Apple: Smoking is Hazardous to Your Macbooks Warranty

Smoking is terrible for you. No question about that. But can it also be hazardous to your electronics warranties? It can if you own Apple products. Turns out if you’ve smoked around your computer, Apple can refuse to work on it, citing “biohazard” concerns.

This information comes from The Consumerist, which has reports from two Apple owners who had their warranties voided after smoking around their computers–actually, only one of them smoked. The other claims that that the company “attribute[ed] non-smoking residue to second hand smoke.”

The Apple store employees reportedly “refuse to work on the machine, due to ‘health risks of second hand smoke.’ ”

New iMac and MacBook touchscreens debut, thanks to Troll Touch

Troll Touch — the fun little company with the unfortunate name — have announced more of their award-winning analog resistive touch kits for 21.5-inch and 27-inch iMacs as well as unibody MacBooks. Prices for the iMac kits themselves start at $1099, or you can order new machines with the kits pre-installed starting at $2299. For laptop owners, your touchscreen kits start at $699. Not cheap at all, but you know what the song says: You’ve got to pay the troll’s toll. Delivery slated to begin before December 1, 2009. If you’ve never seen a video of someone using a touchscreen, you’re in for a treat — we included one after the break. You’re welcome.

Read – iMac touchscreens
Read – MacBook touchscreens

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New iMac and MacBook touchscreens debut, thanks to Troll Touch originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Nov 2009 11:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Apple Legend Jonathan Ive Talks Design


In the video above, Apple’s senior vice president of industrial design Jonathan Ive offers a rare glimpse into his design process. He discusses the latest line of aluminum products; the iMac, the MacBook family, the iPhone and the iPod Nano each make appearances.

Watching the clip, you’ll understand why Apple seems obsessed with looks. Ive talks about gadget design like an artist would speak about his paintings. He’s one heck of a passionate guy.

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Video: Hands-On With New Macbook, iMac, and Magic Mouse

For plenty of folks in the tech community, this week was all about Windows 7, sure, but Apple has never be one to be outshone. Earlier this week the company launched refreshes to much of its hardware line, including new versions of the Macbook, iMac, and Mac Mini. The company also introduced the hyperbolically-named Magic Mouse.

Apple sent along a number of these products along for review in the PC Labs. Over at PCMag, you can check out the recent reviews of the Macbook and iMac. We’ve also got some exclusive hands-on video with those two devices and the brand new Magic Mouse after the jump.

Apple MacBook (Unibody) Unboxing

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We recently got our hands on the new MacBook (on the left, next to the Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch), and our laptop analyst Cisco Cheng took a few photos of the unboxing. According to Cheng, “the rejuvenated Apple MacBook (Unibody) has had a major overhaul, as it now comes with Unibody enclosure similar to that of MacBook Pro laptops.” For more details, check out our full review of the MacBook, and take a look at our unboxing photos after the jump.

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Unibody MacBook (late 2009) review

We’ll just come out and say it: we’re totally underwhelmed by the new plastic MacBook. Hell, we were underwhelmed by the old plastic MacBook back in June, when we reviewed the refreshed unibody MacBook Pros — we said we were “honestly left wondering” why the $999 plastic model continued to exist when the $1,199 13-inch Pro was obviously superior. So when we heard the first whispers that Apple was working on a total overhaul of its low-end MacBook, we naturally assumed that it would either gain in features or drop in price — but neither one of those things happened. The new plastic MacBook remains priced at $999 in its only configuration, and while it’s been updated with the same unibody construction as the Pros, it’s also lost some features along the way. So… what’s going on here? Did Apple just blow a huge opportunity to totally re-think its low-end formula, or is there more to the MacBook than the spec sheets and price tags say? Read on to find out.

Continue reading Unibody MacBook (late 2009) review

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Unibody MacBook (late 2009) review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Oct 2009 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Unibody Apple MacBook Review

It was inevitable that Apple would take their unibody manufacturing prowess from their MacBook Pros and focus it on the MacBook line. We just never expected the new MacBook to be as enticing as the 13-inch Pro.

It’s Basically a White Macbook Pro

To illustrate just how good the internals are on the MacBook, just compare them to the current base 13-inch MacBook Pro. Both have a 2.26GHz Core 2 Duo with a 3MB L2 cache, a 1066 MHz frontside bus and a 2GB default RAM. They also have a really similar LED backlit display, which eliminates the problem of narrowed viewing angles that we docked the first generation unibody MacBooks for, and both now have the same contrast ratio. The only difference is that the Pro has a 60% greater color gamut.

The new body

The rounded edges and a reduced number of seams make the new MacBook appear to be a flattened marshmallow. A glossy, rubber-bottomed marshmallow. It’s an immediately more appealing shape than the previous generation of white MacBooks, marking the end of the transition of Apple laptops to unibody construction. That rubber bottom is also pretty satisfying, both in the fact that it grips surfaces better to not slide around, and because it’s a more thigh-friendly material when the machine heats up. The whole body is more solid, thanks to an aluminum sheet and some more structural supports found in the teardown.
Otherwise, there are many other small design changes you’ll appreciate. The trackpad is now the standard glass multitouch type found on the Pros, the screen has a more prominent bezel and the iSight is circular instead of square. Keyboard layout is the same, but on-key shortcuts have been updated to the latest standards. It also comes with Apple’s new 60W power adapter, which has a tip that looks more like the MacBook Air than any of the previous chargers.
In general, the build quality is more solid and more “Pro” than ever before, despite the material being polycarbonate instead of aluminum. It’s like trading up from a Toyota Yaris to a Camry—not luxury, but it’s a noticeable difference.

