Mac

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We’re within sight of upgrading the main machine at home from a Mac Mini, purchased in December 2006, to a new 24″ iMac. Unlike some of the other Apple products we’ve purchased – products that were upgraded within weeks after the purchase – it seems that our timing may be right on this one.

In the past few weeks, I’ve seen several articles indicating a new iMac line in March. The features vary, but most of the speculation includes quad-core processors and higher-quality Nvidia graphics. From my limited Apple experience, that seems consistent with previous Apple hardware upgrades.

In any event, this purchase may happen sometime in late March or early April – after any new iMacs have started shipping. Our Mac Mini purchase came toward the end of the Core Duo line, processors that were replaced with the Core 2 Duo. My first Shuffle was, within weeks, replaced by a new design. The purchase of my 30 GB iPod (my fourth iPod, at that time) was quickly overshadowed by upgrades to the iPod line and, a bit later, by the initial iPhone release. For a bleeding-edge guy like myself, that was pretty frustrating. I did wait for the 3G iPhone and will likely get a good year of use before the inevitable Apple upgrade.

So, maybe just a few years into our Apple use, we’re finally syncing with the Apple release schedule. If so, it’ll be nice to have a machine that I know is the current state of the art for that model for longer than just a few months.

Update I’ve activated the WP-Polls plugin. Vote now in the sidebar for the features you most expect to see in the new iMacs.

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The new book climbs to almost #610,000 on Amazon.

It might be a bit of a niche …

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My latest book is available for pre-order now from Amazon. It’s very different from the previous two. First, I’m the sole author. Second, where the others were Linux books, this one walks the line between Linux and OS X.

Mac for Linux Geeks” will be available on January 26th.

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I’ll excuse the one hour of battery life I seem to be able to get out of my iPhone. An arrangement of extra power cords (USB, car, wall) and external batteries gets me through the day. I’ll also excuse the fact that iTunes seems hell bent on not syncing applications from my desktop to my iPhone, and inexplicably removing apps from my phone without any notice. I love that damn phone, and it will take a lot more than lost apps and dropped calls to get it out of my hands.

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Some Time Machine users are noticing that their backups are not including new files. While the backups run every hour, and no apparent problems seem to occur during the backup process, when users check the backups for recent created files, the items are not there.

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Some applications install their own Preference Panes in System Preferences, which means that over time you can end up with a cluttered mess full of extra Preference Panes you no longer need. You can go digging through your Library folders to find and remove the ones you don’t want any more, or you can…

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The unofficial guide to getting the most out of your iPhone.

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(Via Macworld.)

Macworld Lab ran the three new standard iMacs through our customary suite of tests to gauge performance improvements on the previous generation. The new 2.8GHz 24-inch iMac showed a 30-point (13 percent) Speedmark improvement on the previous high-end model, a 24-inch 2.4GHz iMac. However, this new high-end iMac posted the same Speedmark score as the previous build-to-order model, a 2.8GHz 24-inch model. The new low-end iMac, a 2.4GHz 20-inch model, had a Speedmark score that was 26 points higher (13 percent faster) than the previous low-end model, a 2GHz 20-inch iMac. Also, the new 2.4GHz 20-inch iMac scored 9 points lower than the older midrange iMac, a 2.4GHz 20-inch model. But as we pointed out in our earlier Macworld Lab benchmark report of the new iMacs, the older 2.4GHz 20-inch iMac that we tested had a larger hard drive and a better graphics card than the new entry-level model, which explains the speed difference.

Full story here.

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