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Portables (Apple) Hardware

Apple Updates PowerBooks 781

Tablespork writes "Apple this morning has updated the PowerBook G4. The new models feature 1.5 or 1.67 ghz processors, 8x superdrives, 512MB memory standard, Bluetooth 2.0, updated graphics cards, a sudden motion sensor, as well as a scrolling trackpad. Looks like we'll have to wait a little longer for the PowerBook G5."
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Apple Updates PowerBooks

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  • Dont forget (Score:5, Informative)

    by TheKidWho ( 705796 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:22AM (#11527719)
    the 15" and 17" can now drive 30" cinema displays!

    And optical audio out on the 17"

    Plus, brighter backlight, better prices and 5400rpm drives across the board.

    Now where is my powerbook G5 damnit!
    • by Ford Prefect ( 8777 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:22AM (#11527729) Homepage
      Now where is my powerbook G5 damnit!

      Tuesday, duh.... ;-)
    • by frankie ( 91710 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:53AM (#11528012) Journal
      I'm more glad they finally installed the right amount of RAM: 512MB on a single stick. First off, no Mac should ship with 256MB, especially not a "pro" machine. Second, last year's high-end models came with 2x256MB sticks, which means you lose half of it when you upgrade. Adding a 512MB stick (for 768 total) was severely value-deficient, and unfortunately 1GB SO-DIMMs are still at a nasty price premium.
    • Re:Dont forget (Score:3, Interesting)

      by for_usenet ( 550217 )
      You'll probably see a Freescale G4 CPU with an embedded memory controller before you see a G5 in one of these.

      One of the primary advantages of the G5 over the G4 was the memory bus speed, and also also the reason that most Pentium and Athlon chips were kicking the G4's ass ... However, if Freescale can harness this benefit (an on-die memory controller) without a lot of the other power-hungry features of the G5, we'd probably have not only a neat laptop CPU, but probably a chip that plays the same role aga
  • Not surprising that Apple would do this. They needed to keep the line fresh while they attempt the Herculean task of getting a super hot, server-oriented G5 chip into a PowerBook.
  • by karmaflux ( 148909 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:23AM (#11527731)
    Who still expected a G5 Powerbook any time this year. TOO MUCH HEAT, PEOPLE. I don't care how strong the Apple engineers' kung-fu is, there's just no way to cram the G5 into that small a form factor without melting the keyboard. Give it some time, and it'll happen. But not soon.
    • But.. but.. I heard from somebody who read some story on some website about some company having a 1x1 pixel placeholder jpg with "g5" in its title, so the G5 powerbook will be released very soon! ..Right?
    • Who still expected a G5 Powerbook any time this year. TOO MUCH HEAT, PEOPLE.

      But what about those pictures taken in the French elevator of the aluminum backpack and hose connected to that laptop... clearly this is the new prototype G5..
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:25AM (#11527749)
    Great, can't wait for the article about some guy trying to stuff a pc laptops guts into the 12" PB and claiming success even though you have to use an external optical drive and use two little wires to connect the battery that will no longer fit, but it works damnit!
    • by pmc ( 40532 )
      Well, they could do that I suppose, but the Apple case is rather big so it would rattle about. An IBM X40 is 10.5 X 8.3 X 0.95 against 10.9 X 8.6 X 1.18 for the 12in power book. It is also lighter. The X40 has a smaller volume than the Mac Mini - and includes a Screen, Keyboard, Touchpad and Trackpoint.

      Trying to fit an Apple 12" G4 powerbookin a X40 case would be tricky....

  • Sudden Motion Sensor (Score:5, Interesting)

    by SlashCrunchPop ( 699733 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:25AM (#11527751)

    Now every PowerBook G4 is equipped with Apple's Sudden Motion Sensor to help protect your most valuable asset: your data. The Sudden Motion Sensor senses change in axis position and accelerated movement. In the event of a drop or fall, the Sudden Motion Sensor instantly parks the hard drive heads so they wont scratch the disks on impact, lessening the risk of damage and improving your chances of retrieving valuable data. When the Sudden Motion Sensor senses your PowerBook is once again level, it unlocks the hard drive heads automatically.

