The Apple year in preview
Macworld UK - Not even Steve Jobs knows everything that will occur in the world of Macs in 2007. But that needn't stop anyone from making predictions of their own. In that spirit, we brought together a panel of Macintosh watchers -- Macworld senior editor Christopher Breen, Macworld contributing editor Adam C. Engst, John Gruber of the Daring Fireball blog, MacUser contributor and Chicago Sun-Times technology and computer columnist Andy Ihnatko, and John Moltz of the Crazy Apple Rumors Site -- to tell us what they think 2007 will bring.
What will be the most significant new hardware to appear in 2007?
Breen: Other -- as in hardware other than computers. This could include an iPhone, a widescreen iPod or the iTV.
Engst: I'd like to say iTV, but it's as yet unclear how large of an impact it will have, given that many people are clearly happy with watching video on their Macs or iPods already, and making a better connection between a Mac and a TV may simply not be sufficiently compelling. AirPort Express is cool, but it didn't change the world. Were I to venture further out on the limb, I'd predict new hardware designs for at least the iMac and the MacBook Pro, with the Mac Mini and the Mac Pro potentially in line as well.
Gruber: An Apple-branded mobile phone. I'm torn between whether such a device will be its own new brand, or whether it'll be branded as an iPod with phone capabilities. But I think 2007 is the year this will happen, and I think it's going to be big news.
Ihnatko: Apple's wireless iPods. The iPod is the tail that wags the dog; any change that Apple makes to the iPod winds up in the pockets, belts and purses of the entire world, and unlike Zune and its "Why even bother?" Wi-Fi features, Apple will make the iPod's wireless features compelling, relevant and instantly transformative.
Moltz: The Apple iPhone, as it will have only one button.
What will be the most significant new software to appear in 2007?
Breen: The software that manages Other -- a new version of iTunes.
Engst: Leopard, without question. Just the features that have been previewed so far would be sufficient to give it the nod, and Steve Jobs implied there were more features coming as well. That said, Leopard faces the same challenge that Tiger faced and, for many people, failed to meet. If, like me, you find Spotlight useless, can't figure out anything useful to run in Dashboard,
Apple

- Connecting to the Cloud with F5 and VMware VMotion
- F5 and VMware partner to enable live application and storage migrations between datacenters and clouds, over short or long distances. In essence, the...
- ROI of Application Delivery in Virtualized Environments
- Learn how load balancing Application Delivery Controllers (ADC) can substantially reduce expenses in traditional and virtualized architectures with a fast ROI. F5 customers...
- BIG-IP LTM VE-The Virtual ADC Your Physical ADC Has Been Missing
- Although software-based Application Delivery Controllers (ADCs) running within virtual machines have been available for some time, the F5 BIG-IP Local Traffic Manager (LTM)...
- EMA Report: NetScaler #1 in Customer Satisfaction
- Learn more.
- Gartner Report: Load Balancers are Dead
- Read More. All Applications White Papers
- Guiding iPhone into the business world
- Watch now.
- Microsoft Exchange or Google Apps? Govt agency goes Google
- James Ferreira, CIO for the New Mexico State Attorney General's office, had a choice to make to support his growing organization: upgrade to...
- How to cut software management costs and avoid over-spending in the future
- View now!
- A Step-by-Step Guide to Building Virtualization Maturity and Maximizing Virtualization Outcomes
- View now!
- Run Your IT Help Desk in the Cloud
- View now! All Applications Webcasts