Mac Consumers Rewarded for Their Patience
After a very lean twelve months for Mac consumers (that is, those Mac users who don’t fall into the professional user category), Apple has finally rewarded their patience with updates across the board to iMac, .Mac, iLife, iWork, and Mac mini. Phew! That’s an impressive list, although it does highlight how neglected Mac consumers have been in 2007 as Apple focused on its entry into the mobile phone market.
The Apple Special Event also gave us insight into why iLife has taken so long, and probably iWork. iLife’s iMovie is a whole new application with a very interesting history. In iWork, Numbers is a new app, and Pages has been re-jigged to finally include a word processing mode.
iMac
The new iMacs are aluminum as expected, have a glossy glass screen, and again as expected, are thinner. Interestingly, the 20” inch model has been trimmed by a couple of pounds but the 24” model has gained nearly a pound.
Visually, I’m undecided and will have to see one in the flesh. I’m not yet sure about the black back or border around the screen. But of course, who am I, I didn’t like the look of the previous iMac (G5 then Intel) until I saw it in the flesh, when I was smitten.
It turned out the spy photos of the new keyboard were indeed real as Steve joked about. Of interest, the F3 key is now the Exposé key and F4 the Dashboard key. What this means to existing keyboards we’ll have to wait and see.
A wireless version is also available and notably has a compact, laptop-like design, which Steve says will suit wireless keyboard users’ work habits.
As predicted on rumor sites, Apple has indeed cut the 17” iMac from its lineup. But many also predicted the demise of the Mac mini, which itself saw upgrades, albeit without the fanfare. So if you don’t need, or more importantly want, a 20” monitor, the Mac mini is for you.
In his keynote Steve said there are two 20” models and one 24”. On the Apple store there are in fact two 24” models. As expected, the base 20” model has been price aligned to the old 17” model.
The most interesting piece of news is the inclusion of a FireWire 800 port on all models. It had been strongly rumored last year that Apple was to drop FireWire altogether. The inclusion of FW800 testifies FireWire is here to stay and that Apple is expecting to sell a lot of iMacs to professional Mac users (who currently are the major users of FW800).
Regarding ports, it would have been nice if the iMac had four, not three, USB ports on the back. Even the Mac mini has four. You just never seem to have enough USB ports.
.Mac
Apple said it would address .Mac’s shortcoming and it has, in part.
- Storage has been increased from 1GB to 10GB and the monthly data transfer limit raised to 100GB.
- Web sites can now be mapped to your own domain name, although you need to do that through iWeb.
- The new Web Gallery feature looks impressive, although I suspect it will be gobsmackingly impressive in reality. It works and feels like the new revamped iPhoto and includes slide show, mosaic view, carousel view, access restriction, and can receive photos from other people and from iPhones. But it does require the latest iPhoto to setup.
But do these changes go far enough? Is Web 2.0 eye-candy enough? Considering you’re still forking out US$99 for services that are free elsewhere, the jury is still out.
iLife ‘08
iLife finally gets updated, and has skipped the ‘07 version.
iPhoto has been redeveloped to allow you to group your photos by events. When you upload from your camera to iPhoto, it now automatically groups your photos by date. From there you can split or join those groups to form events. This is a great idea and will make managing your photos a fair bit easier. Most importantly though, it will let you get back to using albums the way they should be used, i.e. for collections of events rather than for individual events. This will also make creating photo books easier. You will still use Smart Albums for setting up albums of people (using keywords).
The interface has seen some nice improvement, but one we’ll all rejoice in is double clicking a photo now zooms it to full window view rather than going to edit mode. Clicking it returns to thumbnail view.
Other useful features include photo hiding, improved search, some great new editing tools including a before and after view, publishing to .Mac’s new Web Gallery, and hardcover books now include a dust cover.
Probably the best new feature though, the one that will save the most time, is photo customizations can now be copied from one photo to another, rather than having to recreate them (which meant jotting down the settings and re-entering them). That is sensational.
I did notice one big annoyance of mine still exists in iPhoto—when scrolling, the month still displays in the middle of the window, thus obscuring some of the photos. Interestingly, that does not occur when scrolling the new Events view.
iMovie is all new and looks even easier to use.
Videos are now catalogued in a new video library—although there was no indication if it includes videos that are no longer on your Mac. Hopefully it does (and of course tells you to reconnect or reload them). Like iPhoto, videos can also be organized by event.
It interesting that the iMovie demo on the iLife web page demonstrates illegal use of copyrighted music. The demonstrator attaches U2’s “Beautiful Day” to his video and then says you can upload it to .Mac’s Web Gallery (which he does) or YouTube. Ouch! Bono won’t like that.
On .Mac Web Gallery, you can put videos in multiple resolutions, like Apple does on its videos, which is really cool and professional.
I suspect this new iMovie is going to kick off a whole new round of home movie editing.
iWeb is starting to mature. For instance, it now has web widgets which allow easy addition of Google AdSense and HTML snippets for things like YouTube. I might finally give iWeb another look.
