In the retrocomputing world, [DosDude1] is a name spoken with more than a little respect. He’s back again with a long-awaited hack for PowerPC Macintosh: soldered RAM upgrades! This is part of the ...
iMac is the rock of Apple’s desktop line. Over the past decade we’ve seen the iMac Pro come and go, Apple struggling to crack the Mac Pro, and largely forgetting the Mac Mini existed for more than a ...
The upgrade to the M4, the new 16GB RAM standard, the implementation of Thunderbolt across the board, the improved FaceTime camera, and the Nano-texture glass option are all winning moves by Apple.
Apple’s week of Mac announcements kicks off today with a new lineup of 24-inch iMacs, Apple’s first Macs to launch with the M4 processor from this spring’s iPad Pros. The new models still start at ...
Here’s what Apple has to say in today’s announcement: Apple today announced the new iMac, featuring the powerful M4 chip and Apple Intelligence, in its stunning, ultra-thin design. With M4, iMac is up ...
In addition to introducing its M3 chipset (and new MacBook Pros powered by M3 chips), Apple announced a new 24-inch iMac during its primetime "Scary Fast" event on October 30. Powered by the 3nm M3 ...
Matt Elliott is a senior editor at CNET with a focus on laptops and streaming services. Matt has more than 20 years of experience testing and reviewing laptops. He has worked for CNET in New York and ...
Apple is going to begin unveiling their M4 Mac lineup next week, with updates to the iMac, MacBook Pro, and Mac mini to start off the new M4 transition. Although we’re not getting a proper Apple Event ...
Apple on Monday unveiled the new iMac. The design of the iMac hasn’t changed, but the company has upgraded the chip, added more unified memory, updated the colors, and changed the input devices to USB ...
Apple today announced that it has updated the 24-inch iMac with the M4 chip, which debuted in the iPad Pro earlier this year. This upgrade comes around one year after the previous iMac with the M3 ...
I know the answer to this is probably "no", but given how Panther seems to work better on slower Macs and deals better with less RAM, is this feasible?<BR><BR>She has one of the early "Blueberry" ...
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