Highly reliable sources have confirmed the specifications of Apple's forthcoming revisions to its Power Mac G5, iMac G5 and eMac systems, expected to start shipping within a few days of Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger's April 29th release. (http://thinksecret.com/news/0504macs.html)
PowerMacs (possibly using the dual-core PPC970MP chip)
Dual-2GHz
- 512K L2 cache per processor
- Dual 1GHz frontside buses
- 512MB PC3200 DDR SDRAM (4GB max.)
- 160GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 128MB DDR SDRAM ATI Radeon 9600 video card
- 512K L2 cache per processor
- Dual 1.15GHz frontside buses
- 512MB PC3200 DDR SDRAM (8GB max.)
- 250GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 128MB DDR SDRAM ATI Radeon 9600 video card
- 512K L2 cache per processor
- Dual 1.35GHz frontside buses
- 512MB PC3200 DDR SDRAM (8GB max.)
- 250GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 256MB DDR SDRAM ATI Radeon 9650 video card
iMac
"Good" 17-inch, 1.8GHz
- 512K L2 cache
- 512MB DDR SDRAM
- 160GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 128MB ATI Radeon 9600
- Combo Drive (CD-RW/DVD-ROM)
- Bluetooth 2.0
- 512K L2 cache
- 512MB DDR SDRAM
- 160GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 128MB ATI Radeon 9600
- SuperDrive (supporting dual-layer as well as DVD±RW/CD-RW burning)
- Bluetooth 2.0
- 512K L2 cache
- 512MB DDR SDRAM
- 250GB Serial ATA Hard Drive
- 128MB ATI Radeon 9600
- SuperDrive (supporting dual-layer as well as DVD±RW/CD-RW burning)
- Bluetooth 2.0
eMac
Low-End
- 1.42GHx G4
- 256MB RAM
- 80GB HD
- 64MB ATI Radeon 9600
- Combo Drive
- 1.42GHz G4
- 512MB RAM
- 160GB HD
- 64MB ATI Radeon 9600
- SuperDrive (supporting dual-layer as well as DVD±RW/CD-RW burning)
Not happy to see it only claiming 2.7GHz for the PMac speed increase, but if they're dual-core chips there should be a sizable difference in performance over single core versions. The iMac video upgrade is definitely needed. RAM upgrades should have happened a year ago at least.