F330P4 a écrit:le bootcamp je voulais dire ! merci de ne pas me prendre pour un con
Ce n'était pas le cas hein.. Pardonne moi si tu l'as ressenti ainsi ..
Hugues
Modérateurs: Garion, Silverwitch
Hugues a écrit:silverwitch a écrit:Je pense que tu as raison. Un nouvel iBook serait certainement l'idéal pour l'utilisation que tu en aurais. Les nouvelles machines (processeur Intel et compatibles Windows) devraient être annoncées très prochainement pour une disponibilité fin mai.
Silverwitch
Vraisemblablement ce sera un écran 13"3, puisque d'après Forbes qui reprend le Commercial Times, AsusTek a reçu une commande par Apple de fabrication de diverses pièces (carte mère, écran cristaux liquide notamment) pour 1,2 millions d'unités.
http://www.forbes.com/technology/feeds/ ... 43961.html
Et la date dont tu parles silverwitch se confirme puisqu'ils évoquent les premiers jours de juin, soit la même période.
Hugues
Macworld UK a écrit:[...]
Meanwhile speculation continues to grow that Apple will announce an Intel-powered replacement for its current iBook models, perhaps as soon as next week on the eve of the company's financial announcement on April 19.
Some reports claim Apple will offer a choice of colours in the new iBook family, which they say will be renamed the "MacBook" family.
Apple has an arrangement with a UK firm under which that firm disposes of all Apple's ex-demo stock. That company this week announced a number of iBooks and eMacs at slightly discounted prices, inadvertently furnishing potential evidence that a move to release new consumer portables could come soon.
LExpress.fr a écrit:Apple bat Apple
Sahra Saoudi
Le label des Beatles a été débouté lundi de sa plainte contre la firme d'informatique américaine relative à l'utilisation du logo à la pomme dans le domaine musical
Un tribunal britannique a débouté lundi Apple Corps de son action contre le fabricant américain d'ordinateurs, Apple Computer, qui pourra continuer d'associer le logo à la pomme avec son commerce en ligne iTunes.
Le label musical - qui appartient à Paul McCartney et Ringo Starr et aux ayants droit de John Lennon et George Harrison - demandait non seulement le retrait du logo de iTunes, mais aussi des dommages-intérêts. L'avocat de la société américaine avait argué, quant à elle, que cette dernière ne possède pas les droits de la musique vendue sur iTunes, mais seulement la technologie qui permet de la distribuer.
"L'utilisation du logo Apple à l'écran ne suggère pas un lien significatif avec l'œuvre de création", a estimé le juge dans ses conclusions. En d'autres termes, il a estimé qu'Apple Computer n'avait pas empiété dans le domaine artistique, pour lequel Apple Corps a l'usage exclusif du logo à la pomme selon l'accord de 1991.
Suite à sa défaite, le label devra payer l'intégralité des frais du procès, évalués à plus de 3 millions de livres - 4,5 millions d'euros. Il a d'ores et déjà annoncé son intention de faire appel contre la décision rendue lundi.
Andy Warhol l'avait prédit avec une telle perspicacité, dans ce monde multimédia, tout le monde aura droit à son quart d'heure de gloire, c'est maintenant le cas d'un chauffeur de taxi de Londres, interviewé par la BBC en tant qu'expert des nouvelles technologies, à propos du procès Apple contre Apple.
Le quart d'heure de gloire du Congolais francophone et de son accent « frenchy » incertain est désormais devenu une séquence culte, illustrant l'une des plus belles bourdes de la BBC. La journaliste de la télévision publique anglaise devait interroger un certain Guy Kewney, éditeur d'un site Web spécialisé dans les nouvelles technologies. L'expert attendait gentiment son tour dans le hall de la BBC lorsqu'il vit avec surprise une autre personne, interrogée en son nom sur le petit écran.
Le Guy Kewney en pleine interview avec la journaliste de la BBC était en fait un chauffeur de taxi congolais qui attendait le règlement d'une course dans le même hall du studio de télévision. Appelé devant les caméras, il accepte l'invitation sans trop savoir à quoi s'attendre. Sur cette vidéo, on peut admirer le chauffeur se débattre avec les questions de son interlocutrice, alors qu'il ne connaît visiblement rien au sujet. Sous la pression des caméras, il préfère néanmoins jouer le jeu, nous offrant ainsi une séquence mémorable !
Dans un anglais d'adoption, le congolais arrive à terminer une interview après 1 minute 42 secondes d'improvisation totale, un régal. On saura notamment grâce à lui qu'il « est aujourd'hui très facile pour chacun d'aller dans un cybercafé prendre quelque chose sur Internet. » Une révélation !
central_park_écureuil a écrit:Hugues, tu avais raison (avec une semaine d'avance sur la vraie date).
http://www.apple.com/macbook/macbook.html
Hugues a écrit:Une brève démonstration de l'attache magnétique du Macbook:
<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/ABRFV9lGdOY"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/ABRFV9lGdOY" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350"></embed></object>
Hugues
zolthar a écrit:Merde, moi je voulais voir une démo de l'attache magnétique de l'alim ...
zolthar a écrit:Hugues a écrit:Tes voeux sont des ordres :
J'aimerais 1'000'000 d'€
MacRumors a écrit:Apple Trademarks 'Mac Pro' in U.S.