Benchmarks and Battery Life

Comparing the 13-inch aluminum unibody MacBook of 2008 to the 13-inch aluminum unibody MacBook Pro to the 13-inch MacBook now shows that there really isn’t a big difference between the three models. The small discrepancies fall inside the margin of error, and some change can probably be attributed to the fact that the first two machines were running Leopard, whereas the machine we have now is running Snow Leopard.

Point is, this MacBook isn’t really that much faster or slower than the one last year.
Just as the transition to non-replaceable batteries increased MacBook Pro runtime, so too has the transition benefited the Macbook. Except for the fact that there’s no external battery display on this unit for some reason, and that there’s no infrared port for Apple Remotes.

The new MacBook ran 4 hours and 12 minutes, longer than the two most recent MacBook Pros, using the same metrics as we did before: Wi-Fi on, keyboard backlight on low, non-stop H.264 movie playback. In real-world circumstances, that battery life can only get better. Our testing is processor-intensive.

What’s also interesting, according to the teardown, is that the battery is only 60 watt-hours vs. 55 on the old one, yet it gets a lot more battery life. This is probably due to internal optimizations that Apple made, not just because there’s a fatter battery.

Some new problems

• A consequence of having an improved, unibody construction is that you can no longer replace the battery yourself. It also means that native battery life will be longer, as demonstrated in the testing above. In fact, unlike Pro machines where people really do want to swap batteries for extended field use, an improved internal battery will serve regular users much better.

• For some reason, Apple decided to make the entire area surrounding the keyboard as glossy as the outer shell, meaning that your wrists have a more sticky feel when you’re typing. It’s not a huge deal, but it is less usable when compared to previous generations or the MacBook Pro line.

• Again, like the Magic Mouse, the white polycarbonate (plastic) will get scratched easily, and will show scratches if you look at it from a certain angle. It doesn’t diminish performance, but it is annoying if you’re anal about your stuff.

Where does that leave us?

Right now is the brief window in time when MacBooks just got bumped up in specs to match the low-end MacBook Pros, in order for the MacBook Pros to have room to grow without leaving the entry-level machines too far behind. If you’re in the market for a MacBook, this could be the best time for you to buy and feel good about your purchase, knowing that you’ll get the same performance as a machine that costs $200 more.

But keep in mind, this development basically implies that the MacBook Pros will be getting the Core i5 and i7 processors some time in the next year.

The unibody construction was an inevitable upgrade to the MacBook line, and one that brings many more benefits than it does faults. There shouldn’t be a drastic change in the MacBook design any time soon, so now is probably the furthest away from the next generation as you’re going to get. [Apple]

Polycarbonate unibody construction looks, feels great


Has just about the same specs as the 13-inch MacBook Pro, so you’re getting a good deal


Finally get Pro stuff like the multitouch glass trackpad


Glossy wrist area is slightly too sticky


Can’t swap out batteries, but you do get longer life in return


Firewire port is gone

MacBook strips off its polycarbonate unibody shell for the expected teardown

That thumbs up means exactly what you think, and just like all the other new MacBook (Pro) models, that “non-removable” battery in the new polycarbonate unibody MacBook is more of a guideline than an actual set of rules. iFixit’s currently doing its traditional teardown process — so far, other than the battery and hard drive swapping places, the internal geography looks about like its predecessor. Letting your eyes venture into forbidden territories is just a mouse click away at the read link below.

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MacBook strips off its polycarbonate unibody shell for the expected teardown originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Oct 2009 18:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MacBook Loses FireWire Again; Audio-Out Port Gone, Too

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A large number of customers and technicians were peeved when Apple nixed the FireWire port in the first unibody MacBook. Perhaps learning a lesson, Apple revived FireWire in the second-generation unibody MacBook, which was renamed MacBook Pro. Now, only one white, unibody notebook bears the MacBook inscription, and it loses the FireWire port its predecessor had.

Why? The Unofficial Apple Weblog, which reported the observation, thinks it’s because Apple had to make space for the newly integrated battery. That doesn’t add up for us: The 13-inch MacBook Pro should have the same battery, and yet it still carries FireWire 800.

The omission of FireWire is bound to annoy potential MacBook customers with FireWire-compatible gadgets such as hard drives, camcorders and audio gear. And there’s no doubt IT techies, who rely on FireWire for troubleshooting Macs, are going to advise against this MacBook for business use.

TUAW also notes the MacBook loses an audio-out port (which you’d use for headphones and other output devices). Not entirely, however:  the audio-out port has been combined with the audio-in port. Still, this could be a drag for musicians who record while monitoring with headphones.

It’s unlikely we’ll learn the technical reason for the omission of these ports from the new MacBook until iFixit tears down the notebook and takes a look inside. We’ll keep you posted on that analysis.

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A video walkthrough of Apple’s newest additions (Unibody MacBook, iMac, Magic Mouse)

Sure, you’ve seen the hands-on posts and the PR, but have you really gotten a look at Apple’s new gear? Join us for a quick and spirited walkthrough of the goods. You won’t be disappointed. Or you might be. It really depends on how picky you are.

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A video walkthrough of Apple’s newest additions (Unibody MacBook, iMac, Magic Mouse) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Oct 2009 16:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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