Apple 10253 Published by

Apple's blazing-fast, elegant, and economical everything-in-one goes where ordinary desktops can't.



From Infoworld:
Pundits have predicted the death of the desktop for years. I wish it could be so. No technology is more deserving of retirement than the sheet-metal black box and tangle of cables that is the standard PC.

Notebooks and tablets have undeniable appeal: There's only one item to buy, no pieces to plug together. They're silent and power-efficient. They emerge from the box ready to work. But portable devices have limitations that can make them inconvenient if portability isn't your primary consideration. Their displays are too small. The need to run on batteries, and the cramped confines of a compact chassis put a tight limit on memory, storage, and performance. When you reposition the display, the keyboard and pointing device (real or virtual) move, too. Making computers portable also makes them expensive. As long as portables have these strikes against them, the desktop will live on.
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