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Apple updates PowerBooks, touts new technologies

The laptops have a sensor to protect the hard drive in case of accidents

January 31, 2005 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - Apple Computer Inc. today updated its PowerBook line with faster G4 processors, lowered prices and added two new patent-pending technologies: a "scrolling" TrackPad, and a Sudden Motion Sensor that works to stop hard-drive damage if the laptop is accidentally dropped.
But PowerBook fans won't see something many had hoped for: a G5 processor in the new lineup.
As is often the case, Apple officials declined to talk about the prospect of a PowerBook G5 today. But Dave Russell, senior director for portables and wireless at the company, reiterated comments made earlier this month that squeezing a G5 chip into a portable is "the mother of all thermal issues" for Apple. "It's that difficult," he said.
Russell and David Moody, vice president of worldwide Macintosh products marketing, were more forthcoming about the changes made to the company's overall line of professional laptops.
The top-end 17-in. PowerBook now sports a speedier G4 processor that clocks in at 1.67 GHz, marginally faster than the 1.5-GHz model it replaces. Apple's midrange 15-in. models now come with either the 1.5-GHz G4 chip or the faster 1.67-GHz processor as a build-to-order option. The entry-model 12-in. PowerBook now sports the 1.5-GHz chip as well.
All three models saw price cuts of at least $100 and got faster hard drives holding up to 100GB of data and spinning at 5,400 rpm -- faster than the standard 4,200-rpm drives used in most laptops. All PowerBooks now come with 512MB of RAM and, as in the last iteration, AirPort Extreme cards for 802.11g Wi-Fi networking.
The 15- and 17-in. models come with ATI Technologies Inc.'s Mobility Radeon 9700 video card, with as much as 128MB of video RAM available as an option on its 15-in. line. The 128MB card is standard on the 17-in. PowerBook and comes with Dual Link DVI, which allows that laptop to be used with the company's 30-in. Apple Cinema Display. (The 12-in. PowerBook continues with the Nvidia card with 64MB of VRAM.) And the lineup now includes a faster 8X SuperDrive that burns DVDs and CDs, and Bluetooth 2.0 wireless networking.

Prices for the revised PowerBooks range from $1,499 for the 12-in. version to $2,699 for the top-of-the-line model.
"What we've done is upgraded the configuration and pricing in the PowerBook G4 line," said Moody. "Faster processor, faster hard drives and lower prices, plus the iLife '05 application suite. For creative professionals, these are an essential new product."
The iLife suite is a set of applications Apple unveiled earlier this month for working with music,



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