Casino En LigneMigliori Casino Non AamsCasino Online Non AamsBetting Sites UKCasino UK Sites
Apple: Best and Worst of Times Spacevirus Designs Media For Quiksilver Times Square Prodigal Mac: Are We There Yet? Are We There Yet? Are We There Yet? KromA Posts Blink 182 Times Three More Related Stories

Opinion: Page (1) of 2 - 08/29/02 Email this story to a friend. email article Print this page (Article printing at MyDmn.com).print page
Prodigal Mac: It Was the Best of Times, It Was the Worst of Times Which Apple is going to show up in the next twelve months? By Kevin Schmitt Folks, I'm tanned, I'm rested, and I'm ready. (Translation: my usually butt-white Irish skin is a lovely late-summer pink, I've been lazy, and Dave Nagel was about to hand me my rear end on a shiny silver platter garnished with a lovely sprig of parsley if I didn't get him something to publish soon.) I hope everyone out there in Mac-land is doing about the same, because if this summer has been any indication, the next year or so should be a very interesting one for the professional end of the Mac market.

Now, we know Steve Jobs has been all over the consumer market like stink on a goat, and if you happen to fall into this segment, the iTimes are pretty iSweet for you right about iNow, what with the iMac, the iPod, and all 'dem cute little iApps. Alas, this article is not for you. While the times are great for Mac consumer users, it's hard to tell which way the wind is blowing these days for those of us that make up the professional segment, which leads me to oh-so-smoothly work in the title of this article:


It was the best of times
If the mid-nineties were the "poop age" of Apple software, the early zips may come to be known as the decidedly "anti-poop age" of Apple software. As I write this, I have just spent a bleary-eyed weekend with Jaguar, which, in case you've been living under a rock for the last month or so, is Apple's code-cum-marketing name for the eagerly-awaited and much-ballyhooed Mac OS X 10.2. Folks, I am more impressed than I thought I was going to be. I'm not going to go as far as saying that "this is the operating system OS X 10.0 should have been," as I've heard many utter in the last few days, but this is definitely the version that finally delivers on pretty much everything we were promised OS X would eventually be. Oh, sure, I have some minor issues with it, like an enormous system slowdown whenever I try to install a TrueType font and the police state ushered in with the new Dock with regards to third-party application switchers. But, as Fred Sanford would put it, this is the big one: Quartz Extreme, Inkwell, the return of Spring-loaded Folders, native Samba serving, yadda yadda yadda. You've probably heard all the buzzwords by now. The bar has definitely been raised, and unless you're a Director developer or Quark designer, Jaguar is definitely right for the vast majority of the creative marketplace (especially those stuck in the middle of a sea of Windows). Maybe when word gets around about what you actually get for the money folks will stop complaining about the $129 price tag, because it's definitely worth the jack. And yes, before the cynical amongst you break out the torches and pitchforks, I paid for my copy like every other schmoe out there.

And it's not just the OS that's benefitting from the software renaissance going on there in Cupertino. Apple's Napoleonic streak of creative software acquisitions has already borne fruit in the form of the first release of Apple Shake (sounds like the flavor of the month over at the DQ). Sure, Windows users can still buy Shake (for now, anyway), but it's going to cost you double what the Mac version does. Only time will tell what will become of Apple's purchase of Silicon Grail and Emagic, but if the Shake model is any indication, it won't be long before Apple could conceivably have a low-cost, turnkey software/hardware solution for any number of creative markets. Stay tuned on this one, but it's not a stretch to say that the future is very bright in the professional-grade creative production department.

Another sign that this is, indeed, the best of times for Apple was provided to me over the weekend, when I saw Gateway's iMac rip-off commercial. How cute! The little gateway machine was bouncing over an iMac and sticking out it's "tongue" at it, all while the Billy Bigvoice announcer is spewing the same FUD about no applications being available on the Mac. This is, quite frankly, something I never thought I would see: a PC maker trying direct competition with Apple. Wasn't Apple's puny 5 percent market share not worth going after? I thought Apple was irrelevant. Guess not. If you see these ads, after the initial bad taste in your mouth goes away, you'll likely come 'round to realizing that the direct competition route is great for Apple. I'd like to see more PC makers jump on board this train, actually.

