New Mac Mini at Macworld, Will Look Like iMac + Time Capsule

TUAW has the most complete description yet of the new Mac mini widely rumored/expected to launch at Macworld. It’ll be topped with iMac-esque black plastic instead of white, and have a lip like Time Capsule.

The lip conceals the Mac mini’s optical drive slot, which is useful now since TUAW says that the new drive will be SATA, meaning it can be swapped out for a second hard drive, probably as a custom build option. The second drive is boon to the business crowd that uses Mac minis in server farms (like this one), since it not only adds more storage, but makes RAID1 mirroring easy.

No other details on specs—we’re pretty interested in what processor these things will be packing—though it’s looking fairly certain (as certain as these things ever look, anyway) that they’ll have Nvidia’s GeForce 9400m chipset from the new MacBooks in tow.

We’ll know in about a week, along with whatever other surprises Macworld has in store. What would you like to see in the new Mac mini, besides a Blu-ray drive? (Cause that’s what everyone wants.) [TUAW]

Rumor: New Mac Minis Dressed in Sexy Aluminum

Mac_mini Insiders are leaking details about Apple’s rumored Mac Mini, confirming Wired.com’s earlier predictions about the device.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog cites anonymous sources who say the new Mac
Mini will sport an enclosure resembling the aluminum-and-black scheme
seen in the new MacBooks and iMacs.

Also, sources told TUAW that the Mac Mini would ship with a SATA
optical drive, which can be swapped out for a second SATA hard drive as a
customization option.

Wired.com in mid-December reported the first rumor from an insider about a new Mac Mini. An
Apple corporate employee said an upgrade to the Mac Mini will be
launched at Macworld Expo 2009.

Our source could not disclose specification details on the device, but we predicted
the Mac Mini would be composed of aluminum (and perhaps be marketed as "The greenest Mac ever"). We also guessed the rumored
Mac Mini will ship with Nvidia chipsets — which corroborates with a
MacRumors report
that discovered strings of code referring to an
unreleased Mac Mini shipping with an Nvidia chipset. 

Rumor Watch: New Mac mini go for launch [TUAW]

Photo: Apple





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New iMacs in January: The Rumors Continue

Imac

More details have surfaced about Apple’s new iMac rumored for release next month.

Economic Daily News, a Chinese publication that reported the iMac rumor last week, says the new all-in-one desktops will sport magnesium-aluminum alloy chassis. Further backing the rumor of new iMacs, the publication also cited the suppliers of the machine’s cooling module.

The publication says component providers Foxconn and Catcher Technology are supplying the aluminum chassis. And Foxconn is partnering with Auras Technology to provide the cooling module, the report says.

Though these details are still rumors, it’s highly likely a new iMac will be launched January. It’s been about eight months since Apple last refreshed its iMac; January’s Macworld Expo 2009 would be a prime opportunity to announce upgrades.

We’re guessing the iMacs will ship with a quad-core CPU — in anticipation of Mac OS X Snow Leopard, which Apple says will optimize multi-core systems.

Foxconn Group biggest winner over new Apple iMac, says paper [Digitimes]

See Also:

Photo: ~nathan/Flickr

Correction (2:30 PDT): Despite what’s being said in various reports, there are no indications that the cooling module will be different from the current iMac’s.
 





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HP MediaSmart Server ex487 gets hands-on love and full-blown review

HP’s 1.5TB MediaSmart Server ex487 (and its smaller 750GB sibling, the ex485) were just announced hours ago, but that hasn’t stopped a few lucky reviewers from putting their hands-on pictures and impressions online for the world to pore over. The biggest knocks that seemed to really grate the nerves of critics were that the single eSATA port was not port-multiplier aware, and despite the bump to 2GB of RAM, the TwonkyMedia and Remote Media Streaming software were still deemed “quirky and in need of some polish.” Those gripes aside, the newfangled unit was pretty well adored. In fact, WeGotServed flat-out called the device “stunning,” praising HP for its tightly integrated applications that worked fairly well on top of Windows Home Server. For those eying a simple-to-use media server, it looks like HP finally produced one that can be purchased sans regret; the real question, however, is will the outfit push these delectable new features down to existing ex470 / ex475 owners?

