Closing the book on Apple's Mac mini

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  • Reply 501 of 570
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,710member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sequitur View Post


    Excuse my ignorance, but is it possible to buy Mac parts and put them in something like a Mini-ITX case?



    Only used.
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  • Reply 502 of 570
    mr. hmr. h Posts: 4,870member
    Melgross, you appear to be arguing with points that I'm not even making; it is rather annoying.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    You're not looking at the right chips.



    You mean I'm not allowed to put an E4500 into my mythical xMac because the price differential between it and what's used in the current Mini proves me right and you wrong.



    You don't need to tell me that laptop chips faster than the laptop chips in the Mini are more expensive. This is in the "Well, duh!" category. More powerful desktop chips cost less, that is what I am saying and nothing you've presented has, or possibly could, prove that wrong.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    Yes, about five dollars. Not exactly a big deal. It costs much more to make a bigger mobo with more slots and components, than it does to buy one stick of mobile memory over the desktop equivalent.



    Yeah, by about $5 probably.







    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    Well, I certainly don't agree with that, as it makes no sense. The more advanced processes cost LESS, not more.



    It makes perfect sense. I'm not talking about a more advanced process in terms of feature-size, I'm talking more advanced in terms of tolerances and inevitably lower yields etc. to give the capability of running at a lower voltage and hence lower power consumption. It's exactly the same reason as why laptop CPUs with the same feature sizes as desktop CPUs cost more money.



    I think that the onus is definitely on you to provide a much more compelling argument as to why a desktop chipset will not cost less than a laptop chipset, given that a desktop CPU costs less than a laptop CPU.





    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    Apple uses a portable slot drive in the iMac, and so pricing would be the same there as well. Besides, the portable drives don't cost significantly more than any other slim slot drive.



    What the heck has the iMac got to do with anything? I'm not talking about using a slot-loading laptop drive, I'm talking about using a drawer-type desktop drive. Which, like I said are five times cheaper at retail than laptop slot-loaders.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    You're joking, right? Show me any graphics card that Apple offers that's even close to a low price of $125. Just how many people will be buying your favorite $36 card? One?



    I know that Apple doesn't offer a cheap graphics card. The price of that retail card is to demonstrate that the cost of a graphics card needn't necessarily be $125 or anywhere near that.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    It's pretty obvious. Most people buying a Mini already have a computer. That's why Apple doesn't sell it with a keyboard and mouse. I know Mac people who moved to a Mini from older machines, and didn't buy keyboards and mice. Same thing with some PC people, though two did eventually spend $29.95 for the white one.



    If Apple sells the xMac, they will sell it with the mouse and keyboard, as it won't be an entry model as the Mini is.



    But I'm talking about replacing the Mac Mini with an xMac, so the xMac will be Apple's entry-level





    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I know what you're saying, but you're wrong.



    You haven't provided any evidence either that you know what I'm saying, or that I'm wrong.



    Let's try to make it clearer what I'm saying, and maybe you'll get it this time:



    The current Mac Mini uses laptop components and is not able to use more powerful graphics than integrated graphics (i.e., even Apple couldn't put dedicated graphics in there if they wanted to). The fact that it uses laptop components means that it is woefully underpowered, and has woefully low RAM and HDD capacity compared to other $599 desktops.



    So, I'm saying you make the case and motherboard bigger (costs increase) and use desktop components instead of laptop ones (costs decrease, cancelling out the earlier cost increases = same sale price).



    So I've taken this machine:
    • 1.83 GHz Core 2 Duo (T5600)

    • 1 GiB RAM (2 GiB Max)

    • 80 GB HDD

    • Integrated graphics (non-upgradeable)

    • No keyboard or mouse

    • $599

    and replaced it with this machine:
    • 2.2 GHz Core 2 Duo (E4500)

    • 1 GiB RAM (4 GiB Max)

    • 250 GB HDD

    • Integrated graphics

    • 1 free PCIe slot for more powerful graphics or something else

    • No keyboard or mouse

    • $599.

    Now, which one of these is more attractive when compared to the competition?
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  • Reply 503 of 570
    Mr.H is correct, using desktop components would increase BOTH Apple's margins and the power of the machine.
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  • Reply 504 of 570
    vineavinea Posts: 5,585member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by FuturePastNow View Post


    Mr.H is correct, using desktop components would increase BOTH Apple's margins and the power of the machine.