    This sounds like a cool feature, can anyone confirm from personal experience that it really works?

    • by Timo_UK ( 762705 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:26AM (#11527773) Homepage
      ...and it invalidates the warranty instantly. Now they have proof that you have dropped it!
    • by frankthechicken ( 607647 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:33AM (#11527843) Journal
      Indeed I have. Today I experimented by dropping PowerBook G4's (PB G4) from various heights, hammering a nail into a piece of maple with the PB G4, and finally attempting to bat against the Australian bowling attack using the PB G4.

      From these test, I can only conclude that Apple is falsely advertising the merits of the Sudden Motion Sensor, in each and every case, not only was the data corrupted, the PB G4 broken beyond all recognition, but the most staggering result being the complete destruction of my bank account.

      Please take these experimental results as a note of severe caution when purchasing your next computer.
    • >can anyone confirm from personal experience that it really works?

      sure thing, just let me get hold of the new $1499 12" PB and when i let it drop from the second floor, i'll get back to you. :P

    • It works on an IBM thinkpad
    • Whodunnit first? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by gandell ( 827178 )
      Didn't IBM introduce this feature on their laptops a few months ago?
      • Yes. Which makes me slightly suspicious of Apple's claim in the press release that it is patent pending. Although it may come under some kind of cross-licensing deal IBM and Apple have - if so, I don't know whether it will transfer to the new owners of the ThinkPad brand.
        • Re:Whodunnit first? (Score:3, Informative)

          by Lars T. ( 470328 )
          Apple aims to patent fall-detecting iPod [com.com]

          The patent: [uspto.gov]

          An improved media player anda method for operating a portable computing device(e.g., media player) are disclosed. According to one aspect,

          a portable computing device is able to protect its disk drive when being subjected to undesired levels of acceleration . The portable computing device protects its disk drive by monitoring for such accelerations and operating to avoid usage of the disk drive during periods of acceleration. Through such protection,

    • by NetJunkie ( 56134 ) <`jason.nash' `at' `gmail.com'> on Monday January 31, 2005 @10:02AM (#11528095)
      It works. My Thinkpad T42P has it. If you move it too much you'll see the icon in the tasktray change and sometimes hear the drive park the heads. It is configurable so you can turn it off. If you more it a lot, say when I grab it off the coffee table quickly, some things slow down. Video will skip if it's not buffered enough, etc.

      It also adjusts to constant steady motion, like a car or train. It's pretty neat and I think a very worthwhile feature. I use my PB around the office going from place to place in the data center a lot. I'd like it on that.
    • by Niten ( 201835 )

      One of my roommate's professors was talking a little while ago about a similar motion-detecting feature in the IBM Thinkpads which was supposed to protect the hard drive in the event of a fall. According to whatever studies or experiments this professor cited, between the time it takes for the sensor to realize the computer had been dropped and the time it takes to park the hard drive, these things simply weren't effective for falls of under five feet or so.

      Does anybody have any (slightly more informed)

  • by SamSeaborn ( 724276 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:25AM (#11527753)
    I've been waiting forever for them to update the Mac mini.

    Come one! Get to it Apple people!

    ;-)

    Sam

  • I think this is a great feature to have. For those interested in such a feature on an older PowerBook (which I was), check out SideTrack [ragingmenace.com], software that will allow you to set the edge of your trackpad to be a scrolling area. Good on Apple to include this standard, and the two-finger idea seems neat.
    • I'd be careful of installing SideTrack. It's a kernel extension, and I found it to have a seriously detrimental effect on system stability (I needed to reinstall to fix it). Of the two other PowerBook users I know, one experienced the same thing (the other uses SideTrack and swears by it).
  • price drop (Score:5, Informative)

    by jxyama ( 821091 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:26AM (#11527771)
    prices dropped as well, by $100, i believe.

    12" used to be $1599, now it's $1499.

