Apple's redesigned iMac is 5mm thin with edge-to-edge glass

1246710

Comments

  • Reply 61 of 189
    sflocalsflocal Posts: 6,096member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by initiator View Post


    Agreed. But, according to some here, you should just buy an external drive and quit complaining. I don't agree with that at all.





    You're right.  While my two grandma's have moved on to higher ground years ago, my 70+ year old mom has never asked about getting a photo album on CD so she can insert it into her iPad.



    One can hope. :)



    Look buddy, I know where you're coming from.  I've been through the 80's to current to see all that tech go to dust.  There's always the few purists that raise issues when something they use goes to the museum.  You have options.  They are just not the way you'd like it.



    I'd bet money that in a couple years, all the other PC makers will no longer include optical drives in their AIO desktop machines too.  What then?

  • Reply 62 of 189
    bdblackbdblack Posts: 146member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by initiator View Post


    "So I bought this beautiful all-in-one computer only to have to make it ugly by buying an external burner?"


     



     


     



     


    Yes. Very ugly.

  • Reply 63 of 189
    I work at an Apple Specialist and the design of these things must be unbelievable. They shrunk every major component by an insane amount - power supply, fans, heat sinks... all must be positively micro to fit in a unit this size.

    It's a wonder this unit doesn't melt the instant you turn it on.

    Very impressive job, Apple.
  • Reply 64 of 189
    bdblackbdblack Posts: 146member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by enjourni View Post



    I work at an Apple Specialist and the design of these things must be unbelievable. They shrunk every major component by an insane amount - power supply, fans, heat sinks... all must be positively micro to fit in a unit this size.

    It's a wonder this unit doesn't melt the instant you turn it on.

    Very impressive job, Apple.


    So what he's saying is we should buy the applecare :P

  • Reply 65 of 189
    andysolandysol Posts: 2,506member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by BDBLACK View Post


    So what he's saying is we should buy the applecare :P



    It looks like the vents on the back and bottom will be much better than my oven of an iMac now with the little slit up top.  I cant wait to put my hand on the back of one at the Apple store prior to ordering one.  That will be the true test for me.  :)  Applecare is so cheap regardless for the iMac- considering.


     


    Honestly- if the fusion drive is 5400... I likely won't get it.  My wife does photography, so thatll be moving pictures constantly and bog down I'm sure.... 7200 1tb will be better than a flash/5400 in that case I think...


    Hopefully the fusion is 7200 on the 27"

  • Reply 66 of 189
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,728member
    bdblack wrote: »

    <a href="http://forums.appleinsider.com/content/type/61/id/15000/" style="background-color:rgb(241,241,241);">LL</a>


    Yes. Very ugly.

    The answer is obvious, he should simply use silver duct tape and stick that external DVD drive on the back of the iMac!
  • Reply 67 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paxman View Post


    Ooops - misread you and was gonna post something mean.... Edge thin/thickness is important in the sense that from most angles it LOOKS so impossibly thin and light. But my desk face the door to my office which means that I approach my mac from 'the back', so to speak. I wonder what the very bulbous looking back will look like in real life. Will I need to re-configure my office?





    Awww ... show me what meanness you had in store for me; I can take it :)


     


    Seriously, it's not a matter of thinness but rather the process getting there. There are two aspects to the process: First, Apple had to develop innovative manufacturing processes. Second, it's the process of introducing impossibly thin devices ALL ACROSS their product lineups!!

  • Reply 68 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Harbinger View Post




    Awww ... show me what meanness you had in store for me; I can take it :)


     


    Seriously, it's not a matter of thinness but rather the process getting there. There are two aspects to the process: First, Apple had to develop innovative manufacturing processes. Second, it's the process of introducing impossibly thin devices ALL ACROSS their product lineups!!



     Yup.


     


     


    Retina Display MBP 15" - 0.71" (18 mm)


    iPhone 5 - 0.3" (7.6 mm)


    iPod Touch - 0.24" (6.1 mm)


    rMBP 13" - 0.75" (19 mm)


    iPad Mini - 0.28" (7.2 mm) 


     


    All launched within 6 months!!! http://www.ankleskater.com/pagemaker.php?id=ASBG20121023165100

  • Reply 69 of 189
    jeffdmjeffdm Posts: 12,951member
    It turns out there is more ventilation than the small group of slots in the back:

    http://images.apple.com/imac/design/images/evolution_hero.jpg

    Some of that is speaker grille, but I'm betting that half of them are for air intake.

    It looks like they did make the whole unit thinner. I thought it was the same thickness but more rounded back. The back is slightly more rounded though.

    http://images.apple.com/imac/design/images/evolution_2005.jpg
  • Reply 70 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by gyorpb View Post


    That's not how software versioning works.


     


    .tsooJ



     


    Apple uses a NumVersion struct, 1 or 2 digit for a major version and a single digit for a minor version which could if 10.9 happens cause a change to 11.0

  • Reply 71 of 189
    maestro64maestro64 Posts: 5,043member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by JeffDM View Post



    It turns out there is more ventilation than the small group of slots in the back:

    http://images.apple.com/imac/design/images/evolution_hero.jpg

    Some of that is speaker grille, but I'm betting that half of them are for air intake.


    it is the chimney effect that works well, the reason they do not need high power fans. As you know hot air raises so as the unit heats up it draws in cool in from the bottom.

