Cool Mac Gear


iTunes_RGB_9mm

Moore’s Tech Web Reader - Tuesday, December 11, 2007

1307

Apple Macs: Dominant PC Story of 2008
Apple Macintosh Computers Likely To Gain Market Share
Apple's Mac Market Share Rise Is Good For Consumers
A Reality Check for Apple in the Enterprise
Mac OS Versions, Builds Included With Intel-based Macs
Mac OS: Versions, builds included with PowerPC Macs (since 1998)
Leopard shows Windows its claws
Time Machines Standard For Backup
Keeping Those Old Macs Useful
Apple Will Open Shops In South America As Part Of Retail Growth
Net Dumbs Us Down: Nobel Prize Winner
Silicon Valley Iranian Christians Celebrate "Christmas in Iran"
eWEEK: How Not to Engender Confidence in Your Customers
eWEEK: Mirosoft Office Live Workspace Goes to Public Beta
ExtremeTech: AMD, Intel Gear Up for System-on-Chip Designs
Desktop Linux: New Flash Player for Linux Adds Great Features, Slows Playback


image




___


Apple Macs: Dominant PC Story of 2008

ChangeWave's Jim Woods and Paul Carton report:

It's often said that a leopard cannot change its spots, but is the new Leopard operating system helping Apple change the PC industry?

Two recent ChangeWave surveys provide new insight on Leopard's industry impact, along with a close look at consumer and corporate PC demand for 1st Quarter 2008....

Apple computer sales continue to show extraordinary momentum for the holidays, according to our latest PC buying survey of 3,872 consumers (Oct 29 – Nov 5).

Not only do new Mac buyers report sky high satisfaction with their desktops and laptops, but planned Apple purchases for the next 90 days also look exceptionally robust.....

Tellingly, one-in-four respondents (24%) say that the release of Apple's new Leopard operating system has made them more likely to buy a Mac in the future.


To read more, click here.





Apple Macintosh Computers Likely To Gain Market Share

Yahoo! News's Patrick Seitz reports:

Apple's Macintosh computers are poised to make sizable market share gains in the coming months, according to a research firm that tracks PC purchase intent.

ChangeWave Research... recently conducted two surveys that gauged PC-buying plans over the next 90 days - a period running from the holiday shopping season into first-quarter 2008. It polled members of its alliance, which includes technology and business executives with leading companies in select industries. Its members tend to be more tech-savvy and have higher disposable incomes than the general public....

The latest ChangeWave consumer poll found that 29% of likely notebook and desktop PC buyers in the next 90 days are planning to get a Mac. That's higher than consumer purchase intent for HP laptops (21%), HP desktops (24%) and Dell laptops (28%). But Dell had higher demand for its desktops (31%).....

Computers remain the main driver of Apple's business. Mac product sales accounted for 62% of Apple's revenue in its fiscal fourth quarter ended Sept. 29. It also brings in the lion's share of the profit.


For the full report visit here:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ibd/20071207/bs_ibd_ibd/20071207tech






Apple's Mac Market Share Rise Is Good For Consumers

CNet's Don Reisinger says:

According to a recent study by research firm ChangeWave, Apple's Macintosh line of computers is well on its way to gaining a sizable portion of the computing market in the coming months.

Polling customers about their computer buying preferences over the next 90 days, ChangeWave found that 29 percent of respondents claimed they would be buying a Mac over that period, while 24 percent will buy HP desktops and 31 percent will buy Dell desktops.

Amazingly, just two years ago, only 16 percent of respondents indicated that they would plan on buying a Mac notebook, while 11 percent claimed they would buy a Mac desktop.

But perhaps most important, Tobin Smith, founder of ChangeWave pointed out that, "these are not just the Mac-heads who are buying." And most consumers (24 percent) are choosing Macs because of Leopard and their distaste for Vista....

I firmly believe an increase in Apple market share is not just good for Apple, it's good for all consumers too....

For the full commentary visit here:
http://blogs.cnet.com/8301-13506_1-9831586-17.html






A Reality Check for Apple in the Enterprise

Computerworld's Mark Hall reports:

Should CIOs forget the past and jump on the Apple bandwagon? Not just yet. That's because IBM's vision of computing is much closer to business reality than Apple's is. IT problems are complex. For every IT question, Apple has one simple answer: the Mac. IBM, on the other hand, doesn't have a pat answer, because it knows each company's IT conundrums will be solved differently.

In late October, a buddy from my MacWeek days e-mailed me with this half-joking dig: "Apple's worth more than IBM. The Mac wins!!"

To Mac fans, it was a vindication of Apple's approach to computing . Apple strives to make things simple for end users. IBM seems to savor IT complexity, always underscoring how hard technology is to use.