  • by Andy_R ( 114137 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:31AM (#11527831) Homepage Journal
    The 17" machine is wide enought to fit a full-sized keyboard, but it still comes with the same cramped minature one as the 12" machine has. I'd be far more likely to buy one if Apple fixed this.
    • I don't know what you're talking about. I've got a 12" Powerbook and the keyboard is Just Right(tm). I have reasonably average sized hands.
    • all PBs come with a "full sized" keyboard. have you even used one? almost all the keys are the same size as the standard keyboard. (the only exception is, afaik, is the return key on the 12" which is a bit shorter.) if you are talking about separate inverted-T arrow/home/end/pg up+down keys and/or numeric pad, then that's different.

      i think apple would like its user to be oriented at the center in relative to the monitor. that's why those extra keys aren't offered. but even 12" do not have "minature" (sic)

      • While the point about not sitting centrally is definitely valid, take a look at this picture of the 15" machine [apple.com] and compare it to the standard Apple keyboard [akamai.net]. The inverted T is half-height, the function keys are half height (and not all 15 are there), there is no numeric pad, no pageup/down/home/end/help/del block, the return is single height not double, the control alt, space and apple keys are smaller than usual, there is an extra key to the left of the spacebar and the gaps betwen all the blocks that I'
    • by frankie ( 91710 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:48AM (#11527972) Journal
      Um... the keyboard is NOT tiny. Hold a standard keyboard up against an AlBook, you'll see that the main keys are exactly the same width.

      Yes, I suppose on the 17" they could have gone wild and put in full-height arrow keys, maybe even a number pad. But the keyboard is already normal size.
  • Two-finger scroll (Score:5, Insightful)

    by American AC in Paris ( 230456 ) * on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:34AM (#11527853) Homepage
    Now there's a nifty little way to do one's scrolling with the trackpad--use one finger, it's a pointing device; two, and it behaves like a scroll wheel. If it works as advertised, it'll be a far cry better than the "scroll zone" trackpad hacks out there today...
  • Given how expensive new macs are, is there any resources for getting decently new ones used at a good price? I don't mean ebay, either (I've had too many bad experiences with them).
  • Handled with Care

    Now the 17-inch PowerBook G4 is equipped with Apple's Sudden Motion Sensor to protect your most valuable asset: your data. The Sudden Motion Sensor senses change in axis position and accelerated movement. In the event of a drop or fall, the Sudden Motion Sensor instantly parks the hard drive heads so they won't scratch the disks on impact, lessening the risk of damage and improving your chances of retrieving valuable data. When the Sudden Motion Sensor senses your PowerBook is once again
  • The Screens? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by LighthouseJ ( 453757 )
    Looking at the 17" model, it specifies the screen as having 1440x900. My Dell i8600 with WSXGA has a 15.4" screen (same display aspect ratio too) with 1680x1050. The 15" model has a 15.2" screen with 1280x854, if you want to compare as closely as possible. Is it just me or does Apple not seem to have the best deal here? Apple has been known as the machine to do graphics on but it doesn't lead the class as far as display resolution in a given area?

    I'm not trying to Troll or Flamebait here but it just do
    • Re:The Screens? (Score:5, Informative)

      by slamb ( 119285 ) * on Monday January 31, 2005 @10:03AM (#11528104) Homepage
      Looking at the 17" model, it specifies the screen as having 1440x900. My Dell i8600 with WSXGA has a 15.4" screen (same display aspect ratio too) with 1680x1050. The 15" model has a 15.2" screen with 1280x854, if you want to compare as closely as possible. Is it just me or does Apple not seem to have the best deal here? Apple has been known as the machine to do graphics on but it doesn't lead the class as far as display resolution in a given area?

      I think this is a deliberate choice. Apple seems to have the idea of an ideal DPI - see this page [apple.com], which says "After years of experience, Apple engineers have discovered the ideal resolution to display both sharp text and graphics -- a pixel density of about 100 pixels per inch (ppi)." If my trig is correct, a 1680x1050 screen with a diagonal width of 17" has a horizontal width of arccos(tan(900/1440)) * 17" ~= 13", and a DPI of 1440/13" ~= 110, so this PowerBook is already over their ideal.

      In the long run, Apple is clearly wrong - if you have high-resolution images and can scale them any way you like, there's no reason not to display that detail. But for now, scaling probably isn't a good idea. In addition to having to change all the software for it, you'd probably be upscaling slightly, at odd ratios. It would make the images look worse. And having more resolution but not rescaling just means that the icons are smaller and harder to see. I think Apple made the right choice for the short term.

