Go look for it yourself. I remember it from two years ago when the G5 was introduced, and it makes sense independently of that.
But if you think I'm going to spend hours trolling the internet to satisfy you, you must be deranged. I couldn't care less whether you believe me or not, and I'm certainly not going to spend any great effort in that cause.
But if you think I'm going to spend hours trolling the internet to satisfy you, you must be deranged. I couldn't care less whether you believe me or not, and I'm certainly not going to spend any great effort in that cause.
I've been searching for it this entire time, and I haven't found anything on IBM's side promising or suggesting anything. Closest I've gotten is something saying to the effect that they were working on reducing power consumption and heat.
Since you're not willing to step up to the plate, I'll just mark this as yet another example of Fanboist BFA.
/me shrugs
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That shows how much you know. Apple won't do it because they tried it before and it didn't work. It would also screw up everything that is good about the mac, since Apple would no longer have tight control over the hardware (which means things don't **** up as much).
I thought you said you didn't care about the hardware, only the software?
In any case, the general consensus among myself and others is that vendor lock-in is bad in the x86 world. It works fine in PPC, because there aren't many competitors--there's Apple, and maybe Genesi with their Pegasos platform. With x86, you'll have all the hobbyists, the plethora of component brands, and what not. (Incidentally, you do realize this is why Windows crashes so much--not so much the operating system, but the fact that most of the hardware drivers are poorly written third-party affairs, right?)
What's more, it seems to me people will notice that there's not much difference between the innards of an Apple computer and a Dell, and wonder why the Apple is so much more expensive--which means they might be relying more and more on style over substance at that point.
Not something I'd like to reward in an open market.
There are a few things which I can tell from my Cube that might reduce the variety in hardware: first among them being OpenFirmware, though I believe it doesn't work with x86 chips. Outside of that... there really isn't that much of a difference. The AGP ports are there, the PCI as well; SATA, IDE, and the same kind of RAM.
Why won't vendor-hardware lock-in kill Apple in an x86 world?
It would also screw up everything that is good about the mac, since Apple would no longer have tight control over the hardware
Also, just to be as snide to you as you are to me:
I thought you said it was the software that was what made the Mac good, not the hardware? Why are you contradicting yourself here?
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