Wednesday May 24, 2006 07:35 PM EST
Posted by arn
Mac News
Apple previously trademarked the term "Mac Pro" in New Zealand in late 2005. On May 17th 2006, the same name was trademarked through the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office under the following classifications:computers; computer hardware; computer software; computer peripherals; notebook computers; laptop computers; tablet computers; computer servers; handheld computers; mobile computers; hard drives; audio speakers; speakers for computers; personal digital assistants; electronic organizers; electronic notepads; magnetic data carriers; computer gaming machines; microprocessors; memories boards; monitors; displays; keyboards; computer input devices; computer cables; modems; printers; parts and accessories for all the aforesaid goods
This appears to add further evidence that Apple may be considering changing the name of the PowerMac to "Mac Pro" in the near future. Apple rebranded the PowerBook in January to the "MacBook Pro" and subsequently dropped the iBook name in favor of "MacBook".
Steve Jobs had indicated that they were moving away from the "Power" name when the MacBook Pro was first announced:It's a new name [MacBook Pro] because we're kinda done with 'Power' and because we want 'Mac' in the name of our products."
MacBook may run warm because rear vent is blocked
Some MacBook computers may appear to be running too warm, with the fan running consistently and heat emanating from the top and/or the bottom of the computer.
If this happens with your MacBook, check the rear vent of the MacBook to make sure it's not blocked.
Some MacBooks may have left the factory with a thin piece of clear plastic covering the rear vent. This is used in the factory to prevent dust from getting into your computer. If your MacBook has the plastic still over the vent, simply remove and discard it.
If your MacBook does not have the thin piece of clear plastic over the vent but is running warm, see article 30612, "Apple Notebooks: Operating Temperature."
Washington Post a écrit:Apple's MacBook Leaves Its Predecessors in the Dust
By Rob Pegoraro
Sunday, June 11, 2006; Page F06
Apple's new MacBook ranks as one of the company's most anticipated laptops ever. This machine isn't Apple's first portable computer to run on Intel chips -- with all the added speed and Windows compatibility they bring -- but it is the first to sell at consumer-friendly prices. And it brings the first fundamental change to Apple's entry-level laptops since 2001.
The MacBook almost justifies the wait for it to arrive. Apple has delivered an exceptionally versatile machine, but three issues can't help but hold it back a bit. The most serious among them should be fixable with a software update; the others are less critical but can't be cured without changes to the MacBook's hardware (and one may not matter to many users anyway).
In general, the MacBook represents a tremendous advance over the iBook that it replaces. It starts at $1,099, $100 more than its predecessor, but is barely heavier (the review model loaned by Apple weighed 5.14 pounds) and offers a wider, brighter, glossier screen (13.3 inches across). Its most important feature lies inside, a 1.83 or 2 GHz Intel Core Duo processor.
Like the Intel-based iMac, Mac mini and MacBook Pro, the MacBook rips through software revised for these new processors -- including the bundled Mac OS X 10.4 operating system and iLife '06 multimedia suite, plus a growing number of third-party applications. But it also runs most software written for the old PowerPC chips, at the cost of slower performance and a bigger demand for memory. (The 512 megabytes Apple includes aren't enough for sustained use of these older applications.)
And the MacBook can run Windows itself. You can employ Microsoft's operating system inside Mac OS X using the pre-release version of Parallels Workstation, an upcoming, $80 release from Herndon-based Parallels ( http://www.parallels.com ), or you can download Apple's free Boot Camp software ( http://www.apple.com/bootcamp ) to add a completely separate, faster copy of Windows XP that can be booted instead of OS X each time you start the MacBook.
Either way, buying the MacBook -- or any other Intel-based Mac -- means never having to say "I'm sorry, I can't run this program on my computer."
Apple offers the MacBook with a 60, 80, 100 or 120-gigabyte hard drive -- which you can upgrade yourself, a rarity on any laptop. The $1,099 model can burn CDs but only plays DVDs; two more expensive configurations, at $1,299 and $1,499, can burn both DVDs and CDs.
Like other Apple computers, this laptop makes some high-end features standard equipment while omitting a few things included by every other manufacturer.
For example, an iSight Webcam graces the top of the screen, allowing you to conduct video Web chats and take goofy self-portraits in Apple's Photo Booth program, and Bluetooth wireless connects such peripherals as cellphones and handheld organizers. The included remote control and Front Row software let you plug the MacBook into a larger monitor or TV -- after buying a $19 adapter for its miniature digital-video output -- and enjoy your music, photos and movies from across the living room.
But the MacBook provides only two USB ports, lacks a memory-card reader or PC Card expansion slot and even leaves out a modem. That last feature could be deal-breaker; if you ever must use dial-up, your only option is a $49 external model sold by Apple. And it's not as if there wasn't room on the MacBook's left flank to include a humble phone jack.
