Apple bumps Power Mac line, cuts LCD prices

27.04.2005
Von Ken Mingis

Apple Computer Inc. Wednesday refreshed its line of desktop computers, offering a new top-end Power Mac that sports dual 2.7-GHz G5 processors, a new graphics card from ATI and a new 16x SuperDrive that can burn data to double-layer DVDs. Apple also unveiled a new dual 2.3-GHz G5 model as its midrange dual-processor desktop computer and continues to sell two models it had offered before: a single 1.8-GHz G5 Power Mac for US$1,499, and the dual 2-GHz G5 model, which now sells for $1,999 -- a $500 price reduction for that version.

The new dual 2.3-GHz G5 model is priced at $2,499, and the top-end version sells for $2,999. That"s the same price the now-discontinued dual 2.5-GHz G5 models sold for.

Like the just-discontinued dual 2.5-GHz G5 models, the new king-of-the-hill Power Mac is liquid-cooled. The other models are air-cooled.

Apple also announced price cuts on two of its LCDs. The entry-level 20-in. widescreen display drops in price from $999 to $799, and the 23-in. display drops from $1,799 to $1,499. The price of the 30-in. display remains $2,999, but buyers of the new top-end Power Mac no longer need to shell out extra money for a video card to drive that display.

The built-in ATI Technologies Inc. Radeon video card in the dual 2.7-GHz G5 model will run the behemoth 30-in. Apple Cinema Display out of the box.

?We have been hard at work on virtually every part of stack, from the hardware and the displays through Tiger and the the enabling technologies [in it],? said David Moody, vice president, worldwide, for Mac product marketing. ?We?ve been busy.?

The new Power Macs, which had been widely expected, are available immediately and will come with Apple?s about-to-be-released Mac OS X 10.4 ?Tiger? operating system installed. Tiger officially will be released on Friday, although some buyers have reported that their copies of the new operating system have already shipped.

Although Apple announced the hardware upgrades only Wednesday morning, Amazon.com jumped the gun, offering the dual 2.7-Ghz G5 model for preorder on its Web site Tuesday -- prompting speculation in the Mac community that new desktop machines were imminent.

Although the dual 2.7-GHz model is the fastest yet offered by Apple, it still falls short of the 3-GHz processors Apple CEO Steve Jobs had predicted would be released last year. Jobs backed off on that forecast last year after it became clear that IBM was having problems pushing its processors to faster speeds.

Nonetheless, Apple officials touted the new models as representing a solid jump in processing speed that offer customers better value -- especially when paired with the cheaper Apple Cinema Displays, according to Scott Brodrick, product marketing manager, displays, for Apple. ?The lower price points on the Cinema Display line are a great complement to the Power Mac line,? he said. ?For our pro customers, this is a real value.?

Although the price of the largest of Apple?s three LCDs is unchanged, Brodrick stressed that customers who want to use the 30-in. display actually save almost $500 they would have otherwise had to spend for an upgraded video card.

The top-end power Mac features the ATI Radeon 9650 video card with 256MB of video RAM, which will support one of the 30-in. LCDs. Before Wednesday, buyers had to spend another $450 on the NVIDIA Corp. GeForce 6800 Ultra DDL graphics card.

The ATI Radeon 9650 is available on the other two dual-processor models as a build-to-order option, but it isn"t available on the entry-level single-processor Power Mac.

Customers who want to run two of the displays, however, would still need to buy the NVIDIA card, Brodrick said.

Apple officials also pointed to the new SuperDrive in the dual-processor machines, which can burn twice the amount of data to double-layer DVD disks. Single layer disks can hold up to 4.7GB of data; The double-layer disks hold 8.5GB. The new 16x SuperDrives also burn data at twice the speed of the previous models.

All three of the dual-processor models come with 512MB of DDR400 SDRAM standard, while the base model starts with half that amount. The dual 2.3-GHz and dual 2.7-GHz models also come with a 250GB Serial ATA hard drive; the dual 2-GHz model has a 160GB hard drive, and the single-processor version has an 80GB drive.

A 400GB hard drive is available as a build-to-order configuration for either $200 or $275, depending on which dual-processor model is being upgraded.

In addition to Wednesday?s hardware announcements, Apple officials also took the time to again tout the technologies and applications included in Tiger, which Chris Bourdon, senior product line manager for Mac OS X, said would be a boon to users. He pointed to the operating system?s new search technology, ?Spotlight," as one addition that would improve the way users find files on their computers. And he stressed the underlying high-definition capabilities of the 64-bit operating system.

Tiger will sell for $129 when it hits store shelves Friday at 6 p.m. Eastern time.