2K
2K
If you had 2K to spend on a new computer and you'd had you existing one for 5 or so years (iMac - slot loading 500mhz, 8mg Vid ram).
What would you get? Im thinking an eMac, but wonder if it will play q4 when it comes out.
speak up oh great Mac community
What would you get? Im thinking an eMac, but wonder if it will play q4 when it comes out.
speak up oh great Mac community
"Liberty, what crimes are committed in your name."
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I'd sit on the money until I saw what Apple brought out early(ish) next year. It's supposed to be the low end of the range stuff, iBooks & PowerBooks, that come first.
If you *need* a new computer, you'd be pretty safe with a top end Mac for the next few years. Forget the eMac and so on.
I've got a dual 2Ghz system which I expect will be good for three years more, though I will be getting an Intel based Mac as soon as they come out for "development reasons" :icon26:
I can confidently say that applications will be universal binaries for many years to come. I know I will be doing universal binaries for quite some time. Games will probably follow the same pattern.
If you *need* a new computer, you'd be pretty safe with a top end Mac for the next few years. Forget the eMac and so on.
I've got a dual 2Ghz system which I expect will be good for three years more, though I will be getting an Intel based Mac as soon as they come out for "development reasons" :icon26:
I can confidently say that applications will be universal binaries for many years to come. I know I will be doing universal binaries for quite some time. Games will probably follow the same pattern.
to teh point as usual I see. 2K Aus dollars woud get the bottom range iMac or the top of the range eMac, with change to upgrade teh ram, hd etc. The cheapest powermac starts at over 3k4g3nt_Smith wrote:2k, and you pick Apple's second cheapest system? Then wonder if it will play a game not even out yet..
"Liberty, what crimes are committed in your name."
Oh...Australian dollars....shoulda said that before! 
2K Aus is about $1500 US, so I'd go with either the eMac or the iMac. Both will have the same limitation of the Radeon 9600 card, however the iMac has 128MB VRAM as opposed to the 64MB on the eMac, and the iMac has double the system memory and hard drive space, a flat panel monitor as opposed to a smaller CRT, and a G5 at a higher clock speed. I'd personally go with the iMac at $1300 US (~1700 AUS) than the eMac if I had the money to blow on it.

2K Aus is about $1500 US, so I'd go with either the eMac or the iMac. Both will have the same limitation of the Radeon 9600 card, however the iMac has 128MB VRAM as opposed to the 64MB on the eMac, and the iMac has double the system memory and hard drive space, a flat panel monitor as opposed to a smaller CRT, and a G5 at a higher clock speed. I'd personally go with the iMac at $1300 US (~1700 AUS) than the eMac if I had the money to blow on it.
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Re: 2K
factory ibook g4 and pocket $1000 bucksS@M wrote:If you had 2K to spend on a new computer and you'd had you existing one for 5 or so years (iMac - slot loading 500mhz, 8mg Vid ram).
What would you get? Im thinking an eMac, but wonder if it will play q4 when it comes out.
speak up oh great Mac community
You were answering S@M by directly quoting him and then providing a response, and were therefore offering a suggestion to him. Now you claim you're talking about yourself...you sound rather confused.
Last edited by Canis on Sun Jul 24, 2005 12:05 am, edited 1 time in total.
$1599
iBook G4 - 1.2GHz PowerPC G4, 12-inch TFT Display, 512K L2 cache @ 1.2GHz, 1024x768 resolution, 256MB DDR266 SDRAM, 30GB Ultra ATA drive, Combo Drive, ATI Mobility Radeon 9200, 32MB DDR video memory, AirPort Extreme built-in
$1999
1.8Ghz - 512MB - 160GB - COMBO - 17-inch widescreen LCD, 1.8GHz PowerPC G5, 600MHz frontside bus, 512K L2 cache, 512MB DDR400 SDRAM, 160GB Serial ATA hard drive, Slot-load Combo Drive, ATI Radeon 9600, 128MB DDR video memory, 56K internal modem
I would go with an iMac given the comparison in specs, but might wait based on Daves suggestion. End of financial year is always a good time to pick up new computers
iBook G4 - 1.2GHz PowerPC G4, 12-inch TFT Display, 512K L2 cache @ 1.2GHz, 1024x768 resolution, 256MB DDR266 SDRAM, 30GB Ultra ATA drive, Combo Drive, ATI Mobility Radeon 9200, 32MB DDR video memory, AirPort Extreme built-in
$1999
1.8Ghz - 512MB - 160GB - COMBO - 17-inch widescreen LCD, 1.8GHz PowerPC G5, 600MHz frontside bus, 512K L2 cache, 512MB DDR400 SDRAM, 160GB Serial ATA hard drive, Slot-load Combo Drive, ATI Radeon 9600, 128MB DDR video memory, 56K internal modem
I would go with an iMac given the comparison in specs, but might wait based on Daves suggestion. End of financial year is always a good time to pick up new computers

"Liberty, what crimes are committed in your name."
I'd personally be skeptical of the new machines, and wait for Rev 2 machines to come out. Although I'm sure they will work, there will most likely be some problems with them.Dave wrote:lol.. bt you need to learn when to stop pushing back.
Oh and I wouldn't buy another computer until next July when the new Intel boxes come out, especially if you've had your current machine for 5 years.
Personally I'd rather have a broken, but warranty covered, Rev A than a soon-to-be-obsolete $1500 potential waste of money.Canis wrote:I'd personally be skeptical of the new machines, and wait for Rev 2 machines to come out. Although I'm sure they will work, there will most likely be some problems with them.Dave wrote:lol.. bt you need to learn when to stop pushing back.
Oh and I wouldn't buy another computer until next July when the new Intel boxes come out, especially if you've had your current machine for 5 years.