      I'm using a 17" PowerBook right now, and for what it's worth, I'm fairly happy with the resolution.

    • Re:The Screens? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by illumin8 ( 148082 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @10:05AM (#11528126) Journal
      Looking at the 17" model, it specifies the screen as having 1440x900. My Dell i8600 with WSXGA has a 15.4" screen (same display aspect ratio too) with 1680x1050. The 15" model has a 15.2" screen with 1280x854, if you want to compare as closely as possible. Is it just me or does Apple not seem to have the best deal here? Apple has been known as the machine to do graphics on but it doesn't lead the class as far as display resolution in a given area?

      One thing that a lot of PC laptop users might understand is that smaller pixels is not always better. Apple sells to a lot of graphics and design professionals that are used to 100 dpi resolution, and that is the nice thing about Apple displays. They always maintain 100 dpi resolution across the board, no matter what size you buy. It's very important to note that a lot of applications (especially in Windows) don't scale fonts properly so viewing some things on a 14" screen that is 1600x1200 can be painful sometimes. I've marvelled at some of the Dell laptops that have very high resolution LCDs, but I don't think I'd want to work on one for an extended period of time. I think it would hurt my eyes after a while.
    • I help my coworkers and we all got Thinkpad T41s recently and they do 1600x1400 or something of that nature.

      90% of them immediately after getting their new laptop were upset/couldn't read/needed help fixing and then weren't happy with how it looked.

      Adjusting it down to 1024x768 or whatever they were comfortable with was fuzzy and looked like trash.

      reading 1600x1400 on a 14 - 15" screen is hard for them older folk, you know, people over 25 - 30.
  • by kurt555gs ( 309278 ) <kurt555gs@ovi.cBLUEom minus berry> on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:39AM (#11527909) Homepage
    I have a 12" PowerBook, I love it. I was just on Groklaw and PJ admited she uses a PowerBook.

    I would love a G5 laptop except for 2 things.

    1: Battery life. All that heat has to come from an energy source, so unless you have jumper cables hooked to a huge Cat Battery, the G5 oven will not last long.

    2: Heat. I have a Dual G5 PowerMac, and when CPU usage starts to go up, I hear all 6? 7? fans spooling up like some scene for the old movie "Strategic Air Command" getting a 50's SAC bomber ready for take off. This is not what I want in a lappy.

    Besides, how fast does a lappy need to be. I love my PowerBook, and I'll bet everyone that has a PowerBook will say the same thing. It is a product that is just right, it really is.

    Cheers

  • by NaughtyNimitz ( 763264 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:44AM (#11527942)
    Oh my god, i am still looking for that G5-spot while using my two fingers...
  • Also new... (Score:2, Redundant)

    - Optical digital 5.1 audio in/out on the 17"
    - Dual link DVI on the 17" (for 2560x1600 30" display support)
    - A new era: 512MB RAM stock on all models
  • Apple needs to increase the pixel density of the LCDs in the laptops. Make the 17" a 1600x1024 or something.

    I had the 17" (1440x900) for about a year and it was quite nice, but even that resolution felt constricting using the apps Apple markets around that PB (Final Cut Pro/Exp, DVDSP, Shake, etc).

    Incremental upgrades for the system, incrementally upgrade the display as well.
    • Re:Powerbook LCDs (Score:3, Informative)

      by ivan256 ( 17499 ) *
      Don't count on that happening any time soon.

      Apple still tries to appeal to the publishing and photo industries. They make a big deal about keeping their screens at 100 dpi no matter what the size or model.
      • Re:Powerbook LCDs (Score:5, Informative)

        by kuwan ( 443684 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @11:07AM (#11528816) Homepage
        An earlier post proved the following link: [apple.com]

        Best Resolution for Images and Words

        The quality of the pixels you see impacts how you use your computer. After years of experience, Apple engineers have discovered the ideal resolution to display both sharp text and graphics -- a pixel density of about 100 pixels per inch (ppi). Other vendors may offer a larger monitor, but with less resolution, so you end up with fewer pixels, or a smaller monitor with a high resolution that causes eyestrain and headaches. Apple's balanced 100 pixels per inch format is optimized for images, yet allows you to easily work with text in email, Safari and sophisticated type treatments in layouts.


