The Intel iMac - Apple Makes the Switch: iMac G5 vs. iMac Core Duo
As I mentioned earlier, since the Intel transition is nowhere near complete, Apple now offers two iMac choices for their customers at the same price point: the iMac G5 and the Intel based platform, simply called the iMac. Although it is slightly newer, the Intel based iMac uses the exact same externals and mostly the same hardware as the revamped iMac G5. The only differences really are on the motherboard itself.
Two identical iMacs, two different processors
In fact, the iMac in general is extremely quiet, regardless of whether you have a PowerPC or Intel based model. Both iMacs were virtually silent during operation, although for whatever reason, the iMac G5's fan would sometimes spin at full speed upon startup. I never once heard the iMac Core Duo's fan spin up, not even during my CPU intensive H.264 encoding tests.
The 17" iMac comes with a 1.83GHz Core Duo processor, while the 20" ships with a 2.0GHz processor (compared to 1.9GHz and 2.1GHz in the G5 versions). Both of these are your standard voltage Core Duo chips, which means that Apple could theoretically offer a smaller form factor desktop with a Low Voltage or Ultra Low Voltage Core Duo/Core Solo in the future. It's also worth noting that the fastest Core Duo out right now runs at 2.16GHz, so Apple could either upgrade their 20" model or offer an even larger, higher end model in the future. The Core Duo processor is expected to top out at 2.33GHz towards the end of Q2.
The iMac and the iMac G5 are the first Macs I've used that ship with Apple's Mighty Mouse by default. It is a pleasant change from Apple's older optical mice. Despite it not being my favorite mouse, it is still a huge improvement over what used to come with these things.
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