OK, enough fun. Time to leave a big, stinky you-know-what in the punchbowl:

It was the worst of times
While the software side of the Mac equation is pretty freaking excellent, I'm really beginning to worry about where the hardware is going. Take the new towers Apple just released. At first glance, everything looks pretty good. Dual processors across the board, DDR RAM (finally), spankin' new Radeon cards, decent pricing. However, at least for me, after a couple of days I realized I was doing the toolie version of beergoggling with the new towers. Dual processors are nice and all, but combining the clock speeds of two top-of-the-line G4's just about equals the latest offerings of single CPUs from AMD and Intel. Supposedly, megaHertz doesn't matter, but when you're only halfway to where other chipmakers are, with no signs of things getting any faster, then that's cause for concern. There has to be some serious catching up, and soon.


Page: 1 2 Next Page

Related Sites: Creative Mac ,   Digital Media Designer ,   DV Format ,   Presentation Master ,   Oceania ,   MacAnimationPro
Related Newsletter:
To Comment on This Article, Click HERE

Most Recent Reader Comments:
  • Prodigal Mac: It Was the Best of Times, It Was the Worst of Times by DMN Editorial at Aug. 03, 2004 11:27 pm gmt

    Click Here To Read All Posts
    Must be Registered to Respond (Free Registration!!!, CLICK HERE)
  • canon digital camera
    Canon Powershot SD550 7.1MP Digital Camera 7.1MP Digital Camera (Rated by 55 users)
    From its elegantly curved profile to its superb functionality, the ultra-compact PowerShot SD550 Digital ELPH rightfully owns the top spot in the Digital ELPH line.
    Price Range $309 to $445View Details Related Items

    DellBusiness: $399.00
    Dell Home: $339.15
    photosweep: $329.00
    Canon PowerShot S2 IS 5.0MP Digital Camera (Rated by 127 users)
    5-megapixel recording (resolution up to 2592 x 1944) 12X optical zoom lens with Image Stabilizer 1-13/16" flip-up LCD 16MB SD(tm) memory card disposable batteries included
    Price Range $312 to $495View Details Related Items

    Buy.com: $351.89
    DellBusiness: $399.00
    Dell Home: $339.15
    Canon PowerShot A610 Digital Camera 5.0MP Digital Camera (Rated by 49 users)
    5 Megapixel / 4x Optical and Digital Zoom / 2 Inch Vari-Angle LCD Screen / Movie and Still Modes / SD Memory Slot / USB / PictBridge / Uses AA Batteries.
    Price Range $200 to $389View Details Related Items

    Dell Home: $211.65
    Buy.com: $219.99
    DellBusiness: $249.00
    Canon PowerShot SD400 5.0MP Digital Camera (Rated by 235 users)
    The PowerShot SD400 is a 5.0 Megapixel camera unrivaled in its category.
    Price Range $193 to $290View Details Related Items

    6ave.com: $273.00
    42nd St. Photo: $249.99
    Avalon Gadgets: $244.85
    Canon Rebel XT 8.0MP Digital Camera (Rated by 31 users)
    For convenience, ease of use and no compromise SLR performance, look no further than the EOS Digital Rebel XT.
    Price Range $644 to $1,020View Details Related Items

    Dell Home: $809.10
    iBuyPlasma: $749.00
    DellBusiness: $899.00
    Canon Digital Rebel XT Digital Camera - Silver (Rated by 83 users)
    For convenience, ease of use and no-compromise SLR performance, look no further than the EOS Digital Rebel XT.
    Price Range $665 to $855View Details Related Items

    Dell Home: $719.10
    iBuyPlasma: $692.00
    DellBusiness: $799.00
    HOT THREADS on DMN Forums
    Delete memory preset (7) • by kiska on the on the Synthetik Studio Artist forum recording brushstroke question (6) • by john_d2 on the on the Synthetik Studio Artist forum Organizing Photoshop CS2 Brushes (5) • by Isabelle on the on the Adobe Photoshop forum Masking (3) • by Isabelle on the on the Adobe Photoshop forum illustrator CS2 colour replace (2) • by Terras on the on the Adobe Illustrator forum Motion vs Director - Software Advice?  • by ngcomputing.com on the on the Macromedia Director forum
    /www/dmonline/cgi.digitalmedianet.com/cgi-bin/links/ib_ads.xml (No such file or directory)
    © Copyright, 2006 Digital Media Online, All Rights Reserved