PC style as important as Clock Speed 172
Anonymous Coward writes "According to this news, after iMac success, PC style is as improtant as megahertz. What do you guys (and gals) think? "
I'd have to agree, as I've owned some nice computers, but they were all eyesores.
Supposedly PC makers have gotten the message... (Score:1)
Spraypaint your computer! (Score:1)
Find it here: Dagmar's painting the computer -- a quick & dirty mini-HOWTO [airnet.net].
So hide it. (Score:1)
Get a nice terminal, and hide the ugly computer in the basement. Instant end to the looks purty vs. goes fast debate.
As for the person who complained that the styling of purty machines ages badly and gave the example of an old car...well, there's someone who's obviously never heard of people who put hours and hours into polishing "classic cars."
No Subject Given (Score:1)
Function over form defiantly.
Unfortunately, IRIX sucks... :/ (Score:1)
- A.P.
--
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promotional Ad
Style secondary to horsepower (Score:1)
Ye gods! Were you there?? o_O (Score:1)
Granted, it's not terribly important now, but let's not be rewriting history, shall we? Too Microsoftian, and really bad form for open source peoples
Style is important to some, but... (Score:1)
According to the posts here on
I think stylized computers are here to stay -- but not everyone will have one. It's kinda like cars. There's the Geo Metro (a $500 celeron system -- cheap but functional), racing cars/Indy 500 cars (custom built Pentium II 450 systems -- fast but not designed for the aesthetics), VW Bug (an iMac -- consumer oriented, more expensive than a Geo Metro, stylized), and the BMW (400 mhz Powermac G3 in a translucent case -- expensive, stylized, but not as fast or economical as a racing car).
On a different note, some people here are comparing their Pentium II systems to an iMac. Okay, a 233 mhz iMac isn't that great. But let's step back for a moment -- what does Apple offer to the geek crowd?
Today you can buy a 400 mhz G3 system [apple.com] (which is faster than a 450 mhz Pentium II system, according to the bytemark benchmark), Rage 128 graphics, Ultra2 SCSI, with up to a gig of memory. USB and firewire. Integrated 100base-TX networking. It can display on 2 to 4 monitors, if you happen to plug in more video cards. And it all happens to be in a stylized translucent case. That kicks ass!
And what can I run on this sweet machine? MacOS X Server [apple.com] aka Rhapsody aka OpenStep aka NeXTStep aka BSD 4.4. FreeBSD and OpenBSD and NetBSD users should rejoice! Unix users should rejoice! The fact that you can run BSD 4.4 (Rhapsody), MacOS 8.5, Redhat Linux for Intel [xlr8yourmac.com], and NT [connectix.com] on the same machine at the same time is pretty cool. When was the last time you could get Solaris or Linux bundled with your Compaq or Dell? When was the last time you got video/ethernet drivers for Linux/Solaris when you bought a video card or ethernet card? Well, Apple makes hardware and software that works under Unix. (And even open source unix -- MkLinux [apple.com] is mostly their doing) The fact that at least somebody in the mass market computing industry is trying to push this kind of technology (Unix) and philosophy (supporting open source) and aesthetics (translucent curved cases) should be reassuring.
Design is important! (Score:1)
Three years ago I had the idea of creating designer monitor/computer cases. Started to research it, but alas couldn't find the capital to start since runs on commercial plastic injection molders were fairly pricey.
But it is still a good idea. As computers are now integrated into the homeplace, it only stands to reason that custom colors/design will be important. And people will pay a premium for them. More proof? Look at snowboarders. You don't buy a new snowboard because the old one is obsolete, you buy one for the latest graphics.
A few graphic designers, a little capital (or a lot), and some saavy marketing...and bingo. Give me a yell, I'll help.
Open Source and Design (Score:1)
A quick follow-up to my last comment regarding design.
As Linux apps move onto the desktop, the open source community would be well advised to include/recruit graphic designers to help design GUI's.