Read – MediaSmartServer review
Read – WeGotServed review / hands-on

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HP MediaSmart Server ex487 gets hands-on love and full-blown review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Dec 2008 08:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP debuts Mac-compatible MediaSmart ex485 / ex487 home servers

It’s been a long, long while since we’ve heard the words HP MediaSmart, and in fact, the last mention that was made wasn’t exactly positive. HP’s looking to put the past away and forge ahead with two new ones in the line: the Mac-friendly ex485 and ex487. Both devices are (of course) based on Microsoft’s Windows Home Server platform, and just like their predecessors, these are meant to automatically backup machines around the home and act as a network-accessible repository for all things media. The pair features HP’s Media Collector (used to schedule, copy and centralize digital files from networked PCs) and also acts as an iTunes server and an external backup device for Macs running Leopard and using Apple’s Time Machine software. As for specs, you’ll find a 2GHz Celeron CPU in each with 2GB of DDR2 RAM, gigabit Ethernet, four USB 2.0 ports, one eSATA jack and four internal HDD bays. The February-bound duo can be pre-ordered on January 5th for $599 (ex485; 750GB) / $749 (ex487; 1.5TB), and each can be scaled up to 9TB. Full release is after the break.

Continue reading HP debuts Mac-compatible MediaSmart ex485 / ex487 home servers

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HP debuts Mac-compatible MediaSmart ex485 / ex487 home servers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Dec 2008 00:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gingerbread Macintosh for serious gingerbread fanboys only

Tech confections are nothing new: we’ve seen laptops, Kindles… heck, Martha Stewart even got in on the geek-baking action once upon a time. So maybe we shouldn’t be impressed with this edible Mac, but the truth is, we love to eat, and the phrase “chocolate icons” really hooked us. So then… custard-filled pico projector in 2009? Yes. Hit the read link to check out more photos of this delectable desktop.

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Gingerbread Macintosh for serious gingerbread fanboys only originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Dec 2008 04:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: New iMacs to Ship January 2009

Imac

Here’s another rumor that suggests January’s Macworld Expo 2009 will be a snoozer: Upgraded iMacs are slated for shipping that month, according to a Chinese newspaper.

Chinese publication Economic Daily News says a component supplier leaked Apple’s plans to launch new iMacs in the first quarter of the year.

That doesn’t sound very exciting, since this will likely only be an incremental upgrade. The iMac line underwent the aluminum makeover only about a year and a half ago, so there shouldn’t be any major changes.

It’s highly likely this rumor is true. The last update to the iMac was in April; typically Apple refreshes its computers every six months. So January’s Macworld Expo would be a good opportunity for Apple to announce an upgrade.

Adding to the validity of the iMac rumor, MacRumors’ Arnold Kid last week reported that a string of code suggests there will be a new iMac shipping with an NVidia chipset.

So here’s what we know about Macworld 2009, which kicks off Jan. 5 in San Francisco: Phil Schiller (not Steve Jobs) will probably announce new iMacs and Mac Minis. The rumor of an iPhone Nano is gaining momentum, but the sources don’t appear very reliable, so we still doubt that’s happening.

(Yawn.) And this is going to be Apple’s final appearance at Macworld. Talk about going out with a "thud" rather than a bang.

 
[Digitimes via Gizmodo]

Photo: Jami3.org/Flickr





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More Details Surface on Rumored Mac Mini

New_mac_mini520x390
Shortly after an Apple employee told Wired.com that a new Mac Mini is coming January, images and details of the rumored product began appearing on the web.

MacRumors’ Arnold Kim found some very believable information about the Mac Mini. Digging through configuration files in the Mac operating system, Kim discovered evidence that a new Mac Mini as well as a new iMac will ship with NVidia chipsets. Strings of code referring to unreleased models of the two computers gave that information away.

Also, in less believable news, Macenstein over the weekend published an image (above) purporting to
be a spy shot of the new Mac Mini. "Is this the new Mac Mini?" the
publication wonders. Our answer: Probably not. It looks awful; it doesn’t
even display the holy Apple logo. Lame Photoshop job that couldn’t even
pass for a mock-up of Apple’s fine design.

Wired.com last week received a tip from an Apple corporate employee that a new Mac Mini will be announced Jan. 6 at the Macworld Expo trade show in San Francisco. The source declined to comment on specifications of the product.

An upgrade for the Mac Mini is long overdue. Apple has not upgraded the
product since August 2007; the company typically refreshes its
computers every six months.

Photo: Macenstein 





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8 Signs That Apple Customers Are No Longer Special

Applestore

Remember when Apple customers felt hip?

There
was a time when a glowing Apple logo symbolized radical nonconformity.
Being part of a miniature customer base was, to Mac users, like being a
member of a holier-than-thou, secret society — a "Cult of Mac," if you will. But when Apple’s
ecosystem grew beyond notebooks and desktops to phones and internet
services, that era came to an end.

Apple’s ubiquitous presence
in pop culture, news headlines and even politics prove that it’s
no longer special to be a member of the Mac cult.