    At the expense of size and going toe to toe with HP and Dell. For about the same price Dell offers 2.4Ghz Quad Core Inspiron 530 ($609).



    As is the mac mini enjoys certain economies of scale since almost the entire Apple line is composed of notebook components. The size certainly is nice although a home server version of the mini with two built in bays would be cool.
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  • Reply 505 of 570
    mr. hmr. h Posts: 4,870member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by vinea View Post


    At the expense of size and going toe to toe with HP and Dell. For about the same price Dell offers 2.4Ghz Quad Core Inspiron 530 ($609).



    Whilst the mini does have a size "advantage" over those desktops, how many people are buying/considering the Mini because it is small, and how many buy/consider it because it is the lowest-cost Mac?



    As it stands, the Mini is Apple's only desktop machine sold for $599, and therefore it already goes toe to toe with the aforementioned PCs and comes off a hell of a lot worse than my proposed xMac. The Mini has a 1.83 GHz processor and 80 GB HDD, and the xMac has 2.2 GHz and 250 GB HDD, hopefully it's obvious which one of those compares better with the Dell. There will be plenty of potential switchers and first-time computer purchasers who dismiss the Mini, and therefore Apple in general, because it's so piss-poor relative to equally-priced competition on the PC side.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by vinea View Post


    As is the mac mini enjoys certain economies of scale since almost the entire Apple line is composed of notebook components.



    Indeed it does and that is why I suggest that a desktop-component alternative would have equal margins rather than better ones. Having said that, once the iMac goes Penryn, the Mini will be the only machine in Apple's line-up using Merom, it is already the only machine using Napa, and it's the only machine that uses an 80 GB 2.5" HDD.
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  • Reply 506 of 570
    mzaslovemzaslove Posts: 519member
    Oops, typed before I did enough research. Never mind.
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  • Reply 507 of 570
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,710member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Mr. H View Post


    Melgross, you appear to be arguing with points that I'm not even making; it is rather annoying.



    No, we're both trying to make our own points.



    Quote:

    You mean I'm not allowed to put an E4500 into my mythical xMac because the price differential between it and what's used in the current Mini proves me right and you wrong.



    I don't care which chips you put into this non-existent product. It's the chips Apple might put in a possible product that matters.



    Quote:

    You don't need to tell me that laptop chips faster than the laptop chips in the Mini are more expensive. This is in the "Well, duh!" category. More powerful desktop chips cost less, that is what I am saying and nothing you've presented has, or possibly could, prove that wrong.



    I believe that I brought up the desktop chips as an example, but as in the above sentence, I made the correct point that Apple isn't likely to use desktop chips, so the cost of them is irrelevant.



    Quote:

    Yeah, by about $5 probably.



    You're entitled to your guess.



    Quote:

    It makes perfect sense. I'm not talking about a more advanced process in terms of feature-size, I'm talking more advanced in terms of tolerances and inevitably lower yields etc. to give the capability of running at a lower voltage and hence lower power consumption. It's exactly the same reason as why laptop CPUs with the same feature sizes as desktop CPUs cost more money.



    There's no such thing as a process that's more advanced in tolerances and lower yields, ... They pick chips by bin that happen to have different characteristics. All chips are made to be the same, but they aren't. Some come out better than others. They get labeled differently, but this doesn't happen to support chips, just CPU's and memory.



    Quote:

    I think that the onus is definitely on you to provide a much more compelling argument as to why a desktop chipset will not cost less than a laptop chipset, given that a desktop CPU costs less than a laptop CPU.



    You're making the assertion. If you don't want to look that;'s fine.



    Quote:

    What the heck has the iMac got to do with anything? I'm not talking about using a slot-loading laptop drive, I'm talking about using a drawer-type desktop drive. Which, like I said are five times cheaper at retail than laptop slot-loaders.



    You should look at Apple's products. Except for the MacPro they are moving to slot loading drives.



    By the way. I just went to Apple's store to check on some of this, but the store is down. Apple is updating it. I wonder for what?



    Quote:

    I know that Apple doesn't offer a cheap graphics card. The price of that retail card is to demonstrate that the cost of a graphics card needn't necessarily be $125 or anywhere near that.



