Mac Pro (Late 2013, plus mid-2010 and mid-2012 models with recommended Metal-capable GPU) High Sierra compatibility High Sierra arrived in September 2017 and can run on the following Macs. The current Mac operating system is macOS, originally named 'Mac OS X' until 2012 and then 'OS X' until 2016. Developed between 1997 and 2001 after Apple's purchase of NeXT, Mac OS X brought an entirely new architecture based on NeXTSTEP, a Unix system, that eliminated many of the technical challenges that the classic Mac OS faced. Complete technical specifications for every Apple Mac released in 2010 are listed below. For other years, see the main By Year page. Currently Shipping Macs additionally may be of interest. To view each Mac released from 1984 to the present on a dynamic, interactive timeline, you also may find EveryMac.com's Ultimate Mac Timeline useful.
It also supports the last version of OS X 10.10 'Yosemite' and OS X 10.11 'El Capitan' - including Mac-to-Mac AirDrop capability - but no other advanced features are supported. It is capable of running macOS Sierra (10.12) as well, although it does not support the Universal Clipboard, Auto Unlock, or Apple Pay features. Download microsoft word 2010 for free. Productivity downloads - Microsoft Word by Microsoft and many more programs are available for instant and free download. PDF Converter Professional is a PDF converter tool specially designed for Mac OS X users. Use Microsoft Office 2007/2010 on. Standard - Convert Microsoft Word(.DOC.
Predicting the future of technology is a tricky business—just ask Bill Gates—but the allure of prognostication is strong. I've been known to try my hand at it. Sometimes I get a good read on things, like in 2008 when I wrote, 'in the grim future of Apple/Adobe, there is only war.' Vague, humorously hyperbolic, and with no explicit timescale: all the essential ingredients of a successful prediction.
Other times, I'm not so lucky. Five years ago, I wrote a three-part series of articles entitled Avoiding Copland 2010. This time, the message was earnest, specific, and had a year right in the title. In other words, a perfect setup for failure. Well, here we are in the year 2010—the future!—so it's time for me to take my lumps…or perhaps crow triumphantly? But first things first. What was this 'Copland 2010' thing about, anyway?
Background
Copland was the code name for the most infamous of Apple's severalfailedattempts at creating a next-generation operating system. In the 1990s, when Copland was initiated, 'next-generation' meant supporting memory protection and preemptive multitasking, both of which classic Mac OS lacked. Since then, Copland has become the poster child for Apple's nearly company-destroying failure to acknowledge and successfully address a serious technical gap in its software platform in a timely manner. It was only through the improbable acquisition of both a viable modern operating system and a formerly exiled company founder that Apple was saved.
In part one of the series, I put forward my thesis: that the Objective-C language and the Cocoa API are the parts of Mac OS X that are the most in danger of falling behind the competition, and that by the year 2010, Apple could find itself facing another Copland-like crisis due to its lack of a memory-managed language and API. In part two, I elaborated on the assumptions underlying my thesis. They were:
- that fully automatic memory management will eventually be an expected feature of the primary application development environment for a desktop OS;
- that by 2010, the rest of the industry will have adopted languages and APIs that feature fully automatic memory management;
- and that existing (2005) technologies, and obvious evolutions thereof, do not adequately fill Apple's need for a memory-managed language and API.
Many of these assumptions were hotly contested.
In part three, I surveyed the landscape for languages and APIs that could supersede Objective-C and Cocoa. I also tried to encourage those who doubted the specific timeline to at least look at the bigger picture.
After all, everyone can agree that Cocoa and Objective-C will be obsolete someday. Okay, maybe someone out there thinks that won't happen until in the year 2050, but someday, right? […] What should replace Cocoa? What can replace Cocoa? What's Apple's next big move in the language and API wars?
Robotheus mac os. In the article, I considered Objective-C with garbage collection, Java/JVM, C#/.NET/Mono, and even obscure efforts from Apple's past, like Dylan, rejecting them all for some combination of practical, technological, and political reasons. Apple, I concluded, needed to start down what looked to be a long, difficult road to finding or devising its own successor to Cocoa/Objective-C as soon as possible.
AdvertisementThe future is now
So, how did things turn out? If we are to take the title and timeline literally, the conclusion is clear: Apple is not currently experiencing a Copland-like software platform crisis. It may be on the cusp of a very different kind of crisis, but that's another story. As far as Wall Street (and Apple's own balance sheet) is concerned, the future looks bright for Apple.
How did I get it so wrong? Or did I? Let's reconsider my assumptions. Is fully automatic memory management now an 'expected feature' of desktop software development? Not according to most Mac OS X developers, it seems. Garbage collection was indeed added to Objective-C, and Apple has made a considerable effort to promote its use. But the 'second-class citizen problem' I described five years ago has also come to pass. Most Cocoa developers, including Apple itself, are still using manual retain/release memory management in most of their applications. Garbage collection is not a no-brainer choice for all Mac developers today, and is still sometimes seen as a potential performance risk.
Contrast this with the most prominent competing desktop platform, the Microsoft .NET framework and C# language on Windows, where memory-managed code is the default and everything else is considered risky, literally being denoted with the 'unsafe' keyword in the source code.
Nevertheless, Mac developers and users are not panicking like they did in the Copland era about memory protection and preemptive multitasking. If there's a crisis coming, it's definitely not here yet. So much for '2010.' But why?
Now the future is later
Microsoft started working on the .NET Common Language Runtime over ten years ago. Since then, it's had four major releases which have included significant new C# language features as well as increased support for dynamic languages like Python and Ruby. If this is the desktop software platform competition, then Apple is getting its ass handed to it, technologically speaking.
