Eric Richardson lives in Los Angeles, California, and is generally interested in the intersection between technology, community and news.

After founding hyperlocal news site blogdowntown and working in public radio, today he works on pattern-based analytics applications for Emcien.

First Impressions from the New Intel iMac

Posted Tuesday, January 17, 2006, at 11:07AM by Eric Richardson

Like I mentioned on Friday, I picked up one of the new Intel-chipped iMacs for work. Between playing around Friday afternoon and this morning, I think I can give some early opinions.

Bullet points: Big, bright screen. Silent. The universal binary movement is going to be interesting to watch.

I hadn't seen recent iMacs, but I've read that the external asthetics are the same as the newest of the G5 based ones. In any case, it's a good-looking machine. The one I have is the 20" model, which means a 1680x1050 display. There's also a mini-DVI connector on the back to hook up a second monitor. The display's super-bright and clear.

Working in an office, there's a decent amount of ambient sound from other computers. Given that, I haven't yet heard the iMac, even when I lean in and get close. It may not be utterly silent, but it's quiet enough that I can't make anything out.

I haven't used any of the iLife applications, and I doubt I will any time soon. It's a work machine, so I really don't care all too much there.

When I first downloaded a PPC version of Firefox and ran it under Rosetta (the emulator mode) it felt sluggish. There isn't a universal binary build of Firefox available from the main site, though there should be soon. Safari is universal, though, and it feels pretty snappy. Other than the DOM inspector, I don't have a lot invested in the Firefox vs. Safari vs. Camino debate on the Mac, so I'm fine using Safari for now (and it has a DOM inspector coming).

The big question is when Adobe/Macromedia is going to release universal or Intel binaries for their big applications. I haven't done a lot of Flash work under Rosetta yet, but the little I have made it feel very usable, but not as snappy as I'd like. If it's a month before Macrodobe puts out a universal Flash, I'm happy. If it's three, I'm less so.

After having spent a bulk of Sunday afternoon desperately fighting Debian trying to downgrade to XFree86 instead of X.org, the ease of the Mac is a fun change. Would I switch my home machine? Probably not. If Kathy were buying a computer would I recommend one to her? Absolutely.


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