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Update: Apple unwraps new iMac G5s at Paris show

August 31, 2004 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - Apple Computer Inc. will begin shipping its new iMac G5 desktop computer worldwide in mid-September, the company's top marketing executive said today.

Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, showed off the new machine during a keynote speech at the start of the Apple Expo trade show in Paris. The screen of the new iMac is suspended above the desk like that of its predecessor, but its processor, hard disk and DVD drive are concealed behind the screen rather than in the base.

"A lot of people are going to be asking, 'Where did the rest of the computer go?'" Schiller said.

Three models will be available. The top-of-the-range model has a 20-inch LCD screen with a resolution of 1,680 pixels by 1,050 pixels. It contains a 160GB hard disk drive, an optical drive for burning DVDs and a 1.8GHz G5 processor, and will sell for $1,899.

The new machines have two FireWire 400 ports, three USB (Universal Serial Bus) ports, audio line-in, optical audio-out, video out, modem and Ethernet connections at the back of the screen. The speaker grills are concealed in the base of the screen and bounce sound off the desktop up to the user.

The other two models have 17-inch screens, 80GB hard-disk drives and optical drives that can burn CDs and read DVDs. The 1.6GHz model will sell for $1,299 and the 1.8 GHz model for $1,499.

Customers choosing the optional Wi-Fi wireless networking and Bluetooth wireless peripherals need only plug in a power cord into the back of the machine and begin surfing the 'Net, Schiller said.

The power button is also hidden around the back, the only raised feature on the rear surface and exactly opposite the "sleep" light on the front "so you know where to find it," Schiller said. "We like to joke that the back of our computer is more beautiful than the front of anyone else's computer."

The machines contain a Geforce FX5200 Ultra 64MB video card connected to an AGP 8x graphics bus, and can hold up to 2M bytes of 400MHz DDR RAM, connected via a 600MHz front-side bus. The hard drives use Serial ATA (Advanced Technology Attachment). The slot-loading optical drive is mounted vertically, top-right of the machine, with the processor bottom left, cooled by three computer-controlled fans. "We measured the iMac running," Schiller said, "and it's quieter than a whisper."

The 20-inch model will sell for $300 less than the current, less powerful model.

"It really is a breakthrough in personal computing,"


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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