Yet despite this reality, these technical issues are not exactly at the forefront of Mac developers' minds. The reason can be summed up in three words: mobile, mobile, mobile. The ascent of Apple's iOS (formerly iPhone OS) platform has been and continues to be dizzying. With it comes a set of constraints not seen in the desktop computer market in years: 128 to 256 MB of RAM, in-order CPUs that max out at 1GHz, and a complete lack of swap in the virtual memory system. It's been more than a decade since Apple shipped a desktop or laptop computer that was limited to so little RAM, and even longer since a Mac was sold that did not support virtual memory paging to disk. Oh, and by the way, there's also no Objective-C garbage collection in iOS.
This new hardware reality has effectively set the clock back on higher-level programming languages and frameworks in the minds of Apple developers, and Objective-C's nature as a superset of C has renewed its status as a perceived advantage. It's hard to get worked up about still dealing with low-level, per-byte-precise entities like pointers and C structs when your application is constantly receiving low-memory warnings from the OS.
AdvertisementThen there's the magnified importance of user interface responsiveness on mobile devices. Apple's ruthless dedication to maintaining a direct, lively user interface is a big part of what distinguished the iPhone from all earlier touchscreen phones and many of the copycat models that followed. Even today, the fractional second of latency that separates a new iPhone from lesser devices when scrolling a list or flicking through screens remains a subtle but perceptible differentiator. And as with the memory constraints, developers' minds can't help but draw at least a dotted line from the admirably reactive user interface to the low-level nature of iOS's native API.
Reality check
There's a problem with this narrative, however. Just like its biggest desktop competitor, Apple's fiercest mobile-market rival one-ups Apple in the modern development technology department by offering a memory-managed language and API on its mobile Psychedelics mac os. platform. And make no mistake, Google's latest Android release, with its don't-call-it-Java Dalvik virtual machine, is no slouch. (I'll claim a tiny nugget of foresight for having endorsed the idea of a register-based VM, the design approach that would eventually be used in Dalvik.)
To add insult to injury, Google is even building on some of the low-level libraries that Apple has helped to develop over the past few years, adding its own performance enhancements and embarrassing even Apple's mighty iPad with a mere Android phone in an old-school-Apple-style performance bake-off. Yes, WebKit is written in C++, and that's the point: providing a higher-level API to application developers does not preclude taking advantage of high-performance, lower-level libraries.
And it's not just Google. Microsoft, predictably, has brought over its .NET platform and added some even higher-level languages and APIs to its latest mobile efforts. Even poor Palm offered more abstraction and safety to its developers. This is the actual competitive landscape Apple faces.
Obviously, such technical details are dwarfed by larger issues when it comes to determining mobile-market success. Things seem to have ended pretty badly for Palm, for example, friendly web-technology-based SDK and all. But they were still one of the most credible threats to Apple's mobile user interface dominance. Google's still out there, of course, and it's not going anywhere. And Microsoft…hey, you never know, right?
The fate of individual competitors aside, the fact that the most dangerous players are all coming out of the gate with languages and APIs a generation ahead of what Apple offers should be a huge warning sign. And again, this is all happening in the memory-starved, CPU-constrained mobile world. On the desktop, Apple is even farther behind.
It is 2010, after all. 'The future' or not, it's getting a bit silly for GUI application developers to perpetually be one bad pointer dereference away from scribbling all over their application's memory. The world has moved on; Apple should too.
Apple has now moved the entire iMac line to Intel's Core 'i' family of CPUs, including the dual-core i3 and i5 as well as the quad-core i7. All CPUs used in the 2010 iMac support Hyper-Threading (on last year's model, only the i7 versions supported Hyper-Threading). CPU speeds start at 3.06 GHz for dual-core models and 2.8 GHz for quad-core ones, and all but the i3 CPUs support Intel's Turbo Boost technology, which allows them to run at even higher speeds (making allowance for heat issues).
Seasons (2010) Mac Os Download
Apple has also adopted 1333 MHz memory, a step up from 1066 MHz RAM in the previous generation. Except for the base 21.5″ model, Apple offers a faster CPU option at $200 more.
The smaller iMac has the same 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution as 1080i high-def television, and the 27″ provides an incredible 2560 x 1440 pixels. Both sizes are LED backlit, and the 27″ iMac also has Mini DisplayPort input, allowing another computer or video device (DVD or Blu-ray player) that supports DisplayPort to use the iMac's screen (it's not compatible with HDMI, DVI, or VGA, although there are now some third-party adapters). The SD Card slot, which is on the right side below the SuperDrive, supports SDXC.
Apple's wireless keyboard is now standard, as is the Magic Mouse. The new iMac can also be ordered with Apple's new Magic Trackpad.
4 GB of RAM remains standard across the line, and maximum RAM stands at 16 GB using four 4 GB modules.
The base 21.5″ model has ATI Radeon HD 4670 graphics with 256 MB of dedicated memory. The 3.2 GHz 21.5″ and dual-core 27″ models use Radeon 5670 graphics with 512 MB of video memory, and the quad-core iMacs have Radeon 5750 graphics with 1 GB of video memory.
The Mid 2010 iMacs have 4 USB 2.0 ports, FireWire 800 (but not 400), gigabit ethernet, 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, an SDXC Card slot, and an 8x SuperDrive.
The entry-level iMac has 4 GB of RAM, a 500 GB hard drive, an 8x SuperDrive, Radeon HD 4670 graphics with 256 MB of dedicated video memory, and Apple's aluminum keyboard and Magic Mouse. All other models ship with a 1 TB hard drive and even more powerful Radeon graphics (with 512 MB or 1 GB of video memory).
The 2010 iMac shipped with OS X 10.6.4 Snow Leopard and is compatible with OS X 10.9 Mavericks.