A polished front end does wonders to make the user feel comfortable with the underlying technology.
who the hell cares? (Score:1)
Why do you care about how your computer looks? Computers are a tool not a decoration or a night light. Also the iMac looks stupid. I am also very sorry if you are so obsessed with the iMac that you have to make people thing your a total idiot and mentaly challanged to defend the stupid looking iMac.
cool (Score:1)
the BTW sounds really cool- Linux support anyone? Old hardware rules!
sgi knew it years ago... (Score:1)
Good looking case, Heavy duty case, and good hardware inside.
Apple has the looks. They fail on the heavy duty case, but almost everything does. They get a C for hardware inside. The powerPC is a nice chip, and I'm not knocking a lower power insides for those who don't need the greater power, I just don't think apple is that great with designing hardware. (mind you most PCs do worse)
Now if they would fix the OS, but all OSes suck. I'm told by those in the know that the pdp-10 didn't suck, pity they stoped making them in 1983. (Okay, where is that taken from. Kudeos if you can answer without violating the spirit)
who the hell cares? (Score:1)
but who *looks* at a computer? at work my workstation is shoved under my desk and I only see the monitor/kb/mouse. The servers are located in a small dark room downstairs and most people never see them.
at home, the system *has* to be in view (because the SCSI cable to the scanner isn't long enough for the system to go under the table)
of course, this whole thing reminds me of an ex (thankfully) roommate of mine. when moving in, he was hooking up his computer. I walked in to see what he was up to, and he said "So
so, I guess it depends. "fashion" cases are nice, but I wouldn't buy a computer because of one.
visuals, specs, & noise (Score:1)
However, I would gladly do without both style and high-end performance for a zero-noise machine. I suppose I could live with head-seek noise from the fixed-disk, but power-supply fans and cpu-fans bite the big one.
Intel and Microsoft developed the PC?!? (Score:1)
> colossus Intel Corp. and software giant
> Microsoft Corp. are due credit for developing
> the PC ``for the most of us,'' the importance of > design isn't lost on either of them.
Funny most histories of computing site Apple as having really developed the idea of the PC. And we all know how much Microsoft stole from Apple. And yet business people seem to have shorter memories than presidents...
sgi knew it years ago... (Score:1)
--Phil ("Linux sucks differently every time a kernel is released.")
Re:Of course it matters (to most) (Score:1)
``There will be a rush to design things that look a little bit cool, but that raises the question can you reach really low prices with offbeat designs and do you have the volume to justify the expense of the industrial design?'' Kunstler said.
Even if I like how look the iMac, the best thing that the designer put in the little pet was the handle. I hate the boxes that are heavy, bulky and ugly (Ex. Compaq servers) that lacks this handy case improvement. On the other hand, I liked the design of the old Acer Altos that got a handle, white case and an excellent design, making easy and safe to carry the server (if needed) from one room to another, so I don't understand what this guy is trying to say, if he is implying that industrial design doesn't matter, maybe he never opened a box, so he doesn't know how can industrial design make easier the service of the equipment.
From a consumer's viewpoint it's OK that the designers put more attention to the looks of the machines, and a IS guy would care more about how easy is to upgrade memory, change processor card, swap hard drives, cooling, etc. so he can gave a god service to his customers, and this depends of the job (mostly) of the industrial designers.
And, if you are paying hundreds of dollars for that boxes, at least they could make them look good.
Cute? (Score:1)
Sorry, but I don't want a cutesy-wutesy computer.
The idea that looks are important doesn't imply "cute".
What *I* want to see in computer design is a return the classic computer design: huge, imposing, and in it's best examples, frightening.
I want large, black towers. I want an ominous everpresent throbbing hum. I want blinking lights, that make it perfectly clear that the machine is thinking thoughts so far beyond your comprehension that you should be on your knees offering it baskets of fruit. I want quarter-inch tape reels spinning back and forth in a mesmerizing display of it's infernal machinations. I want to own a computer that looks like if you did something the least bit displeasing, it would make use of any electrical devices plugged in anywhere in your house to kill you.
But instead, we get transparent blue jellybeans. Sigh.
MegaHertz is ALL that matters (Score:1)
Slashdot readers are not like most computer users! (Score:1)
The dummer ones among you even say that you'd prefer function over form, thinking that you can't have both! Do you think a manufacturer is going to increase the price of a system because it looks nicer? Of course not! Competition won't let them! The whole idea is that ALL computers, regardless of capability or function, should look good.
