Adonsa said:
If it contains an Intel chip, it won't be worthy of the name Macintosh. It'll be an abomination.
Recommendation to Apple - name it something else.
Actually, I've suggested that Apple call it just
Macintosh.
No additional name should be added (like
Power when we switched to PowerPC processors).
As for what some people consider
worthy... they really aren't in any position to say. Only Apple decides what is and is not
worthy of the term Macintosh.
I remember people being in the same state of denial when Apple started having talks with IBM (the evil empire) to develop the PowerPC.
Statements like:
"If it contains an Intel chip, it won't be worthy of the name Macintosh. It'll be an abomination."
brings back memories of those days. Just replace the word Intel with IBM, and were back to where we were 12 years ago.
Of course when we finally had systems shipping with IBM processors in 1994, people bought them up.
Sorry, but other than speed, the processor in a computer is an invisible component of the computer from the end user point of view.
And on the speed end of things, we'll have to wait and see. Apple is not replacing the G5 at the high end of the product lines until 2007. Intel has until then to put out something that will impress us.
As it stands, Intel has shown Apple something to make them believe that by that point they'll have something that can replace the G5 at the high end.
And as someone who has been running PowerPC and Intel systems side by side with the same operating system from Apple for the last 5 years, I can say that the user experience really isn't any different based on the processor running the systems (other than, again, speed).
As for telling the difference between the platforms when running, here are two shots of my systems. One is based on the PowerPC 604e and the other an Intel Pentium. And it is the same application (Create) copied to both systems.
Which is which?
As for which platform I prefer...
PowerPC.