Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 4th Feb 2009 07:05 UTC
Apple Apple has always been about moving forward, about pressing customers to buy the latest and greatest. Product pacing has been high in Cupertino (except for the Mac Mini, obviously), and this is obviously a good thing if you're an Apple bean counter. Most Apple fans more or less accept this planned obsolescence without question, but the company may have just gone a little too far.
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Single Core Intel Macs
by asiafish on Wed 4th Feb 2009 14:15 UTC
asiafish
Member since:
2006-05-11

There have only been TWO single core Intel Mac models made, and only one of them, the Core Solo Mac Mini, was ever available for retail sail, and briefly in 2006 at that.

I just don't see what the fuss is about Apple leaving releasing an application that works perfectly on all Macs of at least the last 6 years, and loses one of its features unless you have something more powerful than the absolutely slowest three-year-old model.

The other single core Mac was the developer Intel Mac from 2005 that was never sold at retail.

So other than developers who should have moved to production Macs by now, those who bought the very first and very cheapest Intel Mini 3-years-ago, or of course the many Hackintosh users for whom Apple has no obligation to support in any way, exactly which Intel Mac owners are affected by this?

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