Intel-based Macs use a partitioning scheme known as GPT. Only Macintel models can boot from GPT hard drives. Both PowerPC and Intel Macs can boot from APM (Apple's old partitioning scheme) hard drives, which is the format you must use to create a universal boot drive in Leopard. PowerPC Macs running any version of the Mac OS prior to 10.4.2 cannot mount GPT volumes. Dungeons race 2d beta mac os. PowerPC Macs won't let you install OS X to a USB drive or choose it as your startup volume, although there is a work around for that.
Details
- introduced 2010.07.27 at US$1,199 (21.5″ 3.06 GHz i3, Radeon 4670), US$1,499 (21.5″ 3.2 GHz, Radeon 5670), US$1,699 (27″ 3.2 GHz i3, Radeon 5670), and US$1,999 (27″ 2.8 GHz quad-core i5, Radeon 5750); replaced by Mid 2011 iMac on 2011.05.03.
- Part no.: MC508 (21.5″ 3.06 GHz), MC509 (21.5″ 3.2 GHz), MC510 (27″ dual-core), MC511 (27″ quad-core)
- Model identifier: iMac11,2 (21.5″), iMac11,3 (27″)
Mac OS
- Requires Mac OS X 10.6.4 or later. macOS 10.4 Mojave and later are not supported.
- Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard compatibility
- Grand Central Dispatch is supported.
- 64-bit operation is supported.
- OpenCL is supported.
- OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion compatibility
- AirPlay Mirroring is not supported.
- AirDrop is supported.
- Power Nap is not supported.
Core System
- CPU, 21.5″: 3.06 or 3.2 GHz Intel Core i3, 3.6 GHz i5 option ($200 additional)
- CPU, 27″: 3.2 GHz Intel Core i3, 3.6 GHz dual-core i5 option ($200 additional); 2.8 GHz quad-core i5; 2.93 GHz quad-core i7 option ($200 option)
- L2 cache: 4 MB shared cache on CPU (8 MB on quad-core models)
- Bus: 1333 MHz
- RAM: 4 GB, expandable to 16 GB using four 1333 MHz DDR3 SDRAM
- Performance:
- Speedmark 6.5: 174 (3.06 GHz i3 21.5″), 179 (3.2 GHz i3 21.5″), 177 (3.2 GHz i3 27″), 196 (2.8 GHz i5 27″), 199 (3.6 GHz i5), 225 (2.93 GHz quad-core i7)
- Geekbench 2, 32-bit: 5585 (3.06 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 5804 (3.2 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 6726 (3.6 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i5), 5815 (3.2 GHz 27″ 2-core i3), 6601 (2.8 GHz 4-core i5), 6784 (3.6 GHz 27″ 2-core i5), 8976 (2.93 GHz 27″ 4-core i7)
- Geekbench 2, 64-bit: 6264 (3.06 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 6439 (3.2 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 7689 (3.6 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i5), 6545 (3.2 GHz 27″ 2-core i3), 7630 (3.6 GHz 27″ 2-core i5), 7884 (2.8 GHz 4-core i5), 10506 (2.93 GHz 27″ 4-core i7)
Video
- GPU, 21.5″ 3.06 GHz: ATI Radeon HD 4670 with 256 MB dedicated VRAM
- GPU, 21.5″ 3.2 GHz: ATI Radeon HD 5670 with 512 MB dedicated VRAM
- GPU, 27″ dual-core: ATI Radeon HD 5670 with 512 MB dedicated VRAM
- GPU, 27″ quad-core: ATI Radeon HD 5750 with 1 GB dedicated VRAM
- Display:
- 21.5″ 1920 x 1080 LED backlit flat panel display
- 27″ 2560 x 1440 LED backlit flat panel display
- Video out: Mini DisplayPort, DVI and VGA with optional adapters
Drives
- drive bus: 3 Gbps SATA Rev. 2
- Hard drive: 500 GB/1 TB 7200 rpm SATA drive, 2 TB option
- SuperDrive: writes DVD±R, DVD+R, and DVD+RW discs at up to 8x speed, DVD-RW at up to 6x; dual layer at up to 4x; reads DVDs at up to 8x, writes CD-R discs at up to 24x, writes CD-RW discs at up to 16x, reads CDs at up to 24x
Seasons (2010) Mac Os Catalina
Expansion
- USB: 4 USB 2.0 ports
- FireWire 400: none
- FireWire 800: 1 port, 7 Watts
- Ethernet: 10/100/gigabit
- WiFi: 802.11n AirPort Extreme built in
- Bluetooth 2.1: included
- IR receiver: supports Apple Remote (not included)
- SD Card: 1 slot, supports SDXC
- Microphone: internal
- Modem: No longer offered by Apple
Physical
- Power supply: 241W (21.5″), 365W (27″)
- H x W x D (21.5″): 17.75 x 20.8 x 7.42 in/45.1 x 52.8 x 18.85 cm
- H x W x D (27″): 20.4 x 25.6 x 8.15 in/51.7 x 65.0 x 20.7 cm
- weight (21.5″): 20.5 lb/9.3 kg
- weight (27″): 30.5 lb/13.8 kg
CPU Upgrades
- none
Online Resources
The fate of individual competitors aside, the fact that the most dangerous players are all coming out of the gate with languages and APIs a generation ahead of what Apple offers should be a huge warning sign. And again, this is all happening in the memory-starved, CPU-constrained mobile world. On the desktop, Apple is even farther behind.
It is 2010, after all. 'The future' or not, it's getting a bit silly for GUI application developers to perpetually be one bad pointer dereference away from scribbling all over their application's memory. The world has moved on; Apple should too.