    You're right. It doesn't have to be that high, if you own a PC. Too bad Apple's models don't offer other manufacturers enough incentive to make cards for the Mac. Maybe, just maybe, if Apple does come out with this machine, they would sell enough to make that happen.



    Quote:

    But I'm talking about replacing the Mac Mini with an xMac, so the xMac will be Apple's entry-level



    I know you are. I don't think pricing would be at that level though.



    Quote:

    You haven't provided any evidence either that you know what I'm saying, or that I'm wrong.



    Let's try to make it clearer what I'm saying, and maybe you'll get it this time:



    The current Mac Mini uses laptop components and is not able to use more powerful graphics than integrated graphics (i.e., even Apple couldn't put dedicated graphics in there if they wanted to). The fact that it uses laptop components means that it is woefully underpowered, and has woefully low RAM and HDD capacity compared to other $599 desktops.



    So, I'm saying you make the case and motherboard bigger (costs increase) and use desktop components instead of laptop ones (costs decrease, cancelling out the earlier cost increases = same sale price).



    So I've taken this machine:
    • 1.83 GHz Core 2 Duo (T5600)

    • 1 GiB RAM (2 GiB Max)

    • 80 GB HDD

    • Integrated graphics (non-upgradeable)

    • No keyboard or mouse

    • $599

    and replaced it with this machine:
    • 2.2 GHz Core 2 Duo (E4500)

    • 1 GiB RAM (4 GiB Max)

    • 250 GB HDD

    • Integrated graphics

    • 1 free PCIe slot for more powerful graphics or something else

    • No keyboard or mouse

    • $599.

    Now, which one of these is more attractive when compared to the competition?



    I understand what you're saying, but I think you're wrong. I don't see that pricing. I don't see it being released without a keyboard and mouse, and I don't see it replacing the Mini, unless it replaces the expensive model. That's just not Apple's way. The Mini itself proves that.



    I'd like to be wrong on this, but I don't think I am. You're not addressing power and cooling issues which will drive the price up even if the rest of what you say could be done.



    I see the xMac line as being between a Mini and the medium priced iMac.
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  • Reply 508 of 570
    mr. hmr. h Posts: 4,870member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by melgross View Post


    I understand what you're saying, but I think you're wrong.



    Well, you seem to be under the impression that I'm suggesting that I think it's likely that Apple will produce this xMac I'm talking about. I don't think that at all. As it stands, it looks like we'll never see a headless dekstop (rather than a laptop without battery, keyboard, trackpad and screen) under $2000 from Apple again.



    I'm just making a case for this mythical machine that Apple should sell as being a better offering than the Mini. I know that they won't do it.
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  • Reply 509 of 570
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by lundy View Post


    An xMac, eh? I figured as much.



    Not enough profit margin at $599.

    If more expensive, people would just buy the iMac instead.



    I have yet to hear what the average customer would use PCI slots for. Even with the original Macintosh II, 95% of the buyers only had the single video card (that came with the computer) in there.



    they don't need to use them but having them gives you more BTO choice and if you have a nice screen then why buy a imac with a build in one. Also the older imacs had better video cards for gameing.



    If the xmac had a good video card, more room for HDD's, faster desktop cpu, dvdrw and ram then the imac.

    That makes it a better buy then the imac. Also the build in screen in the imac's is not that good for pro work and there are alot of pros with ppc g4 and g5 that don't need the power of the mac pro and want a good system in the $1000 to $1900 price range that the g4 and g5 where in.
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  • Reply 510 of 570
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by lundy View Post


    An xMac, eh? I figured as much.



    Not enough profit margin at $599.

    If more expensive, people would just buy the iMac instead.



    I have yet to hear what the average customer would use PCI slots for. Even with the original Macintosh II, 95% of the buyers only had the single video card (that came with the computer) in there.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Mr. H View Post


    Well, you seem to be under the impression the I'm suggesting that I think it's likely that Apple will produce this xMac I'm talking about. I don't think that at all. As it stands, it looks like we'll never see a headless dekstop (rather than a laptop without battery, keyboard, trackpad and screen) under $2000 from Apple again.