GarageBand has a new “Magic“ feature, which lets you jam along to different music styles which have customizable bands. What’s super cool is that if you set up a record loop, each time the loop restarts, a new take is recorded and at the end you can choose which take to keep.
iLife ‘08 is not an essential upgrade, but is certainly a tempting one. I’ve already ordered mine.
iWork ‘08
The new iWork is here and as rumored, it includes a spreadsheet. But don’t go tossing out your MS Office just yet.
iWork is neither an MS Office killer nor a replacement. It is for those who don’t need MS Office and its bloat of features and who don’t need an Office work-alike.
When Steve said that Numbers is “the spreadsheet for the rest of us” it consequently means iWork is not here to replace Office where it belongs, just where it doesn’t need to be. If that’s you, you might have clicked your last Office icon.
Pages’ biggest shortcoming had been that it didn’t work like a word processor. It was a page layout application, and a very good one at that. Unfortunately, for many people who bought iWork as an affordable alternative to MS Office, Pages often ended up gathering dust because simply writing a letter or an essay was, well, not simple enough.
Rejoice now, because Pages has a word processing mode.
This feature alone will go a long way to helping establish iWork as an alternative to MS Office (again, where it’s not needed).
Pages has borrowed a couple of features from Office though: contextual format bar and change tracking. Not to say Office invented them, but both are very welcome. Hopefully the change tracking will be Word compatible.
Finally, after what seems like years of rumors, Apple has included a spreadsheet application in iWork. And as long rumored, it is called Numbers. And as hoped, revolutionary.
Apple has realized the “rest of us” usually use spreadsheets for smaller works that we include in reports and so forth, rather than massive multi-sheet accounting behemoths.
Numbers is “just a spreadsheet,” but what sets it apart from Excel and the rest is that it is spreadsheeting for publishing. It is WYSIWYG and uses a page layout approach to creating spreadsheet documents. We all knew Apple would revolutionize spreadsheets, and now we’ve seen how.
Keynote has a few new features; the most notable for me was the “Instant Alpha,” which lets you select only the area you want to show in your images.
iWork could become Apple’s software jewel, even above iLife. If I was Apple, I wouldn’t be adverse to porting iLife, or at least some more of its apps, to Windows. However, there’s no way I’d send iWork to the dark side. With Numbers’ revolutionary approach to spreadsheeting and Pages finally being a word processor, it is a killer app in its market space.
Also, importantly, iWork already reads the new MS Office file formats.
In Australia, and possibly other countries, there’s a pleasant surprise with iWork—and iLife. Incredibly, despite the inclusion of Numbers, iWork ‘08 is AU$20 cheaper than iWork ’06. The U.S. price, though, remains the same, at US$79. Ditto iLife.
iWork is finally a must-have for many of us, and is a superb value. Mine will be here tomorrow! I think I’ll have to “play hookey,” as they say in some parts of the world.
Mac mini
The great thing about the cutting of the 17” iMac is it helps keep the Mac mini alive. It has for a while been rumored to be following the Cube into history.
You could almost feel the collective sigh of relief across the Mac community when it was discovered the mini was still a wanted member of the Mac family.
And to top it off, the mini also saw some useful upgrades.
Overall
It’s been a long time since Apple delivered so many useful updates to so many of its customers at one event. Thank you, Apple.
Comments
Beeb,
Calling me a fan boy doesn’t invalidate my point. That’s just another ad hominem attack.
Robotech,
I already read that article. It was craptacular. They compared a G5 iMac to a brand new iMac… I’m sorry, what happened to the previous generation Intel iMac to the newer one?
From the article:
very playable frame rates in Quake 4 at 1024x768
1024x768??!? That’s a 17” monitor! What’s the point of buying a 24” iMac if you have to use it at 17” resolutions? The native resolution of the 24” iMac is 1920x1200. And what exactly is “very playable framerate”? I note they didn’t actually put up any numbers.
LCD monitors that have their resolutions switched to a non-native resolution have to do pixel interpolation, because unlike a CRT, LCDs have a fixed number of pixels.
Therefore, not only does a user have to lower their resolution to 1/3 of the possible resolution, the monitor then has to do pixel interpolation, further reducing the quality of the images on screen at lower resolutions.
This article did nothing to show that the current iMac is faster than the previous generation in video performace… because it isn’t. It’s just faster than a G5.
Robotech wrote:
Wrong, wrong and especially wrong. None of those things needed DirectX 10, especially since DirectX 10 cards didn’t start coming out until the very end of 2006 and start of 2007. They all only require DirectX 9 which has been out since 2003, which is roughly the same type of card requirements that Leopard will require for its user interface.
For WPF (which is Avalon)
Any high performance DX9 Pixel Shader 2.0 card will give good results. The fastest PS 2.0 card with the most memory your bank account can afford is the ticket.
Avoid the low-end cardssuch as ATI 9200 and below, nVidia 5200 and below and go for the high-end X800 or 6800 if you can afford it.
For Aero:
Support for DirectX 9 graphics with a WDDM driver, 128 MB of graphics memory (minimum)², Pixel Shader 2.0 and 32 bits per pixel.
