iBase - an Alternative Budget iMac.
But what would it take for Apple to
produce a real budget iMac? In my thinking, (and I guess if
it's occured to me, it's occured to Apple) Apple could produce a much
lower-cost iMac-style machine, suitable for schools, but what they'd
have to remove might shock too much.
On the other hand, Apple aren't above shocking people. My model
for what they'd do is the 'iBase'.
Let's start with the original iMac. The original iMac was limited
because of its graphics, and its I/O. Remember 1998: The iMac had:
- No means of writing data to ANYTHING! It had a CD-ROM - an
input-only media drive.
- Two expansion ports, one of which was already used by the
keyboard / mouse. So, really it only had one fast expansion port:
USB. And USB isn't fast.
- It had one network port - ethernet.
- It had one consumer port - the modem.
- And it still cost $1299.
As an extra, you could include the irDA port, audio out / audio in
+ Mic input, which is significant, though irDA is somewhat
underutilised. And don't forget the Mezzanine port.
And don't forget, many PC reviews considered the iMac so
restricted as to be virtually useless. If Apple were to do a more
budget oriented machine today, it would have to do something just as
ruthless, if for no other reason than to avoid killing their current
product line. So, this is what I would imagine.
- The iBase would have NO external media support AT ALL. No
Combo-Writer. No Combo-Drive, No DVD. No CD-RW. No CD-ROM. No
Floppy. No Zip Drive. Nothing.
- The iBase would have two expansion ports: 1x USB and 1x
Firewire. That way, the iBase is still a media machine - it can
still do DV and can still do CD-RW etc at a cost.
- The iBase would have one network port - Airport. AirPort would
come standard with the machine.
- The iBase would have no consumer port.
In that sense, the iBase would be a classically invisaged network
computer. It would be pretty dependant on external support, either
from another computer or from an additional external media drive. The
iBase would be the kind of machine you'd want in addition to
your existing lineup, so it wouldn't kill Apple's existing products.
So it would be good for homes, schools and even paranoid corporates.
In addition, (and this is a pretty sensible philosophy anyway) it
would promote AirPort as a standard media in the same sense that the
original iMac promoted USB.
iBase is a budget machine in more than one
way:
- External interfaces cost; the iBase is budget because it
supports only two external interfaces (and an AC power input).
- Media drives cost. The iBase only has a single hard drive for
storage and a bottom of the range (20Gb?) one too.
- Speed costs (in terms of component costs and lost revenue from
more upmarket products). The iBase has a low-end G3, perhaps as
low as 500MHz or even 450MHz! It also has a slow bus, perhaps as
slow as 66MHz.
- Internal circuitry costs: The iBase only has chips for the
processor ( with Cache), Graphics, Sound, AirPort, USB, Firewire
and ROM. Because AirPort is a standard feature I imagine, the
Sound, AirPort, USB, Firewire and Glue logic to be all in one
chip. That's four chips in total.
- DIMM slots cost. The iBase only has no on-chip RAM, just one
DIMM, which you have to throw away if you want to expand. You can
expand to 0.5Gb and you get a 128Mb DIMM as standard.
- LCDs cost. The iBase only has a 10-inch, 800x600 display. This
24.5cm for us Europeans, which gives us more measuring units per
buck. Truth is, many people run their iMacs in this mode and it's
the best that an old iBook, like mine can manage anyway. It will
do. It will have to.
- Install disks come separately, and they cost. This allows and
encourages buyers to buy more than one iBase per house / school.
It also allows the iBase to be cheaper. If they cost $50, then it
means each iBase can be perhaps $25 less.
- The machine is angled and adjusted without the use of hinges.
Perhaps a plastic slotting mechanism would feature.
- The keyboard is a bit cheaper and smaller. It's not a 'pro'
keyboard, but something like an iBook keyboard. It's still USB
though and still has an infra-red mouse. An LCD display like this
might cost $200 to the end user.
How much would a budget machine like this cost? I don't know. $500
or so? A better question is 'Given the compromises, would you want
one?'A better question still is to compare it with the original
iMac and ask which would be the better machine. An even better
question is to ask how much we take the incremental, peripheral
improvements in the iMac for granted to the point where we perhaps
don't realise how truly wonderful the new iMac is. I mean the
original was almost useless and still way desirable, but this one is
a truly magnificent, miles better than the original and a worthy
successor.
I don't need one, but I'm strongly tempted to get one, just
because I can.
-cheers from jules @P.
(Incidently, the ice-Keyboard isn't taken from
the new Apple photos, but was a mock-up from an old Pro keyboard done
about a year ago, when I first started thinking about iBase. Good
guess though huh?)