UA 30000miles offer+$50bonus 只需要任意一笔消费# Hardware - 计算机硬件
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Mon, 11 Jun 2012 16:30:33 PDT
According to New York Times technology columnist David Pogue, Apple still
believes in desktop Macs, including both the iMac and the Mac Pro.
The Mac Pro in particular has raised the ire of some Apple fans because it
has been several years since the last update, and the update today was
extremely minor.
Pogue writes:
Many Apple observers also wonder if Apple thinks that desktop computers are
dead, since not a word was said about the iMac and Mac Pro. An executive did
assure me, however, that new models and new designs are under way, probably
for release in 2013.
Updated Xeon E5 chips were released in March, but the Mac Pro update
released today strangely didn't include them.
The company late last year was reportedly "questioning" the future of the
Mac Pro line, examining whether it should continue offering the professional
-level workstation as sales have declined amid a continued shift toward
notebook machines and specs that had gone stale while waiting for Intel to
release updated processors. With Pogue's post today, however, the future of
the Mac Pro seems slightly more assured.
Thanks Susan!
According to New York Times technology columnist David Pogue, Apple still
believes in desktop Macs, including both the iMac and the Mac Pro.
The Mac Pro in particular has raised the ire of some Apple fans because it
has been several years since the last update, and the update today was
extremely minor.
Pogue writes:
Many Apple observers also wonder if Apple thinks that desktop computers are
dead, since not a word was said about the iMac and Mac Pro. An executive did
assure me, however, that new models and new designs are under way, probably
for release in 2013.
Updated Xeon E5 chips were released in March, but the Mac Pro update
released today strangely didn't include them.
The company late last year was reportedly "questioning" the future of the
Mac Pro line, examining whether it should continue offering the professional
-level workstation as sales have declined amid a continued shift toward
notebook machines and specs that had gone stale while waiting for Intel to
release updated processors. With Pogue's post today, however, the future of
the Mac Pro seems slightly more assured.
Thanks Susan!