
Click for Wireless Adapters and Bases!
| Accelerate Your Mac! Cats-n-Dogs Living Together by Alex Koyshman 8/29/98 |
|
Issue 4- What's up with this Imac, anyway?
Yes, network computer. This machine goes out of its way not to be a
standalone machine- It has built in 10/100BT ethernet, a 56K modem,
infrared serial, and USB. What it doesn't have is any removeable media-
Overkill on connectivity, but nill portability. From my perspective, this
is a rather odd combination to aim at the consumer market, who normally have
little need for connectivity beyond email but can use all the portable
storage they can get- just look at the success of the Zip drive in the
consumer sector! What it appears to be for me is some twisted, elitist
vision that is virtually dictated from Steve Jobs and Larry Ellison- Who
have about as much in common with Joe Consumer as President Clinton has with
Mother Theresa.
And herein lies the paradox. As a Network Computer, it misses the price
mark by a long shot- A Network computer needs only be able to connect and
run apps from a server- It needs to be cheap and unobtrusive. The iMac, by
contrast, is designed to demand attention, and is priced to cover the
expensive industrial design that is its casing. As a consumer product, its
a silly gamble- Why only include a single means of connecting peripherals
that is completely new and untested (USB)? would it really cost more money
to include a SCSI port? or an external VGA port (Which, incidentally, I read
is actually on the motherboard and accesible if you remove the case!!)
I am not at all opposed to a MacOs based network computer. Put them in a
6100 style pizza box with a small hard drive, price em at $699 without
monitor, and you can sell a buttload of them if properly positioned within
large enterprises, and I'm 100% convinced that even at that price-point they
would be profitable. As for an all-in-one consumer product, MacUniverse in
Los Angeles is selling the G3-233 All in one which has 3 PCI slots, 3 SDRAM
Slots, built in IDE and SCSI with the same 15" monitor for $1499. Its an
attractive, functional, expandable unit that I would have a MUCH easier time
justifying purchase of than an iMac. If it was priced at $999, it would
completely turn the whole PC price/performance ratio on its head- and
create a new breed of Prosumer Apple other manufacturers can only dream
about.
And they can still make it out of blue plastic.
I welcome all questions and comments at Back Issues:
|
Disclaimer: The opinions/comments expressed here are the author's alone, and do not necessarily represent those of the site publishers. |