--
Timur "too sexy for my code" Tabi, timur@tabi.org, http://www.tabi.org
Slashdot readers are not like most computer users! (Score:1)
--
Timur "too sexy for my code" Tabi, timur@tabi.org, http://www.tabi.org
Post-purchase styling (Score:1)
--
Kevin Doherty
kdoherty+slashdot@jurai.net
Of course it matters (to most) (Score:1)
Also, think of the standard homeowner. Do they want an f-ugly beige computer rectangular box sitting in the den/living room or do they want one that looks 'cool' and matches the couch/carpet/wallpaper?
Does it matter to everyone? Of course not... many of us on slashdot probably don't even have the cover on the case most of the time... but I do remember a very popular slashdot article earlier this year about different ways to paint a case.
Imac Style Will Age Badly (Score:1)
Trendy quickly becomes passe.
my two kopeks
chrome it (Score:1)
From a business stand point... (Score:1)
who the hell cares? (Score:1)
Now if I could just find one of those very rare Microsoft Natural Keyboards in BLACK, I'd be all set.
The Priesthood - Right on. (Score:1)
iMac sales are a scam! no one is buying them (Score:1)
What is probably fluffed up are the research figures showing how many buyers are first time computer buyers.....
You want classy cases? (Score:1)
Take a look at Great Expectations [cda-ltd.com]. They make furniture-quality wooden computer cases and accessories.
Doug Loss
Or... (Score:1)
If you can't afford Great Expectations, try Wood Computer Cases [rwebsite.com]. They print high-quality photos of woodgrain on regular cabinets.
Doug Loss
size matters most (Score:1)
Slashdot users and lack of style. (Score:1)
space Arks. Space Ark A. You see we are building
them because a giant sun eating space goat is
going to destroy our galaxy.
Where can I get an O2? (Score:1)
Form follows function (Score:1)
Agreed, for many people (Score:1)
The iMac isn't up to the standards of bleeding edge types, but if I were buying a computer for a kid going off to college (maybe not a CS major)I'd certainly consider it for the ease of moving it in and out of dorms.
Agree, kinda (Score:1)
Computers will be the same way in years to come.
I have an ugly G3 minitower, but I cover the thing in punk-rock stickers, so it ends up looking good.
who the hell cares? (Score:1)
Whenever I get computers I always end up covering them with stickers (usually obscure punk-rock bands) or something like that, just to lively the thing up.
I don't know cars, so I care how a car looks. I do know computers, so I don't care how they look. I think it pretty much works like that, and as computers get more mainstream, we're gunna see alot more boxes designed to appeal to the eye.
Aesthetics (Score:1)
If the hardware looks nice, and isn't proprietary, I'd buy it, sure. If it has a curved, molded CD drive or some oddball motherboard size, screw it.
I don't think most of us function over fashion types necessarily WANT an ugly box; it's just that we have seen what most of these pretty boxes are like on the inside.
Just like many don't want a GUI that takes all of their RAM and CPU cycles, we don't want a conversation piece that has the cpu soldered to the board or worse.
I hate the way Intel machines look (Score:1)
I'd love to have something ~small~, at least as a head.
Beige is ugly? (Score:1)
I buy an iMac, but I want to use my old printer [oops...well, have to buy a network box for the printer to use with an iMac.] My old Apple printer, of course, is beige...my iMac is not--Aigh!! Throw that damned laser printer out! It's ugly!
Being the neutral color that is it, what is the problem? It doesn't clash with anything, so why do people think it stands out?
I'd wager that 90% of the fridges/freezers out there are beige or white--so, what's the deal? People generally don't think too hard about the guts of one of these appliances...but in general they come in one basic color. I also question the notion that computers are becoming a commodity. In a sense, they are, but the internals of a computer ARE what define the subjective experience of it. It's great that I can show it to my friends and say "Ain't that great! Blends in with the curtains", but if it is a pain in the ass to use, what good is it to me?
And, tell me the truth--who wants translucent green? I would love to see a room where translucent green 'fits', but beige does not.
