more praise for Apple computers

Microsoft gets regular praise from IT professionals for making it easier to build and maintain networks of thousands of PC's while Apple continues to garner praise for building computers for you and me, ie regular consumers.

The iMac Gets a Brain Transplant

We Test New Apple Desktop To Gauge Impact of Intel Chip; Will All Your Software Work?

January 18, 2006

Just a couple of months ago, in this column, we proclaimed that Apple Computer's iMac G5, then the company's flagship Macintosh desktop computer for consumers, was the best consumer desktop PC on the market. In fact, we called it the "gold standard" of desktop PCs and said no desktop from the major makers of Windows-based computers could match it.

Last week, in a surprise move, Apple gave the iMac a brain transplant. It chose the iMac as the first Macintosh model to be converted to work on the same Intel processors used by makers of Windows PCs, rather than the PowerPC processors from IBM that have powered Macs for many years. This was serious surgery to perform on the company's star product and launched the planned transition to Intel much sooner than originally expected.

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Our verdict: The brain transplant was a success. The two machines behaved almost identically in our tests. Compatibility is excellent. The new model easily handled all the major consumer software we threw at it. We never noticed the translator software, called Rosetta, and any slowdowns it imposed were so slight as to be indiscernible.

But, even now, this is a terrific computer. It's still the best consumer desktop on the market. It still runs crisply, still is free of viruses and spyware, still has the best operating system and the best built-in software of any desktop we've tested. Given how smoothly the new machine works, and how likely it is to get even better, we would prefer it today over the iMac G5, which Apple is still selling for the same price until inventories are gone. The G5 is still a fine machine, but the Intel model has a brighter future, and, based on our tests, it seems ready to go today.