Apple has now moved the entire iMac line to Intel's Core 'i' family of CPUs, including the dual-core i3 and i5 as well as the quad-core i7. All CPUs used in the 2010 iMac support Hyper-Threading (on last year's model, only the i7 versions supported Hyper-Threading). CPU speeds start at 3.06 GHz for dual-core models and 2.8 GHz for quad-core ones, and all but the i3 CPUs support Intel's Turbo Boost technology, which allows them to run at even higher speeds (making allowance for heat issues).
Seasons (2010) Mac Os Download
Apple has also adopted 1333 MHz memory, a step up from 1066 MHz RAM in the previous generation. Except for the base 21.5″ model, Apple offers a faster CPU option at $200 more.
The smaller iMac has the same 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution as 1080i high-def television, and the 27″ provides an incredible 2560 x 1440 pixels. Both sizes are LED backlit, and the 27″ iMac also has Mini DisplayPort input, allowing another computer or video device (DVD or Blu-ray player) that supports DisplayPort to use the iMac's screen (it's not compatible with HDMI, DVI, or VGA, although there are now some third-party adapters). The SD Card slot, which is on the right side below the SuperDrive, supports SDXC.
Apple's wireless keyboard is now standard, as is the Magic Mouse. The new iMac can also be ordered with Apple's new Magic Trackpad.
4 GB of RAM remains standard across the line, and maximum RAM stands at 16 GB using four 4 GB modules.
The base 21.5″ model has ATI Radeon HD 4670 graphics with 256 MB of dedicated memory. The 3.2 GHz 21.5″ and dual-core 27″ models use Radeon 5670 graphics with 512 MB of video memory, and the quad-core iMacs have Radeon 5750 graphics with 1 GB of video memory.
The Mid 2010 iMacs have 4 USB 2.0 ports, FireWire 800 (but not 400), gigabit ethernet, 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, an SDXC Card slot, and an 8x SuperDrive.
The entry-level iMac has 4 GB of RAM, a 500 GB hard drive, an 8x SuperDrive, Radeon HD 4670 graphics with 256 MB of dedicated video memory, and Apple's aluminum keyboard and Magic Mouse. All other models ship with a 1 TB hard drive and even more powerful Radeon graphics (with 512 MB or 1 GB of video memory).
The 2010 iMac shipped with OS X 10.6.4 Snow Leopard and is compatible with OS X 10.9 Mavericks.
Intel-based Macs use a partitioning scheme known as GPT. Only Macintel models can boot from GPT hard drives. Both PowerPC and Intel Macs can boot from APM (Apple's old partitioning scheme) hard drives, which is the format you must use to create a universal boot drive in Leopard. PowerPC Macs running any version of the Mac OS prior to 10.4.2 cannot mount GPT volumes. Dungeons race 2d beta mac os. PowerPC Macs won't let you install OS X to a USB drive or choose it as your startup volume, although there is a work around for that.
Details
- introduced 2010.07.27 at US$1,199 (21.5″ 3.06 GHz i3, Radeon 4670), US$1,499 (21.5″ 3.2 GHz, Radeon 5670), US$1,699 (27″ 3.2 GHz i3, Radeon 5670), and US$1,999 (27″ 2.8 GHz quad-core i5, Radeon 5750); replaced by Mid 2011 iMac on 2011.05.03.
- Part no.: MC508 (21.5″ 3.06 GHz), MC509 (21.5″ 3.2 GHz), MC510 (27″ dual-core), MC511 (27″ quad-core)
- Model identifier: iMac11,2 (21.5″), iMac11,3 (27″)
Mac OS
- Requires Mac OS X 10.6.4 or later. macOS 10.4 Mojave and later are not supported.
- Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard compatibility
- Grand Central Dispatch is supported.
- 64-bit operation is supported.
- OpenCL is supported.
- OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion compatibility
- AirPlay Mirroring is not supported.
- AirDrop is supported.
- Power Nap is not supported.
Core System
- CPU, 21.5″: 3.06 or 3.2 GHz Intel Core i3, 3.6 GHz i5 option ($200 additional)
- CPU, 27″: 3.2 GHz Intel Core i3, 3.6 GHz dual-core i5 option ($200 additional); 2.8 GHz quad-core i5; 2.93 GHz quad-core i7 option ($200 option)
- L2 cache: 4 MB shared cache on CPU (8 MB on quad-core models)
- Bus: 1333 MHz
- RAM: 4 GB, expandable to 16 GB using four 1333 MHz DDR3 SDRAM
- Performance:
- Speedmark 6.5: 174 (3.06 GHz i3 21.5″), 179 (3.2 GHz i3 21.5″), 177 (3.2 GHz i3 27″), 196 (2.8 GHz i5 27″), 199 (3.6 GHz i5), 225 (2.93 GHz quad-core i7)
- Geekbench 2, 32-bit: 5585 (3.06 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 5804 (3.2 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 6726 (3.6 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i5), 5815 (3.2 GHz 27″ 2-core i3), 6601 (2.8 GHz 4-core i5), 6784 (3.6 GHz 27″ 2-core i5), 8976 (2.93 GHz 27″ 4-core i7)
- Geekbench 2, 64-bit: 6264 (3.06 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 6439 (3.2 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i3), 7689 (3.6 GHz 21.5″ 2-core i5), 6545 (3.2 GHz 27″ 2-core i3), 7630 (3.6 GHz 27″ 2-core i5), 7884 (2.8 GHz 4-core i5), 10506 (2.93 GHz 27″ 4-core i7)
Video
- GPU, 21.5″ 3.06 GHz: ATI Radeon HD 4670 with 256 MB dedicated VRAM
- GPU, 21.5″ 3.2 GHz: ATI Radeon HD 5670 with 512 MB dedicated VRAM
- GPU, 27″ dual-core: ATI Radeon HD 5670 with 512 MB dedicated VRAM