Personally, I don't care what Mac does. If you get a Mac, you are certainly going to know that you are buying a proprietary box, anyway. If you bought a standard PC, you would know that you could go anywhere and order parts for it. Buying a proprietary system will guarantee that you will have to order non-standard parts for it. Instead of getting the 50cent faceplate, you will have to order, direct from Apple, the $20 'cranberry' faceplate. Want to order a DVD-RAM drive in Cranberry? Oops..sorry, can't do that.
I worked in the computer retail trenches for years, and some of Schteve's thoughts are accurate--your average MAC user is usually not going to understand what is inside the box, anyway. But a couple of years down the road, when you explain to people that they can't run X software because they didn't get enough RAM when they bought the machine, they get confused and feel like you deceived them, tricking them into buying an inferior product. Do customers ever come back in the store to say "I simply LOVE the computer you sold me. It looks splendid sitting next to the sofa!" No, they come back in irritated at you for selling them a crappy product, and think they are entitled to a refund.
Easy Open Case = Stolen Components! (Score:1)
Is it just me or am I the only one that thinks making it harder for your co-workers to unceremoniously 'borrow' components is a Bad Thing(tm)?
looks, feh ... what about the noise? (Score:1)
For example, I gladly forego 7200RPM drives for 5400RPM drives which are quiet (IBM Deskstar's are great). It's a speed tradeoff, but one I readily make.
I like the look of Corel's Netwinder. I like the planned specs and the functionality of the LC. But if it's got a noisy fan and disk, I'm passing, no matter how cheap they make it.
Slashdot users and lack of style. (Score:1)
So since they are all the same how do they distinguish themselves? Easily *style*. How many of you have ever spent significant time in front of a NeXT? Steve Jobs recognized way back in 91 that if you make something visually appealing as well as having great utilitarian value then you can make something that will last long past its usefulness. SGI and sun have done the same... whereas most people with PeeCees want towers they hide under the desk, workstation owners are proud about the machine they have on their desk. Serious computers users do care about style.
And the common user? Who are they? They are the 99.99999% of the population that will never read (or care to read) a site like slashdot. They are the people who just want a computer that they can send email on, view the web, make pretty graphs and do taxes. You do not need a PII 350Mhz for this. Microsoft is the reason you do. The point is just *like* a car... if it does what you need then style is damn important.
Slashdot users and lack of style. (Score:1)
Coming soon on slashdot! Reading Comprehension!!
How about perspective? (Score:1)
Of *course* people who read
The fact that aesthetics are so important leads me to believe that bringing Linux and other Open Source software to the masses will require bringing it to the clueless, and not the other way around (as many people would like to think).
JB
screw the appearance, unless... (Score:1)
I'm not sure that's "style", however: if they were black with purple polka-dots instead of that blood red color, I wouldn't care. I'd take Ugly and Functional over Cute anyday.
And anyway, the non-Mac crowd desiring aesthetics as well as function has always had those monitor-cover things, spray paint, and mousepads, right? What more could they want?
Hardware as part of the decor? (Score:1)
oh that reminds me: if style is so important (over function) why aren't more people using those AC adapter "networks" (by intelogis or something like that) vs ethernet? Sure I hate mega cables too (cause I haven't drilled all the holes and I trip over them), but speed is just a WEE BIT more important than appearance.
Form versus function, ad nauseum... (Score:1)
As such, certainly visual appeal and functional design are sure to become more influential factors in choosing a PC than they have ever been before. But my question is, why only now, and in particular, why has the iMac triggered this media blitz (which is sure in turn to trigger new product lines from everyone under the sun, who will say they all had it under development anyway)?
PC users have cried out against their cases for years. If those of us who build our own machines weren't screaming about the ugliness of beige, surely we were complaining to each other about the difficulty we had with working (physically) in our machines, the odd tools often required, and even the injuries we had sustained (no one who's done any sort of PC maintenace extensively has escaped some level of personal injury, ranging from scrapes and bruises to the deaded "slot bite" which results from inadvertenly inserting a finger through a case expansion slot and attempting to retreive it).