Like the iPod, the MacBook comes in white or black; the more striking black model costs $1,499, $150 more than a comparably configured white machine. Is it worth that much to carry around something that looks like Batman or Darth Vader's laptop? Something tells me I should expect to see folks using the black MacBook (one blogger has nicknamed it the "DarthBook") the next time I'm on a plane.
The MacBook's weight makes it slightly less suited to travel than its predecessor, but its battery life easily suffices. In a worst-case test, with a DVD playing and the screen backlight turned up all the way, the test MacBook ran for 2 hours and 24 minutes. Turning off Bluetooth and WiFi while dimming the screen halfway -- a decent approximation of coach-class film-going -- stretched that time to 3 hours and 9 minutes.
In other tests, the machine ran for 3 hours and 59 minutes while playing a loop of music with the screen dimmed halfway (with WiFi on and Bluetooth off); a best-case test, with the screen dimmed as low as possible, both wireless systems disabled and only the TextEdit program open, yielded 4 1/2 hours of use.
Unlike most PC vendors, Apple remembers that power adapters add weight and bulk, too; the MacBook's compact hardware weighs only nine ounces. It connects to the MacBook with a new, magnetically attached MagSafe plug that gracefully falls away if yanked instead of dragging the computer off a table or damaging the inside of the power socket.
The MacBook, however, may be less attractive once the flight ends. The review unit repeatedly lost the wireless signal of an Apple AirPort Extreme WiFi access point, even while Windows laptops in the same room stayed online. MacBook users have posted similar complaints in Apple's discussion forums.
Weirdly enough, this problem didn't emerge when I rebooted the MacBook into Windows -- which suggests that Apple should be able to fix it by updating the MacBook's software.
The unit stayed nearly silent most of the time, but a different side of its personality surfaced when copying some music CDs to the hard disk. The CD/DVD drive and cooling fans revved all the way up to a sustained, low-level howl -- as if the computer were readying for takeoff -- and the already hot left rear corner of the machine became outright scorching. The plastic in front of the screen hinge, just above the MacBook's vents, felt even hotter.
It's not that other laptops run much cooler, but after all the time Apple has spent advertising the "performance per watt" advantages of its new Intel processors, you'd expect something a little less sizzling than the average Windows notebook.
It can be instructive to compare the MacBook with PC laptops built around the same Intel chips. Dell's Inspiron E1405, when configured with the closest possible specifications to the base MacBook, costs $18 more, while HP's Pavilion dv1000t costs $145 less when set up to match a MacBook.
Those price differences are far smaller than what a lot of people believe about Macs. On the other hand, a lot of people don't need or want all the extras that Apple bundles. And they'll be able to save substantially more by getting a slower, heavier laptop from somebody else.
Price alone won't lead people to get the MacBook (and it certainly won't sell the high-end MacBook Pro, which has a bigger screen and more powerful graphics hardware and starts at $1,999). You have to want that extra refinement of an Apple machine -- software like the virus-resistant, low-maintenance Mac OS X and hardware such as the MacBook's ingenious trackpad, which lets you scroll through windows or bring up right-click menus by dragging two fingers across its surface.
Glitches such as the MacBook's erratic WiFi reception and almost painfully hot surfaces undercut that appeal. Apple has taught its users to expect better, and it ought to be able to deliver as much before long.
f1pronostics a écrit:J'avoue que je suis de plus en plus séduit. Je me demande même quelle raison me ferait encore pencher pour un PC.
f1pronostics a écrit:Si il y a un peu de sérieux, pourquoi? La compatibilité n'est même plus un argument. Alors sincèrement je ne vois plus.lovecraft a écrit:La lucidité ?f1pronostics a écrit:J'avoue que je suis de plus en plus séduit. Je me demande même quelle raison me ferait encore pencher pour un PC.
C'est tout ce qui reste. Encore que, question offre logicielle de base on ne soit pas volé pour ce qu'on met.ayrtonforever a écrit:le prix alors ?f1pronostics a écrit:Si il y a un peu de sérieux, pourquoi? La compatibilité n'est même plus un argument. Alors sincèrement je ne vois plus.lovecraft a écrit:La lucidité ?f1pronostics a écrit:J'avoue que je suis de plus en plus séduit. Je me demande même quelle raison me ferait encore pencher pour un PC.
f1pronostics a écrit:C'est tout ce qui reste. Encore que, question offre logicielle de base on ne soit pas volé pour ce qu'on met.ayrtonforever a écrit:le prix alors ?f1pronostics a écrit:Si il y a un peu de sérieux, pourquoi? La compatibilité n'est même plus un argument. Alors sincèrement je ne vois plus.lovecraft a écrit:La lucidité ?f1pronostics a écrit:J'avoue que je suis de plus en plus séduit. Je me demande même quelle raison me ferait encore pencher pour un PC.
Hugues a écrit:Une vidéo témoignant de la réactivité d'un MacBook 2Ghz équipé de 2Go de mémoire:
La célérité de la fonctionnalité Exposé de Mac OS X (l'aperçu des fenêtres) est saisissante.
Hugues
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