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A. The new Apple iMac's have been in the press since the beginning of 2002 as they look completely different from their previous models - they are all-in-one computers with flat panel LCD screens that pivot in a similar way to an angle-poise lamp (so you can have it at any height and distance from your face) and sit on top of an oval pod. The oval pod contains a circular logic board that fills the entire diameter of the base, a 3.5 inch hard disk drive and a pop-out drive for burning and playing CDs and DVDs (depending on the model you buy). Each machine incorporates a G4 processor with NVIDIA graphics, with Mac OS X as standard.
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Apart from looking completely different to other computers, these machines have been promoted by Apple as "the ultimate hub for your digital lifestyle" which actually means that Mac OS X incorporates lots of digital programmes as standard, alongside more traditional Apple Works word processing and spread sheet programmes.
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These digital programmes include iTunes - which allows you to manage your music library, burn your own CDs and download tracks to an MP3 player - designed to work with Apple's iPod especially; iPhoto which allows you to connect and download photos from a digital camera and set up a photo library on your hard drive; iMovie which allows connections to a DV camcorder so that you can make home movies; and iDVD (not available on all models) makes burning your own DVD movies and photos onto a DVD disk a reality.
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Each new iMac also comes with the following software as standard: QuickTime, Mail, Microsoft Internet Explorer, EarthLink, AOL, Quicken 2002 Deluxe, World Book Mac OS X Edition, Otto Matic, Mac OS X Chess, PCalc, Acrobat Reader, and FAXstf 10.0 Preview.
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Q. How many versions does the new iMac come in
A. It is available in three versions: the 800MHz iMac with SuperDrive (DVD-R/CD-RW); the 700MHz iMac with Combo drive (DVD-ROM/CD-RW) and the 700MHz iMac with a CD-RW drive.
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Q. What is the difference between the three versions available
A. All three machines come equipped with the 15" flat panel screen, a G4 processor with velocity engine (the SuperDrive model is powered by 800MHz and the other two by 700MHz), Mac OS X, 100MHz system bus; 128MB (or 256MB on the SuperDrive) of SDRAM expandable to 1GB; 40GB (or 60GB on the SuperDrive Ultra ATA hard disk drive; three flicker-free screen resolutions: 640 by 480 pixels, 800 by 600 pixels, and 1024 by 768 pixels (optimum resolution); built-in 56K V.90 fax modem (RJ-11 connector); built-in 10/100BASE-T Ethernet (RJ-45 connector); built-in antennas and card slot for optional 11-Mbps AirPort Card; two 400-Mbps FireWire (IEEE 1394) ports; three USB 1.1 ports (shared on two 12-Mbps controllers); two USB 1.1 ports on the keyboard All machines are IEEE 802.11b compliant.
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All models also include Apple Pro Keyboard; Apple Pro Mouse; modem cable; Apple Hardware Test CD; complete set-up, learning, and reference documentation. A back-up copy of all the software listed above is also provided on CD-ROM.
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In addition to choosing from Apple's preconfigured systems, you can order your new iMac with factory-installed options such as more RAM, AirPort wireless networking, and Apple Pro Speakers (for the CD-RW-equipped iMac). More information on these add-on facilities is available online from www.apple.com/store.
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Other than the differences highlighted in brackets above on the SuperDrive model, the main difference in all three machines is its type of optical drive it houses.
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The 800MHz iMac with SuperDrive comes with a combination DVD-R/CD-RW optical drive which means that it writes DVD-R discs at 2x speed; it reads DVDs at 6x speed; writes CD-R discs at 8x speed; writes CD-RW discs at 4x speed; and reads CDs at 24x speed. It also comes with support for FireWire and USB storage as standard.
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The 700MHz iMac with DVD-ROM/CD-RW Combo drive reads DVDs at 8x speed; writes CD-R discs at 12x speed; writes CD-RW discs at 8x speed; and reads CDs at 32x speed.
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The 700MHz iMac with a CD-RW drive writes CD-R discs at 24x speed; writes CD-RW discs at 10x speed and reads CDs at 32x speed.
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Q. What is a superdrive
A. The SuperDrive is only available on the 800MHz model and is worth the extra money it costs if you want to burn your own DVDs (films, photos etc.) - which play in most DVD players and watch DVD movies (a function also available on the 700MHz Combo drive iMac).
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Q. What is the difference between CD-R and CD-RW media
A. CD-Recordable (CD-R) means its format is write-once, read-multiple. CD-Rewritable (CD-RW) discs can be erased and reused over and over again.
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By Karen Anderson