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Re: ibooks

Originally posted by iBot
Don't the iBooks still use 15-inch screens?

iBooks have never used 15" screens. They use 12" & 14".

I like how all the early posts seem to imply this is an Apple problem, it's an entire-industry-thing, not another Apple-not-keeping-up-with-demand thing. :rolleyes:



...But it sure would make a nice excuse for Powerbook delays.
 
i just tried to see that rumors on appleinsider about the PowerBooks coming next week, but i can't get to the story. can someone post the entire story here? all i can get to is the headline. thanks. :) [/B]

Apple to Refresh PowerBooks in Paris

By:_Kasper Jade
09.11.03

For some Apple loyalists the wait for a new breed of PowerBook G4s has seemed like an eternity. Rumors routinely began to surface back in May, just prior to the company's annual World Wide Developer Conference. At the time, much of the buzz surrounded hints of a revised 15" model and soon spanned across the entire PowerBook product line.

A month later Apple's developer conference had come and gone and new PowerBooks remained as nothing more than hearsay. By mid-July sales of the current line of PowerBooks had slumped considerably in anticipation of the overdue revisions. The bi-annual Macworld trade show arrived shortly thereafter and high expectations once again turned to disappointment among eager PowerBook buyers.

With little to no explanation from the Apple, and frustration building among avid consumers, sources began to paint a muggy picture of Apple microchip supplier, Motorola. As it was reported, problems with the chip-maker's 0.13 micron process were resulting in extremely poor yields of the high-end PowerPC 7457 G4 processor, code-named 'Apollo 7.' Unfortunately for Apple, the PowerPC 7457 family of semiconductors were to power the entire line of new PowerBook G4s.

By late August the situation fared no better. Apple's two largest hardware distributors showed an almost completely depleted inventory of all current PowerBook G4 configurations. The computer company had missed out on potential millions in educational and back-to-school sales and their retailers were growing anxious. To levitate some concerns -- during the last week of August -- Apple told some of its select retail partners to expect new PowerBooks in early to mid September.

It wasn't until last week that sources began mumbling the first bits of promising information on the subject. According to an AppleInsider source, Apple's chip supplier had finally accumulated an ample supply of the faster PowerPC 7457 mobile chips. This news was soon echoed by French Mac news publisher, MacBidouille. According to the site, success rates on high-end PowerPC 7457 production improved this month with Motorola producing 30,000 and 20,000 units of the 1.25GHz and 1.3GHz chips, respectively. However, since Motorola's engagement with Apple sets a pre-defined price on microprocessors, they are currently eating a loss of approximately $125 per functional unit.

Nevertheless, AppleInsider has positively confirmed with multiple sources that the new species of PowerBook G4s will make their debut on September 16th during Apple Expo in Paris, France. While the confirmation has been specific to a remodeled 15" PowerBook, it's expected that the entire portable line will be refreshed. This information also corroborates last week's report stating all PowerBook orders would be full-filled within the two week period.

According to reliable sources, demo versions of these new PowerBooks are currently being produced and shipped to the site of the expo. Upon arrival, the laptops will be met by Apple engineers who will update their system software to the recently finalized version of Mac OS X 10.2.7 Blackrider.

Previous rumors put the new 15" PowerBook in an aluminum enclosure with ports on the sides, a backlit keyboard, USB 2.0, FireWire 800, and a 1.25 GHz PowerPC G4 processor. The 17" configuration is said to gain USB 2.0 and a 1.3GHz PowerPC G4 processor. It will be interesting to see if Motorola's current yields have allowed Apple to meet these original specifications.

Meanwhile, the computer company is also readying updates to their consumer iBooks. The new units will sport USB 2.0 and AirPort Extreme support, sources said. Additionally, the PowerPC 750FX flavor of IBM's G3 processor allows for the implementation of a 200MHz 60x bus that could potentially keep the portables running Apple's latest OS offerings at more than respectable speeds for a fraction of the cost of the PowerPC G4. Further information pertaining to the official release of these iBooks, as well as their processor generation, is currently unconfirmed.
 
15' lcds (1280x800) shortage

i read that the shortage concerns the widescreen ratio (1280x800) of 15' lcd screens. not the 4:3 version.

dell's latest notebook used 3 different resolutions of their 15,4' screens (1280x800, 1650x1050, 1920x1200).

now they only sell the two bigger resolutions! no 1280x800. and that's the exact same screen the 15' powerbook was using until now. that means shortage on the new Al powerbook too, unless they use higher res screens (e.g. 1650x1050) which would be too much for my taste...

so the shortage looks real.
 
although a higher resolution might be very cool. there is a downside that there are different resolution for 15" displays.

have you ever looked at a flash website that has small pixelfonts on a 15" dell laptop with 1650x1050 or even higher res?

everything get's so tiny that you can hardly read stuff.

with win xp you can change the resolution from 120dpi down to 96dpi. then webpages are displayed in the "correct" size. but all pictures look like crap, because the browser has to scale the pictures.
 
Originally posted by trilogic
although a higher resolution might be very cool. there is a downside that there are different resolution for 15" displays.

have you ever looked at a flash website that has small pixelfonts on a 15" dell laptop with 1650x1050 or even higher res?</B>


i know, i'm a webdesigner myself, i've seen it, i hate it.

<B>everything get's so tiny that you can hardly read stuff.

with win xp you can change the resolution from 120dpi down to 96dpi. then webpages are displayed in the "correct" size. but all pictures look like crap, because the browser has to scale the pictures.

i know. i've seen it. i hate it

that's why i'm tending toward a 17' (1440x900). seen it. love it!
 
Apple bought 'em all!

There's a shortage because Apple probably bought all of them and they are installed in a 100,000 15" Al PowerBooks that sit in an Apple factory waiting to be mated to G4 chips that Moto was supposed to ship months ago. :eek:


Okay, maybe not. ;)

Seriously though, didn't Apple invest heavily in Samsung a couple of years ago to make sure their name was always near the top of the list to get CRT glass when they needed it?
 
Originally posted by trilogic
although a higher resolution might be very cool. there is a downside that there are different resolution for 15" displays.

have you ever looked at a flash website that has small pixelfonts on a 15" dell laptop with 1650x1050 or even higher res?

everything get's so tiny that you can hardly read stuff.

with win xp you can change the resolution from 120dpi down to 96dpi. then webpages are displayed in the "correct" size. but all pictures look like crap, because the browser has to scale the pictures.
Seems like the OS and app's like Flash need to be smart enough to rescale not only fonts but maybe images to match the DPI (or is it Pixels Per Inch for screens?) . Do JPG's contain info about how many DPI or PPI that they are supposed to be representing? I know TIFF and other formats used in print publishing do.
 
My understanding is that the LCD panels that are in the iMac are not the same one as in the Powerbook. This after seeing them both taken apart. Powerbook is radically different so I'm thinking whatever shortages wont affect laptops unless it's a global part used across the board causing shortages.

For the person upstream, iBooks use 12.1 and 14.1 TFT displays, nothing close to 15 inch. Again, if there's some part used in all LCDs then I could see that affecting the iBook, if not, no affect.
 
Re: 15' lcds (1280x800) shortage

Originally posted by evanmarx
no 1280x800. and that's the exact same screen the 15' powerbook was using until now. that means shortage on the new Al powerbook too, unless they use higher res screens (e.g. 1650x1050) which would be too much for my taste...

so the shortage looks real.
No, the 15" TiBook uses a screen with 854 pixels vertically, not 800. (Can't remember what the horizontal pixel count is right now...)

HTH
WM
 
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