For the full report visit here:
http://www.ecommercetimes.com/rsstory/60665.html






Mac OS Versions, Builds Included With Intel-based Macs

A new Apple Knowledge Base article says:

Learn which versions of Mac OS X come with Intel-based Macs. Important: Do not use a Mac OS version earlier than the one included with the computer.

If you have a PowerPC-based Mac, see below.


For more information, visit:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=303315






Mac OS: Versions, builds included with PowerPC Macs (since 1998)

An Apple Knowledge Base article says:

Learn the version(s) of Mac OS included with PowerPC Macs produced since 01 Jan 1998. If you're looking for information about Intel Macs produced since 2006, see this article.

Important: You cannot normally use a Mac OS version earlier than the one included with the computer....

Some computers may include a slightly newer build (but same numbered version) of Mac OS X on the Install or Restore discs than was preinstalled on the hard drive. This is normal.

Some versions of computer-specific software can only be used for NetBoot or System Images for the computer model with which they were bundled. This includes these Power Mac G5 computer-specific builds: 6S74, 6S75, 6S80, 6S90.

For more information, visit:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25517






Leopard shows Windows its claws

China Post's Christoph Dernbach says:

Mac users were certainly in a hurry this time. Two million copies of the new Mac OS X Leopard operating system flew off store shelves in the first weekend it was sold.

Drawn in by over 300 new functions, long-time Apple users showed up in particularly large numbers to snap up the sixth version of the Mac OS X system.

Leopard is also intended to show some claws to the PC operating system Windows. Harry McCracken from the online magazine Slate even called the product "Apple's Microsoft-Devouring Jungle Cat."


To read more, click here.
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/business/2007/12/10/134355/Leopard-shows.htm






Time Machines Standard For Backup

australianit.news.com.au's Stephen Ellis says:

Anyone who has upgraded to Apple's new version of OSX, Leopard, knows that one of its more obvious features is an invisible, automatic, built-in backup.

Time Machine is built on technologies Apple has borrowed from enterprise IT

As long as a Mac running Leopard is periodically connected to an external drive, the operating system will capture and preserve copies of your data at different points in time.

This feature, Time Machine, has several notable aspects.

Apple's focus on a slick user experience led it to design a very simple, intuitive interface for retrieving lost files using a set-and-forget model.


For the full report visit here:
http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,22902722-5013038,00.html






Keeping Those Old Macs Useful

Low End Mac's David Passell says:

I recently "kluged" a battery (two actually) for an old PowerBook 190CS. I tore apart the old battery case and stuffed it with 12 AA NiMH batteries I bought at a local CVS pharmacy. I included the old overheating sensors, etc. I also had to build up a replacement PRAM battery (that center-tapped 6V lithium rechargeable) with four AAA NiMH cells in a case (the PRAM apparently doesn't care about the difference between 5.4 and 6 volts). It hangs on the side of the battery slide. (Actually I found that 8 of the original slightly oversize AA NiMH were still okay and rechargeable.)

The machine operates pretty well; however, it has to be kept plugged into the AC adapter. The batteries tend to self discharge and won't start up the system if I leave it unplugged for more than a day or so - even when shut down. The sleep mode works okay....

I used to be (still am, actually) in charge of the Prescott, Arizona Macintosh User Group recycling project, so I saw a lot of older Macs come through, and we usually got them working again. We gave them to organizations like Big Brother/Sister and individuals that needed them.

Most were easy to work on. A Performa 6400 with a TV tuner made a great TV/cable set, among other things. I still use a Power Mac 6100/60 AV as a monitor for a VHS recorder. A couple models were a real pain (the 6500 and 8500 come to mind - you have to disconnect mother board cables to even expand memory; they ended up at the computer abbatoire).

For the full commentary visit here:
http://lowendmac.com/myturn/my07/1210.html






Apple Will Open Shops In South America As Part Of Retail Growth

Macworld UK's Jonny Evans reports:

Apple plans major expansion of its international chain of retail stores.

The company plans 40 new outlets in the current financial year, including shops in Brazil and Mexico, as well as the Chinese shop the company has already confirmed, reports AppleInsider.


For the full report visit here:
http://www.macworld.co.uk/business/news/index.cfm?RSS&NewsID=19900






Net Dumbs Us Down: Nobel Prize Winner

smh.com.au's Asher Moses reports:

New Nobel laureate Doris Lessing has used her acceptance speech to rail against the internet, saying it has "seduced a whole generation into its inanities" and created a world where people know nothing.

