PowerExpress Kaput? (1/5/98)
|
|
| |
So a great many of us are looking at the Powermac G3 longingly, envious of the high MacBench scores but hesitant to buy because these are the "midrange" G3 systems. There are a slew of power users out there whose Photoshop fingers are twitching, but they're waiting for the new PowerExpress machines, due to ship in the Spring, that will fill in the high end of Apple's Macintosh line. Faster G3 processors, faster bus speeds, improved memory subsystems, faster backside cache, SCSI disks, etc. all make the PowerExpress worth waiting for.
That is, if the whole project hasn't been scrapped. Apple Recon's now saying that many reliable sources tell them the PowerExpress project is no more. Oops. If that's true, what will Apple use to fill the high-end gap? Here's hoping they don't just try to marketingspeak the current G3's into the high-end slot. The general assumption is that news to this effect will surface during this week's MacWorld Expo.
Personally, we think the PowerExpress project killed itself because it couldn't face Steve's proposed product name of "Powermac G3 Extreme." Really, what self-respecting high-end workstation wants a name better suited to a sport utility vehicle?
| |
| |
|
SceneLink (330)
| |
|
And Now For A Word From Our Sponsors |
| | |
|
| |
|
| | The above scene was taken from the 1/5/98 episode: January 5, 1998: (Sorry—this was before we started writing intro text for each episode!)
Other scenes from that episode: 331: MacTell Does Windows (1/5/98) Spock, Bones, what do you make of this? Our buddies over at MacCentral report that MacTell, one of the last remaining Mac cloners (especially now that PowerTools is getting squeezed by Apple and UMAX), is jumping into the Wintel waters by shipping a new line of Alpha-based Windows NT servers, dubbed "MediaServer." And as MacCentral kindly reminds us, remember when Power Computing announced it would sell Windows servers in order to "augment" their Mac OS sales?... 332: Spammers Back Down (1/5/98) By the time we broadcast yesterday's episode, in which we mentioned the blackmail drama between the spam-kings known as the National Organization of Internet Commerce and the big stinking bus puttering down the information superhighway known to all as AOL, it appears that the blackmail threat had already been rescinded...
Or view the entire episode as originally broadcast... | | |
|
|