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As long as is understandable, who cares what punctuation or if he spelled it correctly or not. Even if the grammar is bad, who cares.

This website is called macrumors and the topic in this thread is the imac. People should care about what they say not how they say it.
 
If you don't know too, I just don't know what to think ... I'm not English : ask theSeb if his dictionary is a good one !

Oxford basically the "official" dictionary of the language.. but tends to focus on what is technically correct, not actual usage by native speakers. I didn't realize that "realize" was actually technically correct in the UK; I thought only the "ise" versions were correct as that is all I've ever seen used on British publications.
 
Well my teacher taught me "realize" with the "sweet z" rielais ,which came from latin i suppose infact in Italy we say "realiz-zare" which is similar.
 
If you don't know too, I just don't know what to think ... I'm not English : ask theSeb if his dictionary is a good one !

Yes, the Oxford dictionary is a very good dictionary.

This is off-topic, but it frightens me to see how many people born in England can't write English properly, or are just not bothered. It's a sad state of affairs. Even the simple things, like understanding the difference between "is" and "are" for singular and plural.
 
I am not sure what your beef is with this guy, but his writing is hardly incomprehensible.

Well thank you. For info, the reason why it appeared in Quote not to have any mistakes is because I fixed the most obvious punctuation things for effect. I overlooked the typos (they are what they are and don't annoy me) but the iOS bug of putting a comma before the next word rather than at the end of the word preceding it. There. Apologise for ruining your day.

PS. I spell words the English way because that's where I am from and where I live!
 
Well my teacher taught me "realize" with the "sweet z" rielais ,which came from latin i suppose infact in Italy we say "realiz-zare" which is similar.

It comes from the French "réaliser" and the French probably stole it from Latin. The common misconception is that "realize" is the American spelling, but that's not actually true. This form of spelling was in use in England as early as the 15th century.

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Ok,lets stay in topic,lets go back to Imac 2012.

I think everything that we could possibly say about the phantom 2012 iMac has already been said. :D
 
'Realize' (US&Canada) is adapted from the English version of 'Realise'.

Anyways, i think i lost some brain cells reading this.....
 
It comes from the French "réaliser" and the French probably stole it from Latin. The common misconception is that "realize" is the American spelling, but that's not actually true. This form of spelling was in use in England as early as the 15th century.

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I think everything that we could possibly say about the phantom 2012 iMac has already been said. :D

Ok.I remember my studies were talking about Petrarca,Donne,Milton and Dryden to be at the very beginning of the english as we know and even Da Vinci was travelling to France thats why latin was the english along ago.
 
Wasn't correcting the guy to show off my grammar skills. It's just that for months now he makes very valid points and most people tend to ignore them because of the wrong use of commas (thanks for that Seb). So I thought I'd pointit out. It's an iOS issue when you are typing fast.

Back on to the real issues. What do people feel about current generation SSD shortages as a common reason for the delay of 13" rMBP and iMac? Not the only reason. But a eason.
 
'Realize' (US&Canada) is adapted from the English version of 'Realise'.

Anyways, i think i lost some brain cells reading this.....

It is not. Why would you lose brain cells by reading some interesting facts and learning something? That seems odd.

The dictionary on the UK/World side of our website gives alternative ‘-ise’ spellings at the main entries for all ‘-ize’ words where it’s appropriate. In British English, it doesn’t matter which spelling convention is chosen: neither is right or wrong, and neither is ‘more right’ than the other. The important thing is that, whichever form you choose, you should use it consistently within a piece of writing.

Many people visiting the World (non-US) version of our website ask us why we spell words such as realize, finalize, and organize with ‘-ize’ spellings, rather than ‘-ise’. There’s a widespread belief that these spellings belong only to American English, and that British English should use the ‘-ise’ forms instead, i.e. realise, finalise, and organise.
In fact, the ‘-ize’ forms have been in use in English spelling since the 15th century: they didn’t originate in American use, even though they are now standard in US English. The first example for the verb organize in the Oxford English Dictionary is from around 1425, from an English translation of a treatise on surgery written by the French physician Guy de Chauliac:
The brayne after þe lengþ haþ 3 ventriclez, And euery uentricle haþ 3 parties & in euery partie is organized [L. organizatur] one vertue.
The OED’s earliest example for realize dates from 1611: it’s taken from a definition in A Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues, a bilingual dictionary written by Randle Cotgrave:
Realiser, to realize, to make of a reall condition, estate, or propertie; to make reall.
The first recorded use of the verb with an ‘-ise’ spelling in the OED is not until 1755 – over a century later!
The use of ‘-ize’ spellings is part of the house style at Oxford University Press. It reflects the style adopted in the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (which was published in parts from 1884 to 1928) and in the first editions of Hart’s Rules (1904) and the Authors’ and Printers’ Dictionary (1905). These early works chose the ‘-ize’ spellings as their preferred forms for etymological reasons: the -ize ending corresponds to the Greek verb endings -izo and -izein.

I am not sure why you guys from the UK want to argue with your own Oxford dictionary.

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Ok.I remember my studies were talking about Petrarca,Donne,Milton and Dryden to be at the very beginning of the english as we know and even Da Vinci was travelling to France thats why latin was the english along ago.

I think the Latin influence on other European languages dates back even further to Roman times.

Anyway, back to discussing the topic. SSD shortages, eh?
 
Back on to the real issues. What do people feel about current generation SSD shortages as a common reason for the delay of 13" rMBP and iMac? Not the only reason. But a eason.

SSD shortages or even lack ! I don't think they would use the same sizes as in the MBPr, maybe they've been waiting for bigger disks ... :confused:
 
bored.jpg


There isn't anything more to talk about really. All we can do now is wait or continue with our English grammar class.
 
I would buy it in a heartbeat and would give Cinema Displays a boost in sales
but i don't see Apple unifying Mini+Imac+Pro.
 
Back on to the real issues. What do people feel about current generation SSD shortages as a common reason for the delay of 13" rMBP and iMac? Not the only reason. But a eason.

The 13" rMBP would use the same custom slot-inserted SSDs as the 15" rMBP. The iMac would use regular 2.5" enclosed drives, of which there is no shortage.

I'm more inclined to believe that 13" retina turned out to be Hard. But not sure.
 
Peter has stolen this idea. A guy on the Mac Pro forum came up with it ages ago. We should follow what Apple has taught us and sue immediately.

The desktop line seems to be headed for do it yourself territory. :rolleyes:
 
The desktop line seems to be headed for do it yourself territory. :rolleyes:

I am not sure where it's headed, but I am slowly getting back into PC gaming slowly (because it's more fun than work) and I might just build myself a Windows 7 based desktop one of these days. I can't be bothered to try and run a hackintosh.
 
I am not sure where it's headed, but I am slowly getting back into PC gaming slowly (because it's more fun than work) and I might just build myself a Windows 7 based desktop one of these days. I can't be bothered to try and run a hackintosh.

What scares me of going hackintosh is that I fear to be unable to make hardware and software match together without any conflict ...
 
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