Lessing, 88, who won this year's Nobel Prize for Literature, lamented the apparent discrepancy in the hunger for books between developing countries like Zimbabwe and the rest of the world.

In August, Elton John, another creative type for whom the internet has opened up a sea of fresh competition, lambasted the web for stifling creativity, even calling for it to be shut down.

"We are in a fragmenting culture, where our certainties of even a few decades ago are questioned and where it is common for young men and women, who have had years of education, to know nothing of the world, to have read nothing, knowing only some speciality or other, for instance, computers," she said in the speech read out by Lessing's British publisher as she was too ill to travel to Sweden for the Nobel festivities....

Similarly, author Andrew Keen argued in his new book, The Cult of the Amateur, that the internet was killing culture and assaulting economics.


[Editor's note: I have to respectfully disagree, although not without some qualifications. One salient point is that the Internet is a priceless blessing for folks (like me) who do research or just want access to information but who live far away from decent libraries and other cultural resources, which of course includes most of the developing world. It is also a fantastic communications tool whch again disproportionately benefits those of us who live off the beaten track.

The downside of course. Depending on who's doing the figuring and the methodology applied, somewhere between 12% and 20% of Websites are pornogorphy-related, and surveys consistently reveal that prurient topics account for a depressingly large proportion of search engine queries. No redeeming social or cultural value in any of that.

I also consider online gaming (gambling or otherwise) a huge black hole sucking up time or worse, and both virtual worlds and most of what goes on in chatrooms and on FaceBook and MySpace, et al., which amounts to gossip, celebrity-fawning, and inconsequential chatter likewise a colossal bore and tragic waste of time, so Lessing, John, and Keen have a legitimate point about the Internet's culture-antagonistic down-dumbing.

CM]

To read more, click here.






Silicon Valley Iranian Christians Celebrate "Christmas in Iran"

[ Press Release ]

The Iranian Christian Church, under the auspices of International Antioch Ministries (IAM), will host "Christmas in Iran" celebrations at The Iranian Christian Church in Sunnyvale, Calif., during the evening of Saturday, December 15 and repeated the evening of Sunday, December 16. Open to the community, media are also cordially invited to attend this unique Persian holiday event with ethnic food, music by adults and children, and skits. The celebration will start at 6:00 pm with refreshments and end at 9:00 pm with a traditional Iranian feast.

The celebrations will be broadcast via IAM's satellite Iranian Christian TV (ICTV) so that Christians in Iran can participate from their homes or churches. Although the Iranian government allows "official" Christian sects to celebrate Christmas, they have been known to persecute those Iranians who have converted and worship non-denominationally. Thus, the celebration will also give thanks for the religious freedom we enjoy in America. Native Iranian ministry leaders, including Pastors Hormoz Shariat, Kamil Navai, and Nadareh Navai, will host the event.

Iran has a two thousand year history with the birth of Jesus. The "wise men from the east" who followed a star and brought gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh to the Christ child are traditionally believed to have come from Iran. The word "Magi," which is used to describe the Three Wise Men in the Biblical account of the birth of Jesus, is a Persian word (see Matthew 2: 1, 7, 16). Thus, this celebration brings together ancient Iranian traditions with modern Christmas festivities, a combination rarely seen outside of Iran.

Event Information
Location: The Iranian Christian Church/IAM, 740 E. Arques Ave, Sunnyvale, Calif. 94085. Tel: + 1 408 732 7070.

Schedule for Saturday, December 15 (with children's choir) and Sunday, December 16 (without children's choir) is: 6pm: traditional refreshments; 6:45pm-9:00pm: program of music, skits and message; 9:00pm: Iranian feast.

For more information, visit:
http://www.iam-online.net






eWEEK: How Not to Engender Confidence in Your Customers

Opinion: When someone reports a vulnerability in a product you're using, do you want the vendor to wake up the programmers or the lawyers?

To read more, click here.






eWEEK: Mirosoft Office Live Workspace Goes to Public Beta

However, users who do not have Office installed will not be able to edit documents.

To read more, click here.






ExtremeTech: AMD, Intel Gear Up for System-on-Chip Designs

"Both Advanced Micro Devices and Intel have begun forming groups and hiring expertise in system-on-chip designs, looking ahead toward a future where graphics and computing are combined."


To read more, go to:
http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,1558,2230804,00.asp






Desktop Linux: New Flash Player for Linux Adds Great Features, Slows Playback

The new Flash Player could run faster, but its high definition support will ensure that it will be a winner.

To read more, click here.




Charles W. Moore



Posting Comments Requires Membership

Login   or   Register    

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:


Most Popular

iPod




iPhone

iLife

Reviews

Software Updates

Games

Hot Topics