In fact, years ago PC makers took a great deal of effort to make it damn near impossible to work on your machine. And Apple lead the pack. In high school, I once had to repair a Mac in newspaper class because the school system lacked the funding to call a certified technician. Not only was it put together with torx screws, but they were so deeply seated as to require an obscure driver (luckily the same sort of driver is sold at auto stores for replacing headlamps in automobiles). IBM also contributed to the nonsense by putting together all of their earlier home systems (especially all the microchannel ones) with screws capped by a trademarked nonstandard head design, much like the gamebit screws which close Nintendo systems and cartridges.
While I'm happy that in the past several years, "screwless" PC cases such as those made by Enlight have seemed to dominate the market, and proprietary systems like Dell [dell.com]'s now come standard with easy open cases which facilitate adding peripheral cards and internal devices, I do not share the media's apparent bliss over the iMac inspired "form over function" design revolution at all, because aside from it's transparent plastic gumball appeal, the iMac case represents a step backward in usability.
Now granted, that's part of the iMac's purpose, and the Macintosh mentality in general - make it pretty, make it easy, make it simple, I don't want to know how to work inside it or configure it myself (right down to the single button mouse). But is this sort of design implementation really what PC consumers want?
Take the bloated looking latest generation proprietary machines you see at Comp USA and Circuit City these days. You know, the latest line from Compaq, Gateway, et al. Large, heavy cases covered in pretty plastic shells which bend and buckle when you try to pick the machine up and move it, feeling more like packaging material than sturdy construction. And look at the way the plastic elements of these cases "snap" together, rnedering them useless if a single plastic bar should bend, warp or break off (versus a screw hole which you could at least attempt to re-tread).
Perhaps, this overhyped new design evolution will include remedies to such existant PC problems as well as relief from the ever boring beige regime we have all become far too sickened of, but I am skeptical that this will happen. Personally, I'll stay where I am for now, with my screwless Enlight tower, spray painted black by hand.
SAVE THE BATS,
-Khyron
Painting Your Case Is Cool! (Score:1)
Northeast USA Computer Show Schedule
Imac Style Will Age Badly (Score:1)
Make it work, and hide it.. better than IMAC (Score:1)
Re: The average Idiot - Techno-elite at its best (Score:1)
At the risk of starting an off-topic debate, IIRC a screw hole acts as a stress raiser - it's possible a crack can propagate from there. In layman's terms, cutting a hole in a piece of polycarb screws up its excellent material properties. The sort of damage we're talking about would come from a totally different failure mechanism to being hit by a bullet.
Just my two penn'orth.
it's about time.. (Score:1)
I want something that looks as destinctive on the outside as my window managers and color schemes look on the inside.
Besides, computers are a lot like cars. Nobody wants to spend a lot of money on one and not have it look good, or at least look different than everything else on the road. Why do you think the new VW Bug is selling like crazy? It's because it doesn't look exactly like every other car out there.
incorrect (Score:1)
The first production PET was shown in June and the first TRS-80s were delivered in August. Both come after the launch of the Apple ][.
Thus, Apple ][ is the first.
Source: http://web.islandnet.com/~kpols son/comphist/comp1977.htm [islandnet.com]
Make it work, and hide it.. better than IMAC (Score:1)
Honestly, if they would improve the design so that it hides most of the computer I think more people would be happy. Basically all you need is your monitor, keyboard, and mouse around the bulk of the time. Maybe a little box with the removable drives available...
Instead we will probably get stuck with Chia-Computers...
.
Another take... what I want in a new PC (Score:1)
First off, a PTG flat screen (plastic-that-glows or similar technology - no CRT). Some flat panel speakers (once the quality of sound gets even better). Having a non-attached keyboard and pointing device for jobs requiring them. Otherwise voice control the damn-thing from across the room.
Removable storage? Case? The case should either be in the audio rack with the rest of my electronics, or buried behind/under the desk. Access to removable storage could be in the case if it were in a audio rack environment (IOW - a properly designed machine hooked up to a network (or internet) really has little need for constant access to removable storage. Add a CD jukebox and your all set.
Eventually to make cases much more customizable we have to ditch PCI cards. Perhaps a bigger PCCard as used by laptops that does not require the case to be opened and use a common edge connector. (something the side of a CD case...)
Just some ding-a-ling ideas..