- GPU, 27″ quad-core: ATI Radeon HD 5750 with 1 GB dedicated VRAM
- Display:
- 21.5″ 1920 x 1080 LED backlit flat panel display
- 27″ 2560 x 1440 LED backlit flat panel display
- Video out: Mini DisplayPort, DVI and VGA with optional adapters
Drives
- drive bus: 3 Gbps SATA Rev. 2
- Hard drive: 500 GB/1 TB 7200 rpm SATA drive, 2 TB option
- SuperDrive: writes DVD±R, DVD+R, and DVD+RW discs at up to 8x speed, DVD-RW at up to 6x; dual layer at up to 4x; reads DVDs at up to 8x, writes CD-R discs at up to 24x, writes CD-RW discs at up to 16x, reads CDs at up to 24x
Seasons (2010) Mac Os Catalina
Expansion
- USB: 4 USB 2.0 ports
- FireWire 400: none
- FireWire 800: 1 port, 7 Watts
- Ethernet: 10/100/gigabit
- WiFi: 802.11n AirPort Extreme built in
- Bluetooth 2.1: included
- IR receiver: supports Apple Remote (not included)
- SD Card: 1 slot, supports SDXC
- Microphone: internal
- Modem: No longer offered by Apple
Physical
- Power supply: 241W (21.5″), 365W (27″)
- H x W x D (21.5″): 17.75 x 20.8 x 7.42 in/45.1 x 52.8 x 18.85 cm
- H x W x D (27″): 20.4 x 25.6 x 8.15 in/51.7 x 65.0 x 20.7 cm
- weight (21.5″): 20.5 lb/9.3 kg
- weight (27″): 30.5 lb/13.8 kg
CPU Upgrades
- none
Online Resources
Mac Os Versions
- The Mid 2010 iMac value equation, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2010.07.28. The 2010 iMacs have Intel Core ‘i' CPUs, HyperThreading, and Radeon graphics across the board. But what about close-out prices on 2009 iMacs?
- Know Your Mac's Upgrade Options, Phil Herlihy, The Usefulness Equation, 2008.08.26. Any Mac can be upgraded, but it's a question of what can be upgraded – RAM, hard drive, video, CPU – and how far it can be upgraded.
- 27″ iMac firmware update, USB and SSD data recovery, Online Bible for Snow Leopard, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.12.24. Also upgrading your Mac's hard drive, BackPack shelf for iMacs and Cinema Display, and CaseCruzer 27″ iMac carry case.
- 27″ iMac issues, Windows 7 drives users to Apple, Flash support ending for G3 Macs, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.12.18. Also Macs again #1 in reliability, cleaning and disinfecting your Mac, OWC adds 32 GB upgrades for 2009 Mac Pro, MoFi 3G network router to go, and more.
- i7 iMacs arriving DOA, Mid 2010 iMac and Mac mini reviews, first wireless USB hard drive, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.11.27. Also Seinfeld gets new iMac, Macworld keyboard and mouse guides, Mac mini Server a great value, 2 TB external drive from Samsung, and more.
- i5 iMac benchmarked, Mac mini ‘shouldn't be overlooked', Twitter client for Classic Mac OS, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.11.20. Also why Apple leaves the low end to others, 10.6.2 fixes video playback problem in 27″ iMac, 3D Leopard and Snow Leopard performance, and more.
- DVI-to-Mini DisplayPort converters: A ray of hope for the 27″ iMac, Dan Bashur, Apple, Tech, and Gaming, 2009.11.13. The new iMac accepts DisplayPort input, but it won't work with the usual DVI-to-Mini DisplayPort adapters. It requires a more expensive converter.
- Dumping Macs for Google apps, SSD in iMac, Mid 2010 iMac performance problems, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.11.06. Also pros and cons of the Magic Mouse, Late 2009 Mac mini reviewed, Parallels Desktop 5 for 64-bit OS X and Windows, and more.
- 2009 Mac mini takes 8 GB RAM, mini Server a steal, 27″ iMac now ‘the Mac to have', and more, Mac News Review, 2009.10.30. Also using Blu-ray with the new iMac, 10 years of Mac OS 9, Magic Mouse potential, SSD upgrade for desktops, Chrome alpha for Mac, and more.
- Why the 20″ iMac is perfect for home or school, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing, 2009.09.29. The aluminum iMac has plenty of power and screen space, yet it's small enough and light enough to tote from place to place.
- Mac mini the best value in desktop Macs, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2009.08.25. Although the iMac is faster all around, the Mac mini provides plenty of power at half the price. Even with the cost of upgrades, it's the value champion.
- The 64-bitness of Mac OS X 10.6 ‘Snow Leopard', Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2009.08.19. Although Apple is promoting ‘Snow Leopard' as a fully 64-bit operating system, it defaults to running in 32-bit mode.
- OS X 10.6 requirements, why Apple owns the high end, when to upgrade your Mac, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.08.14. Also Microsoft Word patent infringement, BackPack shelf for iMac and Cinema Displays, two updated Bible study programs, and more.
- The perfect Mac: MacBook Pro or iMac?, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2009.08.11. The 15″ MacBook Pro with antiglare could be the perfect Mac, but the iMac also has much to commend it.
- OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard for $29, run Windows on your Mac for Free, Update Breaks Office 2008, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.08.07. Also getting your Mac ready for Snow Leopard, Time Capsule doubles capacity, Picasa 3 for Mac, Bodega Mac app store, and more.
