But that's not what's being advertised:+JuggerNaut+ wrote:yes. when you're told that the hardware is XX times faster than before, that's exactly what most people assume.BlueGene wrote:I guess it's just that most people assumed all the software will run faster.Canis wrote: There's no cheating at all. Dont be so narrow minded. The iMacs are as fast as apple stated, provided you use the software in those benchmarks. Apple has mentioned over and over that developers need to get on the ball with their intel binaries, but Apple cannot control this. If developers do things properly, the machines do run at the speed increases posted by apple. If the developers fuck around and dont optimize their code, the software will run slowly. Sure Apple will round up when advertising their new product, but the fact is this new platform/architecture combination will take time before the speeds are up to par. Apple just advertised that "par", which is accurate and true.
They advertise "up to" 4x faster, but folks are too hasty to read it, right there next to the "4X" icon. http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/The Intel Core Duo and a whole new architecture give MacBook Pro up to four times the horsepower of PowerBook G4
Additionally they post benchmarks from 1.7x to ~4x faster depending on the application, and that's just for intel-native applications. Beyond that they go to lengths to explain the rosetta emulation technology.