be quite easy for Apple to design this product so that the only way to operate the computer would be if OS X was installed, even if it was by the consumer. And besides, nobody would buy a Mac who intended to not run Apple's OS. What would be the point?



    I do think such an ultra mini would not be the best choice for someone who had little or no experience with computers. Installing the OS yourself isn't that hard but it isn't for everybody. Still, I could see that product having a lot of appeal for many potential customers.



    It isn't that someone wouldn't install it, it's that someone would HAVE to install it.



    Apple doesn't want that. They want you to unpack the machine, plug it in, turn it on, and start playing.



    Even the servers have everything installed.
  • Reply 412 of 575
    carmissimocarmissimo Posts: 837member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    It isn't that someone wouldn't install it, it's that someone would HAVE to install it.



    Apple doesn't want that. They want you to unpack the machine, plug it in, turn it on, and start playing.



    Even the servers have everything installed.



    Perhaps though installing the OS would be little more work than hooking up the hard drive via firewire or USB2, the optical drive in the same fashion and putting in a DVD with the necessary software. As I said, this wouldn't be for everybody. Inexperienced users would certainly not go there.



    Another option that would still keep costs down would be to include a small flash drive internally, allowing for the OS to be included in the ultra mini, even if the onboard storage would not be enough to handle that much more. Such a memory would still allow for a remarkably small form factor. I think even the 8 gigs found on a top-end iPod Nano would be enough for such a function. Considering the size of the Nano, I suspect such memory would negligibly impact on the ultra mini form factor. And as flash cost keeps dropping, going higher than 8 gigs in the not-too-distant future would be quite viable.



    Just thinking out loud. I'm not that technically savvy and it could be that there are a thousand and one technical obstacles that would not make such a product viable.



    The possibilities, though, are quite intriguing and even if Apple is looking to retire the mini as it is currently configured, I think it's highly probable that a sub-$1,000 computer with an amazing form factor is very much in Apple's future.
  • Reply 413 of 575
    pbpb Posts: 4,255member
    This photo comes from Macbidouille:







    Where is the Mac mini?



    Now this is about 64-bit machines, which the Mac mini is not, but you never know... is the book already closed?
  • Reply 414 of 575
    aegisdesignaegisdesign Posts: 2,914member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by PB View Post


    Now this is about 64-bit machines, which the Mac mini is not, but you never know... is the book already closed?



    It was in the shot earlier in the keynote showing all the machines transitioned to Intel. Obviously since it is a 32bit Core(Duo) in the Mini, it wouldn't make sense in the slide about which machines supported 64bit.
  • Reply 415 of 575
    pbpb Posts: 4,255member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by aegisdesign View Post


    It was in the shot earlier in the keynote showing all the machines transitioned to Intel. Obviously since it is a 32bit Core(Duo) in the Mini, it wouldn't make sense in the slide about which machines supported 64bit.



    That's what I am thinking, but it is at least strange how Apple neglected the mini lately... from a real update to the keynote.
  • Reply 416 of 575
    backtomacbacktomac Posts: 4,579member
    Kasper's call on the mini looks more accurate every day. I would say that not only is the mini EOL, it's SOL.
  • Reply 417 of 575
    sequitursequitur Posts: 1,910member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Carmissimo View Post


    I do agree with you that the decision to go with a cooler form factor at the expense of storage capacity was the wrong one. A somewhat larger mini with a standard hard drive that would be both 7,200 RPM and able to hold more data would have resulted in a higher value package.



    But that ship has sailed. There's no way now that Apple would bring out a mini that was less mini. That's just not the Steve Jobs way and fault him though you may, the man does have a great flair for developing cool, ground-breaking products. The computer industry owes him big-time on that front.



    Looking ahead, I see flash memory in the 40 to 60 gig range in an even smaller base mini with a basic optical drive. Supplementing that product would be a stripped down mini that has no internal storage or optical drive. Not only would the ultra mini be amazingly compact, it would give comsumers freedom to add whatever optical drive and storage they wanted. The advantage, besides having such an improbably tiny computer, is that one could upgrade optical and storage technology without doing a thing to the basic computer at the heart of the system. Provided the ultra mini was powerful enough, I could see it being a machine that would be useful for a very long time.



    Even if it were true that a lot of mini owners haven't made a point of adding external drives (don't know if that's the case), I could certainly see a market for a flexible product like the ultra mini. I for one would be able to buy such a machine and be up and running without spending a dime on any additional products because I already own them. And even if I didn't, for roughly $300 Cdn. I could certainly purchase external hard drives and optical drives to be up and running. If the ultra mini itself checked in at let's say $499 Cdn. I would have the following for a total cost of $800 Cdn. A 320 gig 7,200 RPM drive, a DVD Burner, aka a superdrive, and the specs from the base mini.



    Compare that to the mini as it sits. The base model with a 60-gig, 5,400 RPM drive and an optical drive that burns CDs but not DVDs, costs $679 Cdn. while the step-up model with a faster processor, an 80-gig, 5,400-rpm drive and a superdrive costs $899 Cdn.



    Now imagine if there was a base ultra mini at $499 Cdn. and one with a faster processor retailing for $649 Cdn. If you went for the faster processor, it would cost $949 for that plus a superdrive plus a 7,200 RPM 320-gig hard drive. Right now, $899 gets you 80 gigs at 5,400 rpm. Which would you prefer? Imagine my delight at being able to have the superdrive, nearly 500 gigs, and only pay $649 to step up to the new mini with the faster processor (assuming of course that Apple will soon make 1 gig of RAM the base spec).



    It seems to me that Apple could take the mini's form factor to another level and you would still get what you want in that having the extra capacity and speed of a full-size drive would be just a matter of adding such a device in external firewire form. Opting for the slower processor (remember this is in Canadian funds) would mean 320 gigs and a superdrive for a total cost of about $799 vs. the $679 it costs for the base mini. The $799 package would be a far better deal, I think, in that $120 for all that extra storage and a superdrive would be well worthwhile. More importantly, for those who wouldn't want to go that route, something similar to the $679 package currently offered could still remain in the mix.



    aegisdesign showed a Mini stacked on a look-alike hard drive on a post at 03:54 PM on 06-11-2007 .



    NewerTechnology also has hard drives that look exactly like the Mini and stack with the Mini; however, they are pricey. NewTechnology also sells HD O-GB kits that also look like the Mini. You can put your own HD or optical drive or whatever in them. You wouldn?t have to rely on Apple to make a cube or super Mini. You could add another empty 0-GB unit if you needed to.



    www.newertechnology.com
  • Reply 418 of 575
    gregalexandergregalexander Posts: 1,400member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by aegisdesign View Post


    It was in the shot earlier in the keynote showing all the machines transitioned to Intel. Obviously since it is a 32bit Core(Duo) in the Mini, it wouldn't make sense in the slide about which machines supported 64bit.



    I noticed that Steve said "Almost all our computers are 64bit"... which was a backhanded acknowledgement that the Mini still exists... wasn't it?



    Still wonder about the future!
  • Reply 419 of 575
    pbpb Posts: 4,255member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by GregAlexander View Post


    I noticed that Steve said "Almost all our computers are 64bit"...



    Curiously enough, he forgot to utter "But soon all will be 64-bit"...
  • Reply 420 of 575
    vineavinea Posts: 5,585member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by PB View Post


    Curiously enough, he forgot to utter "But soon all will be 64-bit"...



    Heh...thats a good and bad thing. Good in that one way for all to be 64-bit is to simply drop the mini. Bad in that a 64-bit update doesn't seem to be a near term update to warrant such a comment.
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