- Computer disaster ends happily, Alan Zisman, Zis Mac, 2009.08.05. The iMac was getting slower and slower, and Disk Utility kept trying to fix the same problems. With a new hard drive, the iMac is running as well as ever.
- SSD in Mac Pro, Mac cloner opens store, Ubuntu vs. OS X, new Nvidia drivers, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.07.17. Also Classilla brings Firefox to OS 9, slow networking in OS X, iMac vs. Mac Pro, URL shortening software, Quicken update finally coming in 2010, and more.
- Optimized Software Builds Bring Out the Best in Your Mac, Dan Knight, Low End Mac's Online Tech Journal, 2009.06.30. Applications compiled for your Mac's CPU can load more quickly and run faster than ones compiled for universal use.
- Intel's promise fulfilled: More processing power per processor cycle, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2009.06.30. Apple promised improved CPU efficiencies when it announced the move to Intel in 2005. Three years of MacBooks show the progress.
- Avoiding dead and stuck pixels on your LCD screen, Charles W Moore, ‘Book Value, 2009.06.22. While CRT monitors would sometimes develop burn-in, LCD monitors may ship with or develop bad pixels.
- Snow Leopard Up-to-Date, 13 Mac browsers, run Windows 7 on your Intel Mac for free, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.06.19. Also Mac sales steady in May, Apple vs. low-bandwidth users, Opera Unite turns browser into a personal server, and more.
- Macs tracking swine flu, 6 quick Mac OS fixes, iMac EFI Firmware Update 1.4, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.05.08. Also Right Zoom maximizes windows, GeForce GTX 285 coming to Mac, APC backup batteries incompatible with Intel Macs running OS X 10.5.4 and later, vertical mice, and more
- Fix for sluggish Leopard dialup, iMac a 3D gaming contender, Easter Mail stationery, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.04.09. Also new HP hardware design superior to Mac Pro, 2 GB of free online backup with IDriveforMac, fast and easy ZoHo Writer online word processing, and more.
- US Mac sales down 16% in February, Opera Turbo available for testing, new iMac benchmarks, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.03.20. Also farewell to FireWire, Mac mini ‘deliberately neglected' to protect iMac sales, Mini DisplayPort to VGA firmware update released, and more.
- New Mac mini and iMac benchmarked, FireWire 400-to-800 solutions, dual-band AirPort Extreme, and more, Mac News Review, 2009.03.06. Also new iMac and Mac mini dissected, OS X share still above 10%, fastest SATA boot drives for the Mac Pro, iMac keyboard loses numeric keypad, and more.
- Ubuntu Linux and Boot camp make it easy to create a triple boot Mac, Alan Zisman, Mac2Windows, 2008.12.24. Boot Camp makes it easy to install Windows on Intel Macs, and Ubuntu now makes it easy to install Linux to a virtual Windows drive.
- Why DisplayPort is the video connector for the future, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 2008.12.23. DisplayPort supports multiple displays, combines audio and video on one cable, and costs nothing to use.
- The ‘Better Safe Than Sorry' Guide to Installing Mac OS X Updates, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 2008.12.16. Most users encounter no problems using Software Update, but some preflight work and using the Combo updater means far less chance of trouble.
- Why You Should Partition Your Mac's Hard Drive, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2008.12.11. 'At the very least, it makes sense to have a second partition with a bootable version of the Mac OS, so if you have problems with your work partition, you can boot from the 'emergency' partition to run Disk Utility and other diagnostics.'
- 15 reasons Macs are better, quad-core iMac in January?, USB 3.0 spec finalized, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.11.21. Also 25 years of Macs, ‘Snow Leopard' in Q1?, SimpleTech's faster and greener hard drive, Hyperspaces, StarOffice for OS X, and more.
- Virtualization shootout: VMWare Fusion 2 vs. Parallels Desktop 4, Kev Kitchens, Kitchens Sync, 2008.11.20. Both programs do the same thing, but one runs Windows XP smoothly alongside Mac apps, while the other bogs down everything but Windows.
- Anticipating Macworld: Nehalem, Snow Leopard, and updated desktops, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2008.11.18. Intel's Core i7 CPU has to make it way into the next Mac Pro, Nvidia GeForce graphics will drive the iMac and Mac mini, and ‘Snow Leopard' will unleash the animal within.
- Debunking the Apple Tax, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 2008.10.31. '…no one else is offering the quality of computer construction that Apple offers in the same price range.'
- One OS to rule them all, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 2008.10.29. With Fusion or Parallels letting you run Windows at full speed, Mac OS X gives you the best of both worlds.
- Nvidia may power new Mac mini and iMac, FireWire firestorm, OS X on PCs, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.10.27. Also turning your Mac into a WiFi access point, iKey keyboard with Bluetooth and trackpad, MacSpeech Dictate updated, and more.
- Economic crunch may slow Mac sales, a recycled Cube, ToCA Race Driver 3 for Mac, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.10.10. Also don't buy RAM from Apple, customize your Mac's appearance, MacTribe expanding into print, My Apple Space social networking, and more.
- How to clone Mac OS X to a new hard drive, Simon Royal, Tech Spectrum, 2008.10.07. Whether you want to put a bigger, faster drive in your Mac or clone OS X for use in another Mac, here's the simple process.
- CodeWeavers brings Google's Chrome browser to Intel Macs, Alan Zisman, Zis Mac, 2008.10.02. Google's new Chrome browser uses separate processes for each tab and brings other changes to Windows users. Now Mac fans can try it as well.
- Apple Trumps Microsoft in Making the 64-bit Transition Transparent to Users, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 2008.09.18. To use more than 4 GB of RAM under Windows, you need a 64-bit PC and the 64-bit version of Windows. On the Mac, OS X 10.4 and later already support it.