Here’s a list of
examples showing just how mainstream Apple products have become. As you read
along, take a look to your left and to your right and get the attention
of the Apple customers around you. Now, raise a glass of Steve
Jobs’ favorite nonalcoholic grape juice and drink a toast to being the same as everyone
else. Repeat after me: We are all individuals!

 

Macs are big in Hollywood

Walle_2

It
seems practically every computer used in a movie is a Mac. It’s a
little sickening, but it makes sense: The damn things are just so
pretty, and if Hollywood stars have to be good-looking, their gadgets
should, too. The new Pixar film Wall-E took Mac product placement to
new heights: Whenever the miniature robot booted up, he played the Mac
start-up chime. And his robot lover EVE even had a white, utilitarian design
that epitomizes the Apple aesthetic. (Then again, it’s no coincidence
that Jobs used to be CEO of Pixar.)

Apple is skipping Macworld

Apple_630x

Apple
last week said that after 2009, the corporation won’t be attending
Macworld Expo
, the trade show that revolves around all things Apple.
The message was essentially, "We’re so big and popular that we don’t
need a trade show full of Apple-worshiping losers to advertise our products." That comes off as a
little cocky, but hey — it’s true. Apple’s secret product
campaign
generates so much buzz, the corporation might as well slice Macworld
from its budget. Heck, a Harvard professor estimated bloggers drummed up $400 million worth of free advertising on the iPhone. Yeesh.

Tool_3
Some guy with a mullet is Apple’s public face

Steve Jobs won’t be throwing on his artsy turtleneck and delivering his famous Macworld keynote in January. Instead, some guy named Phil Schiller, who looks like the star of King of Queens
with a Swayze-esque mullet, is emceeing Macworld. Sure, mullets were hip — in the 1990s.   

Apple is abandoning FireWire
Mac loyalists are still pissed about Apple’s omission of FireWire on the latest MacBooks. The corporation invented
FireWire; devices were made with FireWire ports just to connect to Mac
machines. How could Apple do such a thing? Answer: Apple is more
interested in appealing to the mainstream than its loyal fan base, and
ditching FireWire in favor of slimmer, sexy aluminum MacBooks (and the more ubiquitous USB standard) seemed
like a good idea. And Apple loves consistency, so don’t be surprised if
future Macs leave out that connection port, too.

Simpsons_3
The Simpsons mocks Apple

Appearing in an episode of The Simpsons is like passing a cultural litmus test that screams, "You’ve broken into the mainstream!" A recent Simpsons episode hurled prickly jokes at the cult of Apple — everything from
iPhones to overpriced Mac computers. Heck, Bart even goes as far as to
tease Steve Jobs, saying he pees on every iPod. How dare he insult our
fearless leader?

Walmart is selling the iPhone
You know the iPhone’s pretty
damn trendy if you can pick one up along with a bag of socks, a box of
rifle bullets and some discounted Halloween candy — at none other than
Walmart, one of the world’s largest retail arms. And Walmart is even selling the iPhone at a special low price of $197 — a whopping $2 less than the normal price tag.

The President-elect uses a Mac

Obamamac

Windows PC owners always pull the
"Macs aren’t compatible with any decent software" card when bashing Apple. But
that insult is clearly outdated if Barack Obama was able to win the U.S.
presidency with a Mac as his computing weapon (while using iChat to stay in touch with his family, no less). And wait — there’s one more thing: Obama has his own official iPhone application! Can we all "think different" if we’re all using the same trendy gadgets?

Digg2
Apple stories = Digg bait
Apple headlines are deeply, thoroughly and affectionately Dugg on
Digg.com, the most popular headline aggregator on the web. Check out
the top technology headlines on Digg, and without a doubt you’ll see at
least one story with the word(s) "Mac," "Apple" or "iPhone." Don’t see
one? Then the world is probably coming to an end. 

Photos: Christopher Chan/Flickr, Pixar, Jonathan Snyder/Wired.com, Apple, Fox, 24gotham/Flickr

 





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Giz Explains: Everything You Wanted to Know About DRM

Condensed explanation: Digital rights management is a corporate pain in the ass that stops you from doing whatever you want with music and movies in the name of fighting piracy. But there’s more to it.

Straight up, you run into DRM pretty much every day. Bought music from three of the four major labels or any TV show from iTunes? Played a game on Steam? Watched a Blu-ray movie? Hello, DRM. If you wanna get technical about it, digital rights management and copy protection are two different, if similar things. Digital rights management is copy protection’s sniveling, more invasive cousin—it isn’t designed simply to make it harder to steal content like straightforward copy protection—you thieving bastard you—but to control exactly how and when you use media. We’re going to cover both here, since they both refer to technologies that restrict what you do with music, movies and more.