  • Reply 72 of 189
    boredumbboredumb Posts: 1,418member
    jeffdm wrote: »
    That's nice, but the total thickness doesn't appear to be noticeably thinner, measure it from the thickest point, like the way we should measure Android phones.

    The back is clearly a lot more curved than the previous version. I also question the wisdom of the SD card in the back. That makes it a bit awkward to use, either turn the entire machine around or grope around for the slot. I really liked the side edge slot.

    I agree on the thickness, and I think its kind of a shame that they tweaked the illustration, and then Schiller goes through the carefully elaborate turning onstage, to give the appearance that you are seeing it more "side-on" than you really are, and then to avoid showing you the bubble.

    As for the card, it's no different from what I do now for thumb drives or any usb external, so, if anything, I'd have wanted one usb3 on the side...not possible now though.
  • Reply 73 of 189
    ecsecs Posts: 307member


    While I really love this new look, the question that worries me is what will happen when you use it for a long raytracing task that uses all the four cores to the max... will the CPU temp rise to 90ºC like in recent Macbooks (water evaporates at 100ºC) and will fans rotate at max speed like if it was a laptop rather than a desktop? As I said, I love this look, but I expect my desktop to be able to accomplish long and intensive CPU tasks without being worried with the CPU temp. If it's noisy when doing hard work, I'll be afraid of pushing it too much, and it won't be very useful.


     


    The same applies to last generation games, or even not so last generation, like "Sims 3". Will they melt the CPU?


     


    I hope the Mac Pro isn't the only choice for people who need all cores at 100% during long periods of time.

  • Reply 74 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by auxio View Post


     


    Maybe if you have your machine sitting out for public display in your house/business and want to use it as a talking point.  However, mine's tucked away in my office with loads of other technology piled around it which I need to use as part of my job.


     


    I get the point about the aesthetics of the things around you affecting your state of mind and whatnot.  I love seeing well designed products (both hardware and software).


     


    However, given a choice, I'd much prefer having more attention to detail paid to performance than aesthetics.  Because, when it comes right down to it, I get a bigger smile on my face seeing my machine crunch through code faster (so that I can get out and enjoy other parts of my life more), than I do seeing a couple more inches of my desktop all day. :)





    Just because you need gas economy more than aerodynamics does not mean you cannot appreciate a Porsche. I accept that this might not stir your loins. But I hope, for your sake, that you are able to recognize there is more innovation here than just aesthetics.

  • Reply 75 of 189


    **** tweaks.


     


    It's stunning.  To house an i7 and a G680MX there had to be a bit of a bulge somewhere.


     


    Just wow.  


     


    Still stunned by the design.


     


    What a machine.


     


    Whew.


     


    Lemon Bon BOn.

  • Reply 76 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by enjourni View Post



    I work at an Apple Specialist and the design of these things must be unbelievable. They shrunk every major component by an insane amount - power supply, fans, heat sinks... all must be positively micro to fit in a unit this size.


     


    Well, not micro but there's quite a bit of work done for sure.


     


    Quote:

    Originally Posted by enjourni View Post





    It's a wonder this unit doesn't melt the instant you turn it on.

     


     


    Someone gets it ... or at least part of it!

  • Reply 77 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Lemon Bon Bon. View Post


    **** tweaks.


     


    It's stunning.  To house an i7 and a G680MX there had to be a bit of a bulge somewhere.


     



    Guess it's a man machine ;)

  • Reply 78 of 189


    Originally Posted by night9hawk View Post

    I'm surprised nobody has commented on the fact that neither of the new iMacs have a FireWire port on the back. RIP...


     


    Who cares? Why would you be surprised that the port's no longer on the machines at all?





    Originally Posted by initiator View Post

    So I bought this beautiful all-in-one computer only to have to make it ugly by buying an external burner?


     


    You can just as easily NOT buy an optical drive at all.







    I understand eliminating it on a laptop, but not on a desktop.




     


    So every desktop should have every port ever created simply because it's large enough to contain them all. Got it.





    Originally Posted by drblank View Post

    See, Apple does listen sometimes.


     


    Sure they do. image

  • Reply 79 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Maestro64 View Post


    it is the chimney effect that works well, the reason they do not need high power fans. As you know hot air raises so as the unit heats up it draws in cool in from the bottom.





    Sorry but that's hot air in itself. Heat does not rise fast enough on its own to keep such a tight enclosure and fast running CPU cool. The stack effect, if that's what you're thinking of, does not work well here.

  • Reply 80 of 189

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Harbinger View Post




    Sorry but that's hot air in itself. Heat does not rise fast enough on its own to keep such a tight enclosure and fast running CPU cool. The stack effect, if that's what you're thinking of, does not work well here.



     Yup

Sign In or Register to comment.