    I'm just making a case for this mythical machine that Apple should sell as being a better offering than the Mini. I know that they won't do it.



    why can't we have a desktop in the $900-$2000 range like the g4 and g5 use to be at? the mac pro starts at $2200
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  • Reply 511 of 570
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,710member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Mr. H View Post


    Well, you seem to be under the impression the I'm suggesting that I think it's likely that Apple will produce this xMac I'm talking about. I don't think that at all. As it stands, it looks like we'll never see a headless dekstop (rather than a laptop without battery, keyboard, trackpad and screen) under $2000 from Apple again.



    I'm just making a case for this mythical machine that Apple should sell as being a better offering than the Mini. I know that they won't do it.



    We both don't think that Apple will produce one, though I wish they would.



    So, in the end, we do agree.
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  • Reply 512 of 570
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,710member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Joe_the_dragon View Post


    why can't we have a desktop in the $900-$2000 range like the g4 and g5 use to be at? the mac pro starts at $2200



    If they did produce on, the $899 to about the $1,599 price level is what I would expect.
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  • Reply 513 of 570
    benroethigbenroethig Posts: 2,782member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Joe_the_dragon View Post


    why can't we have a desktop in the $900-$2000 range like the g4 and g5 use to be at? the mac pro starts at $2200



    That would clash way too much with the zealot stereotypes. Remember, anyone who isn't dazzled by the perfect iMac must either want some bottom of the line Compaq or must be a film producer with an unlimited budget. There can't be anyone between the two extremes. Then again I just gave mine, which I bough last summer, to my parents since I found myself using my 5-year old G3 iBook most of the time.
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  • Reply 514 of 570
    alfiejralfiejr Posts: 1,524member
    So ... Apple Insider finally ran a piece on Friday admitting it was wrong and the Mini is not dead. based at long last on some new 'insider' tip. Did AI eat humble pie? not really. did AI apologize to all those who tried to point out in this thread - in vain - it made no sense for Apple to abandon this desktop market segment? nope. did AI show any sign of a real thought process on this topic over the last 8 months whatsoever? un-uh. just stupid rumor-mongering.



    AI, you got a big black eye right now.
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  • Reply 515 of 570
    jowie74jowie74 Posts: 540member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Alfiejr View Post


    Did AI eat humble pie? not really.



    Really? They say "Eating our words"... I'd say that's a suggestion they were wrong. I don't think they really need to say more, it's not like they're reading all of our posts.
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  • Reply 516 of 570
    mr. hmr. h Posts: 4,870member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Alfiejr View Post


    did AI apologize to all those who tried to point out in this thread - in vain - it made no sense for Apple to abandon this desktop market segment?



    Killing the Mini does not equal abandoning this market segment. It only means that if the Mini were not replaced.



    We all know there are plenty of people who think the Mini should die and be replaced with the xMac.
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  • Reply 517 of 570
    benroethigbenroethig Posts: 2,782member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Mr. H View Post


    Killing the Mini does not equal abandoning this market segment. It only means that if the Mini were not replaced.



    We all know there are plenty of people who think the Mini should die and be replaced with the xMac.



    Not that low. Sub-$800 low end iMac, yes.
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  • Reply 518 of 570
    jowie74jowie74 Posts: 540member
    enough with the xMac already
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  • Reply 519 of 570
    Hopefully the new mini redesign will adopt a more user-upgradable design, rather than stabbing it with putty knives!



    If I was a betting man (I used to be - scratch cards - a mugs game) I would say the mini will have a similar specification to the macbook. That's a realistic forsight.



    I cannot see the mac mini having a dramatic design change and will not be user upgradable.



    When the new machine is released, I cannot see myself buying it unless it is user upgradable.



    Sorry folks, I am hoping in vain for a machine (xmac) that fits in the middle of a mac pro and a mac mini.
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  • Reply 520 of 570
    idaveidave Posts: 1,283member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by GavinScrimgeour View Post


    Hopefully the new mini redesign will adopt a more user-upgradable design, rather than stabbing it with putty knives!



    I don't find the putty knife thing to be any harder than removing a half dozen screws.



    Obviously, upgrading a mini is much harder than upgrading a Mac Pro. Tiny components make it that way.



    Unfortunately, I don't think Apple wants us upgrading our computers. They want us to buy new ones every year. The minis are much like the iMacs in that respect.
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