Cool looking boxes would be nice (Score:1)
Yeah, I know that I can break out the paint and get artistic on my machine but I am not a painter, or designer so what I would get is a box that looks like its had paint splatted all over it.
I know this message has gotten pretty passionate "who gives a flying **ck how it looks!" responses but come on if VA Research started making radically cool looking machines everyone would cheer.
Also, please consider the fact that most big time commercial machines have very similiar innards and comparing them is pointless. They are all the same. There are a few noticable exceptions like VA Research that makes high quality machines from the very best parts. Still, whether it is Compaq or Packard Hell it is all pretty much the same under the hood. You can buy a comparable machines and find the same sort of parts in each.
My point is that this is a way for a good company to set itself apart in a big world of HW providers and I am amazed that nobody has thought about this sooner.
Oh, great (Score:1)
Me: "Can I get get it with a SCSI controller?"
Salesman: "Uh, I dunno. But you can get it in blue."
Lowest commom denominator (Score:1)
important when your talking about computer users
that are in the lowest common denominator. People
who want/need to do serious work on their computer
eg. developers care about what their computer can
do, not about how attractive it looks. (Unless
of course you horny as hell
ps. If you want to flame me on this at least post
something intelligent.
who the hell cares? (Score:1)
Sorry bud, but PCs have been able to boot from CD for quite some time now. El Terito (mmmmm... nachos) standard or somesuch thing. Floppys are cheap and ubiquitous to don't expect them to dissapear soon.
Style matters, even to /.'ers (Score:1)
Considering the number of replies to "Ask Slashdot: keyboard spraypainting tips wanted" [slashdot.org], I'd say that even /.'ers care about aesthetics in their computers.
Another example, the 20th Aniversary Macintosh. Everything about the TAM, the style, the Bose sound system, the "concierge service", and the $7500 price tag were targetted at wealthy computer users with a sense of style. However, it wasn't until the price slipped down to around $3,000 that demand became so high you couldn't get your hands on one. By this time, the G3s were already available while the TAM was still running a PPC 603e.
The question isn't if people care about how their computers look. The question is, how much are they willing to pay? My roommate purchased a TAM then, and made a conscious decision to pay for style over performance.
Beige? (Score:1)
What I look for in a computer case is lots of room, and edges that won't slice my fingers open when I try to pick the thing up. (Not that I've bought a whole computer all from the same place in the last 6 years or anything, but I'm quite fussy about what cases I buy.
Re: (Score:1)
There are other colours besides beige? (Score:1)
On the other hand, a computer is a productivity tool, so I don't think creativity is as important as performance. It's a great bonus (In particular, getting your computer tower custom painted looks amazing, woos chicks and gets you big pay raises) but I wouldn't sacrifice much for it.
So, in summary, case painting, handles and doors would be excellent but integrating the monitor into the case or compromising the available number of drive bays are big turnoffs IMHO.
Style? (Score:1)
Maybe computers will start showing up in furniture stores. You could purchase a computer that wouldn't clash with your drapes. Or maybe get one with an artificial wood grain to match that late 19th century desk in your grandfather's office. 8-)
It won't catch on.
Style Above All Else!! (Include carpel tunnel) (Score:1)
There's an old cliche: Form follows function.
Easy Open Case = Stolen Components! (Score:1)
1, 2, 3, 4, 4 and a wheel... (Score:1)
Hardware as part of the decor? (Score:1)
wired the house. Neat little wallports on the
wall look just like phone jacks - very neat, and
don't aggrevate the YL.
You should see my macheeeen..... (Score:1)
I think a full tower IS good looking (Score:1)
I think its a work of art. iMacs look cheesy, in my mind..
The average Idiot (Score:1)
But I am not the average consumer. The average consumer is an idiot. I feel bad that they are being exploited by apple into buying the imac because it has many inherant faults. I always tell new users to get something other then an imac because they can get 5 times the worth for a much cheaper cost. Sure it won't look straight off the jetsons, but it will cost you 500 bucks less, and if something goes wrong with it, i could fix it. Not be scared to crack the plastic case putting a screw back in. Hey I could even send you a file on a floppy and you could read it. Amazing.
