Archive for the ‘Apple’ Category

Report: Apple to unveil new iMacs by mid-October

Computerworld – Apple will refresh its iMac desktop computer within a matter of weeks and will unveil the first revamp of the all-in-one’s exterior since mid-2007, a prominent Apple enthusiast site reported Thursday.

According to AppleInsider, Apple will introduce new iMacs sporting a new enclosure “anytime between next week and mid-October.”

Taiwanese manufacturers have been producing the redesigned iMacs for the past two weeks, sources told the Web site. Other clues, including $100 to $200 discounts on existing models to volume customers, point to an imminent release.

But details are few and far between. Although the site’s sources claimed the redesigned iMacs will sport a thinner design, perhaps one that mimics the look of Apple’s LED-backlit Cinema Display line introduced last December, information about other enhancements, tweaks and additions was scant. An internal Blu-ray optical drive is one possibility.

The last time Apple updated the iMac was in early March 2009, when the company doubled the amount of RAM, increased storage space and dropped in faster Intel Core 2 Duo processors while keeping prices stable for all but one model, the least-expensive 24-in. iMac.

At the time, one analyst called the refresh “underwhelming” and “exactly what you’d expect from Apple, more stuff for the same price.”

The recent gossip got the attention of a pair of industry analysts, who agreed that an iMac overhaul is long overdue. But they’re split on whether the timing is on the mark.

“Apple’s desktops, as a percentage of their total [system] sales, continue to decline,” said Stephen Baker, an analyst with retail research firm NPD Group. Baker said the talk of an iMac refresh made sense because of the long stretch since the line last saw a redesign, and because Apple would like to give its desktops a chance to compete with laptops, long its strength.

He also suggested Apple would be smart to cut prices of its iMacs, rather than take its traditional approach of keeping prices flat while beefing up the components’ specifications. “The pricing for iMacs is almost the same as for Apple’s notebooks,” he observed.

Apple currently sells the one 20-in. iMac model at $1,199, and the three 24-in. configurations at $1,499, $1,799 and $2,199. In comparison, the company’s MacBook Pro line of laptops are priced between $1,199 and $2,499.

Ezra Gottheil, an analyst with Technology Business Research, was skeptical of a September or October refresh.

“I think it looks likely that Apple will do this, but not until early 2010,” Gottheil said, noting that virtually every major component in the desktop systems had been upgraded in March. He also cited Apple’s strong sales during the recession as another reason why the company wouldn’t feel pressured to retool the line.

In the second calendar quarter, Apple sold 2.6 million Macs, 4% more than the same quarter the year before. Only 849,000, or 34% of that total were desktops, which the iMac dominates. That was down 10% from the 943,000 desktops sold in the same period of 2008.

Gottheil also hedged his bet. “The iMac is the longest in the same box,” he said, referring to its case design while and acknowledging anything’s possible from the Cupertino, Calif.-based computer maker. “Apple is completely unpredictable.”

Another hint that Apple may do the unpredictable comes from history’s timeline: Last year, Apple unveiled the new “unibody” design for the MacBook Pro in mid-October.

Also worth noting is the , which tracks the product cycles of Apple’s hardware, and makes recommendations based on the average time between refreshes. According to the guide, the iMac has been updated every 220 days, on average, since it’s 2003 introduction. As of Thursday, 203 days had passed since the March 2009 revamp.

“Buy only if you need it — approaching the end of a cycle,” the buyer’s guide warns.


Review: Apple’s Snow Leopard opens door to a fab future

Mac OS X Snow Leopard offers a slew of hidden features and lays the groundwork for big advances to come.

Snow Leopard is Apple’s latest operating system release, making this the seventh version of Mac OS X (eighth, if you count the two versions of 10.4 “Tiger” that bridged the PowerPC-to-Intel transition). On sale for $29 beginning tomorrow, Snow Leopard offers slimmed-down code, a smaller footprint and a raft of under-the-hood technologies designed to bring additional stability and performance. It also lays a strong foundation for the future.

Nearly two years ago, in October 2007, Apple released Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) a full six months behind its original ship date. (Apple blamed the delay on the need to prepare for the launch of the first iPhone.) Leopard brought more than 300 new features and tweaks to Apple’s long-evolving OS. With the release of Mac OS X 10.6 — this time, Apple unveiled its new OS ahead of schedule — Apple builds on the underlying technologies it began to unleash in Leopard.

What it didn’t do is change the look. Unless users know where to look, they won’t see much difference between Leopard and Snow Leopard. The vast majority of the changes are under the hood, but they position Apple to take advantage of hardware advances for years to come.


Apple denies rejecting Google Voice for iPhone

Computerworld – In responses to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) inquiries about Google Voice, Apple today denied that it has rejected the application, AT&T said it played no part in Apple’s iPhone application review process, and Google asked the agency to redact its answer about Google Voice’s App Store status.

One media watchdog group welcomed the FCC’s demand for answers, and said that the replies from Apple and AT&T prove that the two collude in determining which applications make it into the App Store.

“The FCC’s inquiry into Google Voice has ripped back the curtain on the wireless market and revealed AT&T’s secret veto power over applications on the iPhone that offer consumers voice services over the Internet,” said Ben Scott, the policy director of Washington D.C.-based Free Press, in a statement Friday. “AT&T has been caught with its hand in the Apple jar.”

Apple, however, told the FCC that it hasn’t denied Google’s submission to the App Store.

“Contrary to published reports, Apple has not rejected the Google Voice application, and continues to study it,” Apple said in its letter to the FCC, which Apple posted in its entirety on its Web site. “The application has not been approved because, as submitted for review, it appears to alter the iPhone’s distinctive user experience by replacing the iPhone’s core mobile telephone functionality and Apple user interface with its own user interface for telephone calls, text messaging and voicemail.”

Three weeks ago, the FCC launched an inquiry into reports that Apple had rejected Google Voice for the iPhone, and that the company had also removed similar software that had previously been approved for the App Store.

As part of that investigation, the FCC sent letters to all three companies involved: Apple, Google, and AT&T, which is the exclusive mobile carrier for the iPhone in the U.S. In those letters, the FCC asked the firms to explain their actions, and in particular asked Apple and AT&T whether they collaborated — and if so, how — in the App Store review process.

The FCC had not posted the replies from AT&T and Google on its document database as of Friday night, but Engadget obtained copies, and published them online.

For its part, AT&T denied that it had a hand in the Google Voice decision. “AT&T has no role in Apple’s consideration of Google Voice or related applications,” said AT&T in its response today. In the past, AT&T has also denied involvement in the App Store approval process.

AT&T, however admitted that it has talked to Apple at times about specific iPhone applications, which in some cases were later revised before being accepted. “AT&T has had general discussions with Apple about optimizing the technical criteria that Apple uses to evaluate iPhone applications in order to minimize congestion on our wireless network,” the carrier said.


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