Friday, January 18, 2008

Macworld 2008 Recapped.

Well Macworld 2008 came and went, and overall I was pretty satisfied with everything announced. I was extremely happy to see that 2 or 3 of my hopes/predictions did end up coming true!

-First Solid State Disk Options

I was extremely happy to see that Apple FINALLY introduced Solid State Disk as an option when configuring the new MacBook Air. Though a little steep price-wise, this is definitely a step in the right direction, and slowly but surely will start to see high capacities, which hopefully will result in price drops. I truly believe that Flash or Solid State Disk's are the future and I recommend going this route if at all possible in any sort of portable device.

-Ultra Portable Macbook

Apple released the Macbook Air on Tuesday, and it looks pretty slick. It's a bit on the pricey side, coming in at $1,799 but I truly believe that this is mostly because of the such small form factor. I love where apple is going with this. Apple's always ahead of the game when adopting and killing off standards; USB and Firewire standard before most PC's even had it, Killing off the Floppy Drive with the translucent iMacs, Bluetooth Standard across the whole Mac line, the list goes on and the Macbook Air is another perfect example. One of the reasons why the Macbook Air is so sleek and tiny is because it's lack of ports. The transition from the iBook to the Macbook, meant killing off the 56k modem, and now Apple has done it again by killing off the Ethernet Port (optional USB adaptor). Once 802.11n is finalized later this year (hopefully!) I don't think people will even miss the Ethernet port.

However there are a few things I do not like about the Macbook Air. For starters, the memory is soldered into the motherboard and therefore can not be upgraded. Again, this is probably just a form factor issue, also this would make the Macbook Air a little less seek. Lastly, the battery is not user-replaceable, so whenever the user is going to want a brand new battery, they'll have to ship it in and pay $129 bucks for a new battery. Thank God there is no cost for labor.

-iPod Touch Updates

Unfortunately there was no updates to the iPod's capacities, but there was an update that is almost equally as exciting. Apple FINALLY updated the Apps available on the iPod Touch (-not iTouch!). Apple has now included the following Apps into the iPod Touch; Mail Client, Google Maps, Stocks, Weather, and Notes. As if I didn't already want an iPod Touch pretty badly this pretty much sealed the deal for me, and I will hopefully be getting one of these as soon as possible.

-Time Capsule

One thing that was a complete surprise to me was the introduction of "Time Capsule." Time Capsule is essentially a NAS. It is aimed towards users who want to use Time Machine to back up their entire family of Macs wirelessly. I think it's a pretty clever name. It is an Airport Extreme Base Station (Apple's Wireless B,G,N Router) with a "Server Grade" hard drive inside. Personally this was one of the more exciting announcements of the whole entire keynote, since I'm currently in the market for BOTH a new wireless router and an external hard drive. I was quite surprised with the prices as well. The 500GB Time Capsule will cost you $299, and the 1TB model will cost you $499. If you do the math these are pretty good prices considering the Airport Extreme Base Station was $179 prior to the release of Time Capsule. This mean's that they are throwing in an external drive for $120 bucks for the 500GB model and $320 bucks for the 1TB model. Doing a quick search at Amazon shows that this is an amazing deal, not to even mention that it's all integrated into one product!

With Leopard being quite a big success right out of the gate, the iPhone SDK just around the corner, and the latest Mac lineup transformation, I think 2008 will be a pretty exciting year for Apple.

2 comments:

rlgh said...

I definitely agree with you - I would love to have an iMac and an Air... and Time Capsule is definitely drool-worthy.

I was just wondering, have you been having any trouble with Leopard at all? I'm having a lot more issues of programs freezing and I've even had the OS crash twice in the past two weeks. I've also had my battery capacity drop dramatically since installing Leopard, though that might not be a connected issue.

I think one of the next things Apple should look at developing (or implementing) is a new kind of battery, something that's more dependable and with longer life. I'm going to be going on my 4th battery (including the original) in 2 years on my MBP and it's starting to get old. When my Apple Care plan runs out I definitely don't have the money to buy a $129 battery every 6-8 months. Any thoughts?

jonathansmith68 said...

well, i do know 10.5.2 is just around the corner ( http://www.engadget.com/2008/01/22/mac-os-x-10-5-2-update-now-said-to-be-packing-nearly-100-fixes/ ) and as it says in that post, packs nearly 100 fixes. Hopefully this means that most of your problems will be resolved. The ONLY issues i've been having lately with 10.5.1 is my Safari seems to lock up from time-to-time. No idea if this is the web site i'm going to, or my not so graphically powerful macbook (i think i was watching some embedded flash videos at the time). What apps are you running that you seem to have problems with it freezing? As far as your battery experiences, that's weird, i haven't really had any issues, however, i don't really seem to take it anywhere where it's not connected to an outlet. Maybe someday when i get an imac or a mac mini, this will be tested more often!