I see apple's motives, we live in a society where people plug the power strip into itself and wonder why nothing works. You expect this kind of person to know what parts to purchase and put a computer together, then install debian?
I have nothing against stylistic computers, there is nothing wrong with that. But when you are stripping components and features, charging more for it, and then "making it look pretty." That is just a 10 on the lame meter when your target audience is idiots.
Ugly (Score:1)
I want my computer to be HUGE ugly and minimal.
When I got my latest computer i ordered it in the largest box they had. I have enough free space inside there to put the Netwinder inside it.
I love high vibration CD-ROM readers, you know the ones that cause your neighbors to seek shelter under desks when you stick a CD in?
Why doesn't anybody make a computer for me? Put dry-ice(hmmm...pentium nuetralizer?)...and puffers so that it blows smoke. anyways, i'm getting off topic
it's about time.. (Score:1)
the thing that is bad about the imac is that it is pawning off an inferior computer for styling to a target audience that doesn't realize the importance of what future trends will bring. if we see the death of the real computer to little nice dinky machines that don't even have a real operating system, and to get a real computer you'll have to pay 10,000 bucks, don't come whining to me about it. I warned you.
the imac is only furthering the market split. I think we should be spending more time educating the masses instead of providing an easy way out. so they don't WANT to learn about computers? oh well tough meat for them because they are the way of the future. i didn't expecially WANT to learn algebra back in highschool. but i'm glad i took it now. providing the masses with an 'idiot-tool' will only further split the market and end up how i described it above.
the friendly little imac is a dangerous trend in my eyes. not for what it is right now, but for what it represents.
Imac Style Will Age Badly (Score:1)
Put this up as a web page! (Score:1)
yes linuxPPC is easy to set up...uhh...think about it? Apple is very closed when it comes to hardware. there really arn't that many options and so setting up drivers is cake since all G3s are shipped with the same specs for the most part. yet another reason why PCs are more open.
it's about time.. (Score:1)
If you had correctly read my argument you would have seen that I wasn't calling the macos a fake OS...or the imac a fake computer. No you had to extort that information from what I said like the poor reader you are. I clarify for you what I said in different, more easy to understand words.
The iMac represents a future trend that is leading to a market split. In which you have computers that are real computers, and computers that are "terminals"
let us analyse that statement. That means the market split does NOT exist yet. that means the imac is NOT a terminal. What it represents will LEAD to such a split. If you don't see this then I can't help you out much.
I am all for diversity. I love computers with style. They arn't my first priority since I don't really stare at the box much, but they are a good thing. That isn't what I'm talking about however. I'm talking Apple and Microsoft's goal to create miniture terminal computers in the future that are built into your stove or what not. When the average person is able to get such an embedded device that reads emails and prints out term papers, who'll need to buy a big full machine anymore? The hardware industries won't be driven to make full computers for cheap anymore. Long gone will be the days when you can get a middle line computer for 1000 bucks. Gone will be the days that you can get a relatively top of the line computer for 2500. Who needs those when you have everything you want in an embedded computer? Right?
Well that is a wrong philosophy because all of the geeks and hobbiest like me out there will still want a computer they can tear apart and work with. To get such a machine we will have to pay huge amounts of money because that will be an extremely vertical market. the only reason that computers are as cheap as they are now is demand. If the demand drops everybody will have to charge more. This really isn't tha complicated and i'm surprised it completely flew over your head.
GIVE ME A BREAK (Score:1)
BTW, mhz is a simply the top factor for me a buy a computer. But if it looks nice thats a plus. but if my performance lags, screw looks.
hmmmm
GIVE ME A BREAK (Score:1)
Anyone remeber NeXT style? (Score:1)
who the hell cares? (Score:1)
Now thats a stupid comment. Why the hell should I have to unscrew things just to get at the inside. Give me one damn reason why computers should be complicated. (Apart from keeping people like you in a job)
>so ummm, you give them green and take away the floppy drive? good choice
The last time I used a damn floppy was when I needed to load Winblows with VirtualPC on to a new disk image. It is not our problem that PC's are too dumb to be able to boot from a CD, or just about any damn storage device you can plug into a mac.
If PC's ever finally do get the abilty to boot driectly from a CD, then you will see floppy drive dissappear from them to.
