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Ars Technica Gives Intel iMac a Favorable Review

Ars Technica Gives Intel iMac a Favorable Review

by , 2:15 PM EST, January 17th, 2006

Ars Technica's Eric Bangeman has posted a review of the new Intel-based iMac, which was unveiled by Apple last week and is available now. While it offers the same exterior as its G5 predecessor and typical users will see little difference in performance, Mr. Bangeman wanted to address how well native Intel applications run compared to software that must make do with Rosetta, an emulator that translates PowerPC-based code to Intel-based code on the fly.

"Rosetta works as advertised, and that itself is good news," Mr. Bangeman wrote. "While you'll see a performance hit on applications like Photoshop and graphics-intensive games like UT2K4 and Quake will be all but unplayable until Intel-native versions ship, Rosetta is good enough for most uses." His review offers several benchmarks that match the new iMac's performance against the iMac G5 and a Dual 2GHz Power Mac G5 in a variety of areas, from ripping CDs into iTunes to a "Photoshop bake-off."

He added that "Apple has done an outstanding job porting their own apps to the new architecture. All that's left after the Pro apps [come out in March] is the longstanding need to FTFF (fix the f****** Finder)."

The reviewer also attempted to install Windows on the iMac, a task that Apple has said it won't stop but won't assist with, either. He wrote: "The biggest problem is that with the exception of the Itanium version, Windows XP doesn't support Extensible Firmware Interface, which is what the new iMac uses in lieu of Open Firmware on the PowerPC platform and BIOS in the x86 world."

However, he did try to boot from a Windows XP installer CD as well as a Windows Vista installer DVD, both of which failed. He also tried to boot directly into the Extensible Firmware Interface but was unable to do that either. He does expect, though, that "it's going to be a matter of time before Windows is running on the iMac, especially Vista." A fellow Ars Technica writer will be helping him with this task, and he solicited feedback from knowledgeable readers. If he can get a version of Windows to run on the computer, he promised to update the review with his findings.

On the negative side, Mr. Bangeman dinged the computer for not having the user-serviceable parts of the original iMac G5. Apple changed that feature with subsequent revisions of the machine. He also liked Front Row but felt that it "seems like a bit of a work in progress." For example, shared music libraries are unavailable when using iTunes through the application.

Observer Comments

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Close Name:ireid2k Posts: 125 Joined: 07 Apr 2003
Subject: You'd better see this!

This guy took it apart!

http://mactree.sannet.ne.jp/%7ekodawarisan/imac_intel/imac_intel01.html

Close Name:jcbeckman Posts: 55 Joined: 06 May 2004
Subject: You don't want to service it!

I "serviced" an original iMac G5, and believe me, you *don't* want to be inside that thing. I've been servicing PCs for 15 years or so, building some from scratch and parts, and I've upgraded a Cube's CPU, but I wouldn't go back inside my iMac G5 again.

Close Name:Guest
Subject:

I'm most interested in finding out how DRM/TPM was implemented in the final retail release of 10.4.

Close Name:Guest
Subject: Early iMac G5s were easy. Now, though.....

Was that "original" iMac G5 a Rev. A or B? I have a Rev. A 20" iMac G5. Replacing the midplane and power supply were not difficult on those (bad caps...don't ask). Replacing the hard drive or optical drive would be quite simple (I had those out for the midplane replacement). RAM upgrades on the early models required pulling the back off...and that was pretty simple, too.

It sounds like the new, slim form-factor iMacs, whether G5 or Intel are another story entirely. I've seen the tear down photos of these....yikes! I wouldn't want to go in there, and I've had my old Bondi Blue "non-user servicable" iMac apart more times than I care to think (and I never had a job remotely like computer repair/maintenance). IMHO, reducing the user servicability is big a step backward, and probably a deal-killer for me. I'm seriously considering a MacIntel tower when those become available.

Close Name:Al Swearengen Posts: 339 Joined: 10 May 2005
Subject: It is more like an iBook

Quote
jcbeckman wrote:
I "serviced" an original iMac G5, and believe me, you *don't* want to be inside that thing. I've been servicing PCs for 15 years or so, building some from scratch and parts, and I've upgraded a Cube's CPU, but I wouldn't go back inside my iMac G5 again.


I still mess around with my PowerMac G4, swapping hard drives and such. However, I am getting too old to work inside on things like my iMac iSight, eyes aren't that sharp these days and my fingers not so nimble. These iMacs are a lot like an iBook or PowerBook (or is that MacBook), a lot of components fitted just so.

Close Name:Guest
Subject: TFA

"This guy took it apart! "

Yeah. It's in the article. But thanks. Say, would you might repeating some other parts?

Close Name:ireid2k Posts: 125 Joined: 07 Apr 2003
Subject: TGTIA

Quote
Guest wrote:
"This guy took it apart! "

Yeah. It's in the article. But thanks. Say, would you might repeating some other parts?


I would. . . but only if you say please! lol

Close Name:Guest
Subject: best recommendation yet

If serious hardware and software geeks are drawn to Apple's consumer flagship, then I think that's pretty cool.

I love seeing Jobs doing his magical acts, he's the master wizard of the good sales talk, but won't buy a computer on his say-so alone.

So thanks Ars for doing the dirty digging, those are the recommendations I need for actually buying a computer.

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