- SATA, SATA II, SATA 600, and Product Confusion Fatigue, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 2008.09.08. In addition to the original SATA specification and the current 3 Gb/s specification, SATA revision 3.0 is just around the corner.
- Does running OS X system maintenance routines really do any good?, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 2008.08.26. Mac OS X is designed to run certain maintenance routines daily, weekly, and monthly – but can't if your Mac is off or asleep.
- Mac prices in context, Macs best for Microsoft Office, Macs surge in education, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.08.15. Also Macs becoming standard in the enterprise, Linux on old Macs, Gmail feels your pain, BurnAgain FS software for rewritable discs, and more.
- Simple Mac security in the age of malware, Kev Kitchens, Kitchens Sync, 2008.08.13. Unlike Windows PCs, at this point Macs can't become infected simply from being on the Internet, but you still need to be careful about your downloads.
- iMac beats Dell XPS One on price and features, Kev Kitchens, Kitchens Sync, 2008.08.06. The Dell costs $100 more with a slower CPU, a worse graphics processor, and no alternative to Vista Home Edition.
- Free VirtualBox for Mac now a virtual contender, Alan Zisman, Mac2Windows, 2008.07.21. A year ago, the Mac version of VirtualBox lacked some essential features. Over the past year, it's grown into a very useful tool.
- Win the depreciation game by buying on the low end, Charles W Moore, ‘Book Value, 2008.06.24. The worst depreciation afflicts high-end models. By buying a less powerful version, choosing certified refurbished, or picking up a used computer, you'll come out ahead.
- No widescreen display for me, accessing MacWrite files, Fedora Linux for G3 Macs, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2008.06.19. Why monitors need more height, not more width; using MacWrite files, unleashing old Macs with Linux, and using badram to work around bad RAM in LInux.
- 16:9 computer displays: Let's not go there, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2008.06.17. '…there's no reason our computer displays should match the proportions of our television displays.'
- 5 business essentials for ‘The Switch', Jason Packer, Macs in the Enterprise, 2008.06.06. If you're planning a migration from Windows to Macs, these five steps will help you succeed in making the switch.
- 5 reasons Macs are right for business, 10.5.3 improves GeForce 8800 performance, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.06.06. Also 3.06 GHz iMac ‘packs a wallop', convertible keyboard for Macs, free open source virtualization software, hard drive rescue software, and more.
- Virtual PC works with Leopard, Intel vs. PowerPC performance, beyond the Mac mini, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2008.05.20. Also upgrading Intel iMacs, Compact Flash in a PowerBook 2400, and thoughts on low-end Macs.
- SheepShaver brings Classic Mac OS to Intel Macs and Leopard, Alan Zisman, Mac2Windows, 2008.05.20. Mac OS X 10.5 doesn't support Classic Mode. Neither does Leopard. But SheepShaver lets you emulate a PowerPC Mac and run the Classic Mac OS.
- Open source virtualization for Macs, iMac shutdowns, Psystar reviews, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.05.16. Also aluminum iMac USB power concerns, Penryn iMac twice as powerful as fastest G5 iMac, Radeon vs. GeForce in top-end iMac, Odysseus email client in beta, and more.
- Windows on Macs: Three paths for integration, Jason Packer, Macs in the Enterprise, 2008.05.14. Mac users have three routes for running Windows apps: Run Windows using Boot Camp or virtualization, or use a compatibility layer such as WINE.
- Value of old Power Macs, old computers in school, Panther or Tiger on Pismo, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2008.05.12. Also new 20″ Penry iMac vs. 24″ Santa Rosa and great results with a low-cost external SuperDrive.
- Apple tops in tech support, Penryn iMacs and Psystar Open Computer reviewed, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.05.09. Also the iMac philosophy, OpenOffice 3.0 going Mac, MozyHome backup comes to Macs, weather in the Dock, and more.
- Prosumer Mac suggestions, bring back the 12″ ‘Book, Pismo displays, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2008.05.06. Readers offer more thoughts on a midrange Mac, the need for a new 12″ ‘Book, using F-keys as F-keys in OS X, and lid closed video mode for Pismo.
- Mac growth 4x PC rate, USB power famine, Montevina chips not in new iMacs, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.05.02. Also reducing energy waste from peripherals, fixing the Mac's shortcomings, Open Computer shipping and reviewed, why Apple bought PA Semi, 5x the range for Time Capsule, Mac gaming mouse, and more.
- 50% Mac sales growth is only the beginning, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2008.05.02. Apple has a great line of computers and an awesome operating system, but a prosumer model could make last quarter's growth seem normal.
- What's the Best Version of OS X for My Mac?, Ian R Campbell, The Sensible Mac, 2008.02.28. Which version of Mac OS X is best for your hardware depends on several factors.
- Using the aluminum iMac: Color me impressed, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 2008.04.22. A MacBook is a wonderful thing, but an iMac with a 20″ display can really spoil you.
- 18 bits can't display millions of colors, today's magic is different from yesterday's, and more, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 2008.04.16. Also more feedback on Mac browsers, slow dialup Internet, and a SCSI-to-USB 2.0 solution.
- Add a second display, overlooked Leopard features, Nehalem chips hits 3.2 GHz, and more, Mac News Review, 2008.04.11. Also Apple and Canada, firware updates, Kensington keyboard with 3 USB ports, Magic Mail Folder, Newton Connection software, and more.
- 18-bit video inadequate, restoring AppleWorks speed, Macintosh display info, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2008.04.09. Also problems importing AppleWorks drawings and a damaged, unfixable mail database in Outlook Express 5.