        So that would be the reason why they don't make higher resolution displays.

        --
        It works. [wired.com]
        Free Flat Screens [freeflatscreens.com] | Free Mini Mac [freeminimacs.com]
  • This is the g5 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by darkmeridian ( 119044 ) <william.chuang@NOSPaM.gmail.com> on Monday January 31, 2005 @09:58AM (#11528051) Homepage
    Look at the AdBlock elements: one of the links on the page: http://switch.atdmt.com/action/apple_g5_powerbook

    Yup. Remember this thing about how there was going to be a new G5 Powerbook? Hehe.
  • The SMS (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Illserve ( 56215 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @10:02AM (#11528092)
    Nice idea and I hope it works.

    But it's the kind of gadgety feature I can imagine going bonkers and effectively shutting down your computer until you send it in for a refit.
  • by corporatemutantninja ( 533295 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @10:08AM (#11528153)
    I bought an aluminum G4 PowerBook 15" to replace my TiBook, mostly for the faster processor, backlit keyboard, and acceptable WiFi reception. But I still use the old unit sometimes, and whenever I do I'm immediately struck with how beautifully made it is. It's slightly smaller, the keyboard and trackpad feel nicer...it's really a design masterpiece. It just makes me happy to be using it. The new enclosure gets the job done but Jonathan Ives really took a step back with it.
  • 12" still crippled (Score:5, Informative)

    by Johnny Mozzarella ( 655181 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @10:16AM (#11528239)
    Apple still is crippling the 12 " PB by not including
    - Gigabit Ethernet
    - FireWire 800
    - backlit keyboard

    OK the backlit keyboard just looks cool but why can't they at least make these optional?

    I have a 15" but would have liked to have gotten the 12" if it had better specs. The only real advantage the 12" PowerBook has over an iBook is the dual screen capabilities. Even that can be hacked into the iBook.
    • by dcocos ( 128532 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @10:39AM (#11528482)
      I'm with you on the back lit keyboard, but as for calling it crippled, I'm not so sure, I personally don't know of any people who use GB ethernet. For me the key Powerbook specs are the DVD burner on the 12inch and that that the PB can drive DVI out so I can use it with my projector. After carrying around a 12in for a while the 15in seems big and heavy.
    • by benmhall ( 9092 )
      > The only real advantage the 12" PowerBook has over an iBook is the dual screen capabilities. Even that can be hacked into the iBook.

      You know, I was thinking that too, but it's just not the case. Here are the diffs:

      - Faster (1.2GHz to 1.5GHz on the 12")
      - Faster buss speed (100MHz vs 167, IIRC)
      - Faster, bigger HD (iBook's are only 4200RPM)
      - Better Video (32MB ATI9200 vs 64MB GeForce 5200 on the 12"PB)
      - Supported split-screen
      - Audio in
      - Better keyboard

      All told, these differences are worth the ~400CDN
    • by mbbac ( 568880 )
      The Ibook doesn't have:

      1.5GHz PowerPC G4
      512MB PC2700 (333MHz) DDR SDRAM
      NVIDIA GeForce FX Go5200 with 64MB of DDR SDRAM
      60GB Ultra ATA/100; 5400 rpm
      8x SuperDrive (DVD±RW/CD-RW) [optional]
      built-in Bluetooth 2.0+EDR
      GraphicConverter, OmniGraffle, OmniOutliner, QuickBooks for Mac New User Edition
      Mini-DVI to DVI adapter

      I bolded what I believe are the key advantages of the PowerBook.
  • by harlows_monkeys ( 106428 ) on Monday January 31, 2005 @12:38PM (#11529796) Homepage
    The Synaptics trackpad Apple uses supports scrolling, but Apple's software uses it in a mode that doesn't enable that.

    So I wonder if they actually have a new trackpad, or if they have simply updated their software?

    BTW, you can get third party drivers to enable the features that Apple isn't using, and more. For example, SideTrack [ragingmenace.com] gives you vertical and horizontal scrolling, corner taps for more buttons, and more.

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