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Welcome to Macintosh
The Gaping Hole in Apple's Desktop Line
- 2007.07.13
Bong! . . . :-) . . . Welcome to Macintosh!
From low end to high end of Apple's desktop line, you have the Mac mini, the iMac, and the Mac Pro. Let's break down the prices for each entry-level model (as per the Apple Store):
Mac mini
- 1.66 GHz Intel Core Duo
- 512 MB DDR2 SDRAM, expandable to 2 GB
- 60 GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 24x Combo Drive (DVD-ROM/CD-RW)
- Integrated GMA 950 video card with 64 MB of shared memory
- Price: $599
iMac
- 1.83 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo - 2 MB L2 Cache
- 512 MB DDR SDRAM, expandable to 2 GB
- 160 GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 24x Combo Drive (DVD-ROM/CD-RW)
- 17" LCD Widescreen Monitor
- Integrated GMA 950 video card with 64 MB of shared memory
- Price: $999
Mac Pro
- two 2.0 GHz Dual-Core Intel Xeon processors - 4 MB shared L2 cache (each processor)
- 1 GB DDR2 ECC RAM, expandable to 16 GB
- 250 GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 16x SuperDrive (double-layer support)
- nVidia GeForce 7300 GT video card with 256 MB of GDDR2 SDRAM video memory
- 3 open PCI Express slots
- Price: $2,200
What's wrong with this picture? There's a gaping hole in the desktop line!
Let's get to the meat in the sandwich....
The Mac mini is the entry level Mac (rumored to be discontinued soon). It's the affordable entry into the Mac experience. BYODKM - bring your own display, keyboard, and mouse. Very few expansion possibilities, at least internally.
Next, the iMac. The darling of the Mac desktop line. A powerful Mac with a built-in LCD monitor and with a little more expandability than the Mac mini. Like the mini, most upgrades have to be done externally.
Finally, the Mac Pro. All the power you could ever want with all the expandability you can imagine - at a price guaranteed to give you an extreme case of the shakes and a stroke to boot!
If Apple kills off the mini, it would be a huge mistake. Especially as the "halo effect" from the iPod (and now the iPhone) has ignited a potential firestorm of converts from the other side. While the mini may be lacking in certain areas, one thing is clear: It's the most affordable Mac in the lineup, and killing it without a replacement, price-wise, would be completely stupid!
What's missing from Apple's desktop line? A midlevel "headless iMac". The mini didn't quite fit the bill for this. Physically it did, but expandability was severely compromised.
For years, the Mac faithful have been clamoring for the perfect compromise between a headless iMac with some room for internal expandability without having to fork over a Mac Pro. It's a segment Apple has ignored and continues to ignore.
It's time to listen up, Apple. What's wrong with offering a small to mid-sized tower or even a Cube redux with some expandability for $1,199?
You could resurrect the Cube in a slightly bigger form and throw in current iMac specs (just a rough example):
Cube
- 1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo 2
- 512 MB DDR SDRAM, expandable to 2 GB
- 160 GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 24x Combo Drive (DVD-ROM/CD-RW) with an option for a SuperDrive
- Dedicated graphics card, such as the GeForce 7300
- 1 or 2 PCI Express slots and at least 1 open drive bay
- Price: $1,199
This could easily be attained.
Part of the reason the Cube failed was because it had very little expandability and commanded the same price as the low-end G4 tower. Why would someone pay $1,599 for something with little expandability when they could have a Power Mac G4 with expandability for the same price?
This would provide the right balance between price and expandability. Apple could sell many of these, as there are a lot of Mac users who don't want an all-in-one, think the mini is too limited, and refuse to cough up the mucho dinero for the Mac Pro.
As wonderful as Apple is when it comes to design, they could easily make the new Mac as sleek and svelte as the rest of the Mac lineup. I've been on many forums such as AppleInsider and ThinkSecret (just to name a few), and I can tell you, there are plenty of Mac users clamoring for this.
Apple, if you build it, they will come.
Further Reading
- Dreaming Up a Mac More Expandable than the Mac mini, More Affordable than the Mac Pro, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2007.01.31
- The Mythical Midrange Mac Minitower, Dan Frakes, Macworld, 2007.06.26
Recent Welcome to Macintosh articles
- Hooked on Classic Macs, 01.09. Tommy Thomas is back with a renewed focus on Macs that can run the 'classic' Mac OS.
- Apple IIe Nostalgia: A Reunion 15 Years in the Making, 01.06. Sometimes nostalgia is all you remembered, like when you get to recreate your first computing experience from the Apple II era.
- Distraction Free Writing on the Go with the Laser PC6, 10.27. Sometimes you just need a keyboard and screen instead of a full-fledged computer. The Laser PC6 could be what you're looking for.
- Apple's eMate still a great tool in the classroom, 05.09. How one teacher equipped his classroom with eMates with his own money - and plans to keep using them as long as possible.
- More in the Welcome to Macintosh index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: 15" 'TiBook' PowerBook G4, Jan. 2001 - A new 1" thin PowerBook design with a titanium case, 15" widescreen display.
- Group of the Day: ModBook List covers the Axiotronic ModBook tablet Mac.