There are, approximately, 10,742,489 kinds of DRM and copy protection. Almost every company or format has its own flavor that works in a slightly different way from everyone else—Apple’s iTunes-smothering FairPlay, Blu-ray’s BD+, the restrictions built into every gaming console. They’ve gotten more complex and nuanced over time, too, as content delivery has evolved. For instance, elementary-school DRM would simply keep you from copying or converting or doing other unseemly things to a file, like playing it on a non-sanctioned device. Or you might remember old-school CD keys, before the days of online activation. Today’s DRM, like for movie rentals, music subscriptions or software, constructs more elaborate obstacle courses, nuking videos 24 hours after you press play, or allowing a certain number of copies.

Many of these work in similar ways—files are encrypted with the DRM flavor of the day, and they’re unlocked or decrypted for your use by authorized programs and devices. Think of it like a secret handshake that only certain programs or pieces of hardware know. Often, they’re tied to an account like on Steam or iTunes. This makes it easy for the Man to keep track of and manage what you’re doing with stuff—how many copies you’ve made, how many machines you’ve authorized to play your content, whether your monthly all-you-can-eat music subscription is still active, that kind of thing. DRM-busting cracks look for ways to strip that encryption out to allow free usage, copying or modification of the file.

So, aside from the fact that DRM keeps you copying or modifying content, and playing it on whatever damn player you wanna play it on, and maybe limits your time with a movie to a fleeting window, it doesn’t sound so bad. Okay, it does. But it can get worse—like when DRM breaks. For instance, Valve’s Steam network had a hiccup in 2004 that meant people were locked out of the game they paid to play. Or when Windows cocks up and tells users their OS isn’t genuine. Or Sony’s infamous rootkit CDs. Or when DRM servers are shut down, rendering music useless. The list goes on.

But wait, haven’t you heard that DRM’s dead? Or has a cold? Weeellll, yes and no. Sure, some music stores sell DRM-free MP3s—Amazon is unrivaled in that has ’em from every major label, and iTunes sells DRM-free music from EMI. And CDs have never had ’em, except for that aforementioned BS copy protection from Sony and a few other short-lived misguided attempts. So, it’s sort of going away for pay-to-own music, but it’s still fairly ubiquitous, in all-you-can-eat subscription music, in movies and in software, and it’s not going away anytime soon. The emergence of streaming serious video content, like with Hulu in particular, sort of challenges this on the video front—there’s no DRM, but then again, it’s not as easy to rip a stream for Joe Blow as it is to share a file over Limewire. Harder questions, though, like whether DRM means you ever really own anything anymore, we’ll leave to the lawyers.

Here’s a list an quick blurb on every major kind of DRM you’re likely to run into, and why it sucks (beyond the whole keeping-you-from-sharing-it-with-all-your-friends business):

Audio
FairPlay is Apple’s flavor of DRM that’s baked right into iTunes, iPods, QuickTime and iEverything else—most music from the iTunes store is lojacked with it, with exceptions from EMI and some indie labels. It allows for unlimited copies of music files, but only five computers at a time can be authorized. FairPlay files only play on Apple’s own iThings. Like every other DRM scheme, it’s been cracked.

PlaysForSure (now simply “Certified for Vista,” which is confusing since not all “Certified for Vista” stuff will play PlaysForSure, like Microsoft’s own Zune) was Microsoft’s attempt to get everyone in the portable player industry on the same Windows Media DRM. Even though Microsoft has basically ditched it, it’s successful in that a bunch of services, like Rhapsody and Napster, and players—essentially everyone Apple, from Sony to Toshiba to SanDisk—have used or supported it. It’s fairly generic copy protection that keeps you from sending it to all of your friends, though it works with and enforces subscriptions, with the biggest bitch being that it restricts you to Windows and to PlaysForSure devices. (Read: Not iPods.)

Zune uses a totally different DRM tech than PlaysForSure and is incompatible with it. It allows you to share DRM’d subscription content with up to three other Zunes, though it won’t let you burn songs unless you buy ’em. And if subscriptions die, it nukes your songs. It also manages the Zune’s “squirt” feature, making sure you don’t play beamed songs more than a few times and other annoying restrictions.

PlayReady: Hey lookie, another Microsoft DRM scheme. This one’s different from the similar-sounding PlaysForSure in that while it’s backward compatible with Windows Media DRM, it works with more than just Windows Media audio or video files, like AAC and MPEG, and is meant to cover a broader range of devices, like mobile phones.

