Tuesday 7 August 2007

Apple release stunning new iMacs, iLife '08, iWork '08

At an event in Cupertino today Steve Jobs announced brand spanking new iMacs as well as significant updates to their iLife and iWork software suites.

The new iMacs have been completely redesigned and are available in 2o or 24-inch glossy screened varieties. They are now clad in brushed aluminium and glass, with a black trim. Not a dissimilar look to the iPhone and Pro Macs.



The new iMacs include the latest Intel Core 2 Duo processors configurable up to 2.8 GHz with 4MB of shared L2 cache and up to 4GB of 667 MHz DDR2 SDRAM memory.

The top of the line 24-inch version features ATI's next generation Radeon HD 2600 PRO graphics card with 256MB of GDDR3 memory and the 20-inch version features the ATI Radeon HD 2400 XT with 128MB of GDDR3 memory.

They can also be configured with up to 1TB of hard drive storage and are compliant with the stringent new Energy Star 4.0 requirements.

Not content with redesigning the iMac, Apple have also introduced a super-thin new keyboard to match. Drawing heavily on the design of the MacBook, the new aluminium clad keyboard features low profile keys for a "crisp, responsive feel". It also has dedicated function keys for features like dashboard, expose and media controls.



Both the keyboard and the iMac are incredibly slim and look stunning on the desktop.

They come preloaded with the new iLife '08 software suite which includes major reworks of iPhoto and iMovie as well as updates to iWeb, GarageBand and iDVD.

Of note, iPhoto now supports online web galleries and automatically organises your library by events. iMovie has had a major overhaul and now, importantly for me, supports the popular new HD camcorder format, AVCHD.

iWork also saw a significant update with new versions of Pages and Keynote as well as the introduction of an innovative new spreadsheet app "Numbers".

Click on these links for more on the iMac, iLife '08 and iWork '08.

Saturday 4 August 2007

Is the Panasonic 42PZ700 the ultimate plasma?

For quite some time now I have been holding out buying an HDTV until I could get a full 1920 x 1080 resolution 42" plasma. There are loads of 40"+ LCDs that have that high resolution but I am not a great fan of LCD, I much prefer the picture on a plasma. So I have been waiting.

Getting the 1920 x 1080 resolution into a 42" screen is a challenge for plasma technology but Panasonic have managed to achieve it with the TH-42PZ700 - and it's pretty special.



So is it the holy grail of plasma TVs? It has all the benefits of native 1080 resolution and the ability to display every detail of a 1080i or 1080p picture without having to scale it to fit. And if you connect a PC up to it you're going to be able to use a much higher resolution.

Certainly, from the reviews I've read so far, people seem to think it's a great TV. This is from HDTV.org's review:

Combine Panasonic's latest 10th generation screens with Vreal processing and Full HD however and in the TH42PZ700 you have what is possibly the best High Definition (HD) performance available today from a 42in screen. The level of sharpness and detail is absolutely stunning, showing every possible nuance of detail imaginable.
So it's good then. Deep blacks, high levels of detail. Cool. But do you really need 1080 resolution?

After all this time waiting for it, I'm now questioning whether, in the real world, it's necessary. You see, for my eyes to even be able to perceive the increased resolution, I have to be sitting about 5 feet away from the screen.

In my lounge I would be sitting about 7 feet away from it when sitting on my sofa. So will I see the extra resolution? Well probably not. But that's hardly the point is it? Gadget freaks need the best and I think I would always regret it if I didn't buy the full resolution set.

Anyway, I can just about justify it for gaming when I will be sitting about 4 or 5 feet away and for the extra resolution when connecting a PC :-)

But for most people who just want an HDTV in their lounge, I really don't think the extra £1000 or so over a Panasonic PX70 is probably worth it.

Panasonic only made the PZ700 for gadget freaks who insist on the best, normal people need not apply.