.NET 3.0 is a set of APIs that leverage the above so obviously they have the same requirements.
Robotech,
Note the “cons” section in the article you reference:
Radeon HD 2600 Pro is underpowered versus its NVIDIA alternative.
Which is what I’ve been saying all along.
Which is what I’ve been saying all along. -VB
There are certain things we know in life: we get up in the morning, take a shower, eat breakfast, read the news (AM for example), go to work, back home, eat dinner, watch TV, then back to bed. Any other activities in between are just improvisations to the norm.
But there are certain things we really don’t know the reasons: Why the the Earth is tilted 23’? why the moon have exactly the same axial rotation rate as its orbit and not allowing us to see its other face? And best yet, why does Steve think the way he does?
We can hypothesize and extrapolate numbers to come up with a rational answer but hardly any of those predictions come close. The iPhone was a rumourland-derivative and the idea might have been stolen by Steve. But again, we don’t exactly know. He might have spawned loose the idea and taken into context that started the very first iPhone rumors. Who knows?
So, why did Apple engineering choose ATI Radeon HDs over NVIDIA when they are already using NVIDIA with their last models? it all comes down to that fundamental engineering compromises and/or the best cost vs performance sales pitch from either supplier.
It all comes down to $$$ saved and $$$ earned.
why does Steve think the way he does?
Actually, it’s fairly obvious. Steve Jobs wants to sell HD video content to Mac users, and he doesn’t care about selling games.
The Radeon HD cards suit his purposes, not his customers.
The problem is, this is what lead to Apple’s downfall in the 90’s—not listening to customer needs/desires.
They all only require DirectX 9… -Sterling
Ok, here’s a snippet from the Wikipedia:
“The latest release versions of DirectX, DirectX 10 and DirectX 9Ex, are exclusive to Windows Vista. Microsoft claims the reason for this is that there have been extensive changes in the Windows graphics architecture and introduction of the Windows Display Driver Model.”
Hmmm… If I am an XP user and don’t want to buy a new machine then I am stuck with what I have. I won’t buy a DX10 card only to have it work in DX9c mode (that might not even be possible). I have to be running Vista to use DX10. That is what I am trying to lay on the table here. Not Vista being able to work on a DX9 or pre-DX10 GPU.
I don’t care much about Vista at the moment since nothing in Vista improves what I currently do with XP - not mentioning XP SP2 is probably the most polished OS that Redmond has ever conceived. And XP SP3 is only around the corner.
The fastest PS 2.0 card with the most memory your bank account can afford is the ticket.
Exactly, as in free in-the-bundle. Thank you for the tips, Sterling.
As for Leopard using only DX9-level GPUs is nonsense. Leopard’s Core Graphics (refer to my previous posts) will use the best GPU you can afford, bundled or retail. Leopard Core Graphics are already being QA tested with the latest DX10-level cards, I am sure.
And are any that are still currently on sale or even bundled with G4 desktops and notebooks that do not conform with DirectX 9? If not, then your distinction itself is nonsensical.
Robotech:
That’s absolutely different from what you said about Vista requiring a DirectX 10 card. That’s like arguing that OS X Leopard requires multiple hard drives because of the Time Machine feature.
From Wikipedia: Direct3D 10: Designed around the new driver model in Windows Vista and featuring a number of improvements to rendering capabilities and flexibility, including Shader Model 4..
That basically means DirectX 10 supports new hardware features that will come out in cards and supposedly do it more easily. Windows does not require these things to run. No part of the Windows interface requires these elements to exist.
More from Wikipedia:Direct3D 9Ex (previously known as 9.0L): allows full access to the new capabilities of WDDM (if WDDM drivers are installed) while maintaining compatibility for existing Direct3D applications. The Windows Aero user interface relies on D3D 9Ex.
So it shows that you are only required to have a DirectX 9 cards to use Vista. You don’t need a Dx 10 card if you have a up to date graphics driver.
Steve Jobs wants to sell HD video content to Mac users, and he doesn’t care about selling games. The Radeon HD cards suit his purposes, not his customers. The problem is, this is what lead to Apple’s downfall in the 90’s—not listening to customer needs/desires.
I don’t think that can be a valid reason: I seem to recall OS X doesn’t currently use any hardware decode functionality in modern graphics cards.
Bare Feats appears to agree with vb_baysider
Bare Feats appears to agree with vb_baysider
And didn’t I recommend a MacPro for him if Quake/Doom/Halo/Prey-kind of games titillate him so much?
Are these the games that’s going to move 4+ million to buy Macs this coming year? I don’t think so, Sterling.
Thanks for lip-smacking VB’s “rear ports”. Anything else?
You have to agree, RI, it is sad that the iMacs have been updated with graphics cards that perform worse.
In fact, it’s less than half as fast in some tests. It really sucks that Apple has put out a machine that is so lacking in the graphics dept, just when the major gaming companies are making a big push in mac gaming.
Benji, well summed up.
Fanks