Apple Intros New iBook Notebook, G5 Desktop
Company unveils new lower-cost notebook line and entry-level PowerPC G5 desktop. Official says new video card in the works for 30-inch LCD.
Just in time for holiday shopping, Apple released on Tuesday a new line of its entry-level iBook notebook computers. The latest version of the iBook line packs more processing power than its predecessors and comes with 801.11g wireless networking as a standard feature. But its slimmed-down price tag will no doubt appeal to its targeted education and consumer and customers. While the new iBook line is aimed at consumers, the top-end iBooks features now come close to those of the current 15-inch PowerBook that Apple considers part of its professional lineup. Priced at $1,499, the top-of-the-line iBook comes with a 1.33GHz PowerPC G4 processor, 14-inch LCD as well as Apples slot-loading "SuperDrive," a combination CD-R and DVD-R drivefeatures once reserved for the PowerBook line. The entry-level 12-inch iBook, which previously featured a 1Ghz processor, has been bumped up to a 1.2 GHz G4 processor.
Click here to read about IBMs plans to take the PowerPC G5 mobile.
Meanwhile, Apples price-cutting wasnt limited to the iBook line. The company on Tuesday announced the immediate availability of a new, single-processor PowerMac G5 desktop system running a 1.8GHz CPU. The model is an "entry-level" version of the other three configurations with dual processors from 1.8GHz to 2.5GHz. The new single-processor model costs $1,499$500 less than its siblings..
"This gives customers a more-affordable entry point [to the PowerMac line]," said Tom Boger, director of Apples worldwide product marketing.
Apple also updated its Xserve RAID storage system on Tuesday. Click here to read more.
In addition, Boger said that a new NVIDIA GeForce graphics card for the PowerMac would be available in November. The new card, he said, would provide "90 percent of the functionality of the NVIDIA Ultra card"the current display adapter shipping with new PowerMacs"for $100 less." The new card will include the "dual-dual" digital video interface technology required to drive two of Apples 30-inch flat panel displays, currently supported only by the Ultra card.
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