AcutancePhotography said:I have never cared for the all-in-one imac design. I prefer my peripherals to remain separate and easily switchable in case something breaks or there is an upgrade.
Unfortunately, Apple doesn't sell a classic desktop computer. You have a choice between:
- Really roughing it: iPad and keyboard
- A laptop on a stand plugged into a monitor (my choice for many years)
- A mini: a little shuttle that has relatively limited horsepower and limited upgradeability
- An all in one like the iMac (which is upgradeable if you don't mind following some step by step guides: https://www.ifixit.com/Device/iMac_Intel_27%22_EMC_2639)
- A budget busting Mac Pro.
- Or you spec a killer PC and set it up as a hackintosh, but that's fraught with some degree of risk -- risk of buying components that don't play nicely with MacOS, risk of cooking components, risk of being locked out with subsequent OS updates, etc.
The value proposition has been best with the Mini, but I have considered replacing my 5 year old Macbook Pro with an iMac as I never use the laptop out of the docked position these days (due to iPad use, phones capable of moving files more easily, etc.).
So the iMac announcement seems like a feature-level winner, but there are some drawbacks:
- The last iMac was a much better value proposition. I believe there's a huge price bump for the new retina 5k version.
- How many video cards natively support that massive resolution? Upgrading to a nicer card in 2-3 years time (a common move by PC builders to stretch the life of their PCs) may be difficult, expensive, or outright impossible if Apple has a difficult mount geometry (which is highly possible with these kind of all-in-one rigs).
- If you also use your nice Photoshop box to play games, you are likely hosed. 99% of the world presently makes all of its desktop/TV games for 1920x1080 resolution, and we all play them on monitors with exactly that resolution, as leaving that native resolution on an LCD monitor aliases everything all to hell. So with that fancy new monitor, you either have to (a) enjoy gaming on a fuzzy TV like view or (b) wait until game companies offer games that run in a native 5k format (don't hold your breath) and you crush your video card trying to render all those pixels real time. So if I bought this, it would be a dedicated Photography box only and I'd need additional space and different monitor for a gaming PC.
- A
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