Video
FairPlay for video is a lot like the audio version, but adds a couple tricks like nuking rental videos 24 hours after pressing play and presenting a slightly more complicated obstacle course to sync them to portable iThings.

High-Bandwidth Digital Copy Protection prevents video from being copied as it moves across certain digital video interfaces like HDMI, DisplayPort and DVI, which sounds innocent enough, until you try to watch something on a non-HDCP compliant display—and you can’t.

Content Scrambling System (CSS) was DVD’s piddly encryption scheme, long ago busted open like a rotten watermelon.

AACS (Advanced Access Content System) is one layer of copy protection that’s part of the spec of both HD DVD and Blu-ray. It’s way stronger than DVD’s CSS setup with several components involved in the encryption/decryption process, and allows for blocking specific players that have their keys compromised. Plus it can allow specific numbers of DRM’d copies of content, like for portable players. Also cracked, rather explosively.

BD+ is Blu-ray’s secret sauce DRM that’s actually a virtual machine, allowing it to do stuff like make sure the hardware and keys are kosher, and execute code. It’s been cracked, twice actually, but part of the appeal is that it can be updated—the last version is at least three months away from being cracked again, though it totally will be. BD+ was the main reason some studios supported Blu-ray over the AACS-only HD DVD, and you can see why.

Macrovision VHS, yep, that old chestnut: copy protection on VHS tapes that made everything squiggly when you tried to run two VCRs together. Why include it in a digital roundup? Well, besides nostalgia, if you want to convert your original 1986 Star Wars VHS tape to digital, this will make your life difficult—fortunately, a quick Google search turns up ways around it.

TV and cable—there’s a lot going on there to keep you from stealing cable’s goods, so you need a box or a CableCard to take the encrypted feed and make it watchable. The industry didn’t even really get behind the plug-n-play CableCard, either—it was more or less forced on them. There’s also this thing called a broadcast flag that stations like ABC or NBC or HBO can embed in shows at will so you can’t record them.

• Tivo uses DRM from Macrovision that can slap you with all kinds of restrictions, ranging from no copying at all to automatic expiration, limiting copies or managed transfers to PCs, or even not allowing you to view certain football games outside of a designated region. Its TivoToGo, for porting stuff to portable devices, actually uses Windows Media DRM though.

Windows Media DRM, speaking of it, is one of the more popular off-the-shelf DRM kits, used by everyone from Netflix for its streaming service to Amazon’s defunct Unbox downloads (now Video on Demand downloads) to Walmart’s old video store, that’s somewhat flexible it what it allows or doesn’t, depending on the service’s wants—from no copying to nothing but Windows Media compatible devices (i.e., no iPods). It only runs on Windows, naturally.

• Even Adobe Flash has DRM now. If you’ve used the streaming part of Amazon’s Video on Demand service, you’ve run into Flash DRM (which had a lovely Antarctica-sized hole allowing you to rip movie streams until a couple months ago). Two bad things about this DRM, notes the EFF: First, with an unencrypted stream it’s “unlikely that tools to download, edit, or remix them are illegal.” That changes if it’s locked up with DRM. Also, it means you’ll have to use Adobe’s own Flash player to video Flash videos. Lame.

PlayReady is another Microsoft DRM flavor, aimed mostly at portable devices, but it also powers the DRM in Microsoft’s Silverlight, which is what just brought Netflix streaming to Macs.

Software
Windows Genuine Advantage is what makes sure you’re not using a pirated copy of Windows. It phones home occasionally, which can cause bad things if the servers go down. If your copy is legit and it says you’re a pirate, you’re not the first person it’s falsely accused.

Valve’s Steam is one of the most elegant, integrated DRM solutions we’ve seen in a physical-media-be-damned world (except for its two infamous outages). Unlimited copies of games on unlimited computers, but only one can play on an account at a time. It’s fairly seamless, like good DRM should be.

EA’s copy protection system got real famous, real fast thanks to Spore, and nefariously restricts game installations to three computers—in its lifetime, not just at one time like some media DRMs.

• Pretty much every console has varying levels of DRM and copy protection (duh, it’s a closed system), but DRM issues are coming more brightly into focus as we download games from stores, like on the Xbox 360 and Wii, where games are tied to your original system, so you’re screwed if you get a replacement—it’ll take some decent footwork to get your games back, at the very least.

• Not software DRM per se, but Windows Vista has a ton of DRM technologies baked right into it.

Any DRM schemes we missed, feel free to complain about how they make your life more miserable in the comments.

Something you still wanna know? Send any questions about DRM, rights, McDonald’s managers or Taiko Drum Master to tips@gizmodo.com, with “Giz Explains” in the subject line.