- January 9 in LEM history: 01: Macworld keynote - 02: The new iMac - Redefining Apple's market - 03: Safari shows off the Apple difference - Impressions of Safari beta - 04: The colored iPod mini - 06: Installing 'Tiger' on unsupported Macs - Time to replace 5-year-old PowerBook - 07: iPhone and Apple TV - Axiotron Modbook - Mac vs. PC price comparisons are never fair - Backup to the rescue - 08: 2008 Mac Pro value equation
Recent Content on Low End Mac
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- Thanks for the IBM PC, Dad, L. Victor Marks, My First Mac, 01.09. Dad, thanks for bringing home that first IBM PC way back in 1981.
- What a Legacy: The Origin of the IBM PC, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.09. IBM introduced its PC on August 12, 1981, shaking up the entire personal computer industry. Today even Apple makes its computers IBM compatible.
- Our Debt to the IBM PC, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.09. A Mac user looks at the legacy of the IBM PC.
- Heat Management for 'Books and the Last Mac to Run OS 9.1, Phil Herlihy, The Usefulness Equation, 01.08. Tips on keeping a first-gen MacBook Air from throttling back with CoolBook, using G4FanControl with a G4 PowerBook, and the fastest Mac that can boot Mac OS 9.1.
- Surprise, Average Broadband Throughput Is Lower than Maximum Throughput, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.08. If a service is advertised as 8 Mbps maximum, it shouldn't surprise anyone that the average speed is below that number.
- A History of Apple's Lisa, 1979-1986, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.08. Originally envisioned as a business computer to replace the Apple II, the Lisa brought the mouse and GUI to the computer market - only to be felled by the less costly Macintosh.
- Lisa's DNA Is All Over Modern Computing, Ray Arachelian, Apple Seeds, 01.08. Those who label Apple's Lisa a failure are ignoring the computer's legacy that shows up in every personal computer sold today.
- The Innovative Lisa, Dan Knight, Online Tech Journal, 01.08. Apple's Lisa and how it paved the way for the Macintosh.
- The Lisa Legacy, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.08. We should always remember how Apple's innovation paved the way for all future computers.
- Waterfield First with SleeveCase for New 17" Unibody MacBook Pro, Charles W. Moore, 'Book Value, 01.08. Waterfield has a reputation for top quality bags at appropriate prices, and it's already designed a sleeve for the new 17" Unibody MacBook Pro.
- Blackouts and Web Access, Death of a Kanga, the Future of PowerPC Macs, and More, Charles W. Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 01.07. Also another email client suggestion and whether a G3 iMac can handle a 7200 rpm hard drive without overheating.
- The 17" Unibody MacBook Pro Value Equation, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.07. The new model is a bit faster, a bit smaller, a bit lighter, and has an incredible 8-hour battery life.
- How Netbooks Impact Microsoft and Apple, Tim Nash, Taking Back the Market, 01.07. Netbooks are keeping Windows XP alive, which may slow adoption of Windows 7, and perceived value keeps the Mac market share growing at the expense of Windows.
- Apple's Worst Business Decisions: Another Perspective, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.07. Apple's poor business decisions predate the Macintosh. Let's hope they learn from their mistakes.
- The Ill-Fated Apple III, Jason Walsh, Apple Before the Mac, 01.07. "...not only was the Apple III mind crunchingly expensive, it was made with none of the passion of the Apple II or Macintosh."
- 2 Apple Failures: Apple III and Lisa, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.07. Apple's two not-so-great product lines between the Apple II line and the Macintosh.
- Apple III Chaos: Apple's First Failure, Joshua Coventry, Cortland, 01.07. Apple had known nothing but success with its Apple II product line, but when it tried to enter the business world with the Apple III, the learned the cost of failure.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best MacBook Deals, 01.09. Used 1.83 GHz, $595; 2.0 SD, $650; refurb 2.1 GHz, $849; 2.2, $899; 2.4, $949; new 2.1 SD, $945 after rebate; 2.4, $900 a/r; 2.0 Unibody, $1,199 a/r; more.
- Best G5 iMac Deals, 01.09. Used 17" 1.6 GHz Combo, $400; 1.8 SuperDrive, $450; 1.9 iSight, $575; 20" 1.8 GHz, $500; 2.0, $625; 2.1 iSight, $699.
- Best iPod nano deals, 01.09. New 3G/8 GB, $125 shipped; 4G/8 GB, $134 shipped; 16 GB, $175 shipped (most colors).
- Best Apple TV Deals, 01.08. Refurb 40 GB Apple TV, $199; new, $220; refurb 160 GB, $279; new, $320. Prices include ground shipping.
- Best Mac Pro Deals, 01.08. New 2.8 GHz 4-core, $2,099 after rebate; refurb 8-core, $2,399; new, $2,589 a/r; 3.0 $3,398 a/r; refurb 3.2, $4,099; new, $4,099 a/r.
- Best 12" PowerBook G4 Deals, 01.08. Used 867 MHz Combo, $490; 1.33 GHz, $548; 1.5 GHz SuperDrive, $595.
- Best 17" MacBook Pro Deals, 01.07. Used 2.16 GHz Core Duo, $1,190; 2.33 Core 2, $1,400; 2.4, $1,799; refurb 2.33, $1,799; 2.5, $1,899; new, $1,900; refurb 2.6, $2,299.
- Best Power Mac G5 Deals, 01.07. Used 1.8 GHz single, $500; dual, $629, 2.0, $700; dual-core, $929; 2.3, $999; 2.5 dual, $900; 2.7, $1,089; 2.5 Quad, $1,399.
- Best iPod shuffle Deals, 01.07. Refurb 1 GB '07, $39 shipped; new, $43; '08, $45; refurb 2 GB '07, $59 shipped; new, $58; '08, $63.
- More deals in our archive.
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