- Millions vs. thousands of colors: What's the difference?, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2008.04.07. Once again Apple is being sued over a Mac that can display ‘only' 262,144 colors per pixel, not the millions it claims. Does it realy matter?
- Too few USB ports in too many Macs, developer Leopard ran on Yikes, Mac IIfx RAM heaven, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2008.01.16. Also Macworld Expo disappoints, Pismo a great field computer, using flash memory in vintage Macs, and Word vs. Pages for academic writing.
- Restore stability to a troubled Mac with a clean system install, Keith Winston, Linux to Mac, 2008.01.15. If your Mac is misbehaving, the best fix just might be a fresh reinstallation of Mac OS X – don't forget to backup first.
- The best alternatives to Apple's USB keyboards, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 2007.12.10. There are a lot of USB keyboards out there, even for the Mac, but these two have great keyboard action, are solidly built, and have features Apple's keyboard don't include.
- Cross-platform computing: Better than it's ever been, Andrew J Fishkin, Best Tools for the Job, 2007.11.13. Macs can read PC media, both Macs and Windows PCs play nice with each other on networks, and emulation makes it easy for Intel Macs to run Windows apps.
- Beyond Google, 10 years on the G3, the Cube is not a Road Apple, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2007.11.13. Also the 64-bit advantage of Core 2, OS 9 on a USB flash drive, sound problems since switching to Leopard, and 7200 rpm in an eMac.
- Proof Macs cost less, Leopard spanks Vista, Mac pride pins, Arabic OS X 10.4.10, and more, Mac News Review, 2007.11.09. Also the pitfalls of Macintel recovery, waiting for the 10.5.1 update, QuickTime 7.3 released, new Leopard books, and more.
- External $100 Sony DVD burner likes Macs, Brian Gray, Fruitful Editing, 2007.10.10. The box and manual say nothing about Mac compatibility, but this 18x USB 2.0 DVD burner is plug-and-play (at least with Tiger).
- FastMac 8x SuperDrive and BurnAgain DVD: Fast and easy multisession disc burning, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 2007.10.08. FastMac's 8x SuperDrive upgrade is remarkably fast compared with older PowerBook burners, and BurnAgain DVD makes it easy to append files to a previously burned CD or DVD.
- 3.2 Gbps FireWire, 4.8 Gbps USB coming, Macs cost less to use, a Core Image-based image editor, and more, Mac News Review, 2007.09.28. Also wireless USB to hit 1 Gbps, Mac sales are surging, aluminum iMacs have great image quality, 802.11n WiFi for most modern Macs, and more.
- Importing video into iMovie, jumping the gun on G3s and Leopard, interference robustness, and more, Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag, 2007.09.18. Also, Intel Macs support 802.11a WiFi alongside b, g, and n, and USB card options for beige G3 Power Macs.
- Does a college freshman need to run Windows on a MacBook?, Al Poulin, My Turn, 2007.07.24. While you can run Windows on today's Intel-based Macs, is there any reason most college students would want to or need to?
- Software to darken iMac display, columnist returns iPhone, Logitech introduces air mouse, and more, Mac News Review, 2007.07.20. Also a USB turntable for turning your record albums into MP3s, a retractable flash drive, iPhone: The Missing Manual, Parallels Desktop 3 a major update, and more.
- VMware Fusion beta 3 adds new features, takes a giant step toward release, Alan Zisman, Mac2Windows, 2007.04.11. Looking for a virtualization solution for your Intel Mac? The latest beta of VMWare Fusion makes several improvements and includes some unique features.
- 1 core, 2 cores, 4 cores, 8: How Much Difference Does It Make?, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2007.04.10. Geekbench scores make it possible to compare the newest 3 GHz 8-core Mac Pro with the 1.5 GHz Core Solo Mac mini – and all the models in between.
- 11 No Cost Tips for Optimizing Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger Performance, Ed Eubanks Jr, The Efficient Mac User, 2007.03.12. If your Mac is getting sluggish, here are 11 tips that can help restore its original performance.
- CrossOver: Run Windows Apps on Intel Macs Without Windows, Alan Zisman, Mac2Windows, 2007.02.28. If you need to run Windows apps on your Intel Mac once in a while, CrossOver may be the least expensive way to do so since it eliminates the need to buy a copy of Windows.
- Parallels Revisited: Release Version Far More Polished than Beta, Alan Zisman, Mac2Windows, 2006.11.21. Parallels lets you run Windows or Linux without rebooting your Intel-based Mac, and it's made great strides since the beta came out earlier this year.
- To AppleCare or not to AppleCare?, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 2006.11.20. Consumer Reports, which generally recommends against extended warranties, says AppleCare makes sense. But does it?
- Pre-2006 Software: The Big Reason You Shouldn't Buy an Intel Mac in 2006, Ted Hodges, Vintage Mac Living, 2006.11.09. If you work with software that predates the Intel transition, you may be better off sticking with PowerPC Macs. And if you use classic apps, you definitely want to avoid Intel.
- Region Free DVD Viewing Options for Intel and PowerPC Macs, Andrew J Fishkin, The Mobile Mac, 2006.09.12. Several hardware and software options that will let your view ‘wrong region' DVDs on your PowerPC or Intel Mac.
- Comparing Apples to Apples: When is Macintel faster? When does PowerPC make more sense?, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 2006.01.29. Benchmarks show the Intel Core Duo flies through native code but plods through PowerPC programs. Will PowerPC or Intel give you the more productive workflow?
- Macintel stumbling block: Sometimes you need Classic, Jeff Adkins, Mac Lab Report, 2006.01.25. As nice as the new Intel Macs seem to be, the lack of any Classic environment makes it impossible for some people to upgrade.