Floppy drives are dead! End of story. Give me an ORB any day!
Imac Style Will Age Badly (Score:1)
NOT!!!!
Apple will be the one creating those "sleek, flat-screen monitors and cases the size of a casette player" - which they already created 6 years ago.
May I remind you of the "Apple Station" a prototype that never saw the light of day under Mike Splindler. It was sleek, it had a flat screen, it was small, I had a telephone built in and had wireless everything! NO WIRES! - apart from one power cable to the CPU and the phone line to the CPU. Even the damn printer was wireless!
Apple is the only company with the balls to "think different". If the the iMac had not come along, computers would still be beige! As always, the industry follows Apple!
Make it work, and hide it.. better than IMAC (Score:1)
If you think about it, it is basically the same thing.
who the hell cares? (Score:1)
less noise more important! (Score:1)
I'm waiting for the hardware industry to take ergonomics issues seriously and develop hardware that actually improves how we are working with computers.
As long as they hold a large ammount of stoof! (Score:1)
iMacs (Score:1)
Case in point: 20th Anniversary Mac (Score:1)
iMac sales are a scam! no one is buying them (Score:1)
*snicker*
Considering that I'm currently writing this on an iMac running linuxppc, that's sort of a non-argument...
Style IS (WAY) more important than CPU MhZ (Score:1)
Let's! Can I count with you? Oh, goody!
>13" monitor... really guys, don't you know bigger IS better...
I'm pretty sure Apple sure does. After all, they included a 15" monitor with my iMac...damn nice one, too. Very clear, very crisp. Not the best one ever made, but definitely not the worst.
>The mentality of the average PC owner is that
>their computer is a progressive fun adventure
>that only get better as you add nifty toys to it...
Sure is. After all, I can add another monitor with a cool little gizmo called the iPort [griffintechnology.com] that lets me use an external monitor. It's about $79, and from what I hear, it works great. Also has a couple of serial ports, so you can hook up non-usb and ethernet printers.
>Heat disipation with regard to cutting edge
>technologies.
Nonissue. The iMac isn't *targeted* at those who continually tinker with the innards of their computers. That's what the G3 minitowers are for.
>limited options... non-standard (no, USB isn't
>standard yet) internal equipment
It *isn't*? Wow...then all the PCs, new Macs with usb ports, and all the usb devices I've seen (including the usb Zip drive and scanner currently attached to my iMac) must have been figments of my imagination. Same with all the IDE hard drives in existance...after all, the iMac uses one, and if the iMac uses one, it can't *possibly* be a standard...
>Asthetics... I DON'T LIKE THE IMAC DESIGN THEME...
Then GET OVER IT. Unclench that lump of coal up your ass. Hope some other manufacturer makes a cooler-looking case. Or make one yourself. Lots of folks (myself included) seem to like it, otherwise Apple wouldn't have sold so many of the machines.
>Thanks for providing a case that doen't allow me
>easy access to hack and thinker with the hardware
Since you'll never own an iMac, why in blazes is this such an issue? If you want a computer you can open up and stick new stuff into, buy a PC, a PowerMac tower, or build your own. I'm sure you're capable of this, else you probably wouldn't be reading
The iMac isn't meant to be a work-in-progress. It isn't meant to have other bits of hardware kludged into its innards. It's meant to be a self-contained, inexpensive, speedy little machine, which just happens to look cool.
>The list goes on and one... IMacs just plain suck
>and represent a last ditch marking ploy from a
>company on it's well diserved trip down the down
>the tubes.
Oh, of course. Definitely a last ditch marketing ploy from an ailing and decrepit (and yet, quite profitable...hmm) company which sold record numbers of iMacs and G3s in the last few months. Yep, Apple's really gasping for air and clutching at straws. Purely a fluke, no doubt about it.
And if you're interested, I have this bridge for sale...very nice view of Brooklyn.
and CRAYS!!! (Score:1)
but there CRAYS are *SO* much better then HP/IBM/compaq/etc
they should sell cases!!!!!!!!
Purty colors! (Score:1)
Seron,
Proprietary (Score:1)
Americanism (Score:1)
Good old American-centric ignorance...