As well as delivering the highly-anticipated
iPad Mini at a launch event last week, Apple has also announced updates to
their Mac Mini and iMac ranges which should please those who had been seeking
more computer memory options for their existing Apple products.
Complaints recently made about the recently revamped Macbook Pro stated that
many consumers were unhappy about the non-upgradable memory within the systems,
prompting Apple to reconsider memory options across their other devices.
The Mac Mini, which has long since been
hailed as the most compact desktop computer available to buy, features
improvements ranging from performances to extra USB 3.0 ports, but one of the
more pleasing upgrades was the shift from the old 2GB memory to 4GB. Doubling
the RAM memory in this way means that the operating system
will run much more smoothly, with multitasking made far easier and faster. The
Mac Mini is noted for being compact without compromising on power, and this new
update runs at speeds of up to twice as fast whilst maintaining its
portability. For those who find that 4GB of memory is insufficient, the Mac
Minis are also easily upgradable.
Since their inception, iMacs have gone
through strength to strength, emerging from each redesign more powerful than
ever. This new update is no exception; as well as a slimmer build, improved
optical quality, 60% faster graphics, a HD camera, four USB 3.0 ports and two
Thunderbolt ports, the iMac’s capacity for Apple memory upgrades has also been vastly upgraded. The
21-inch iMac have two RAM slots and support up to 16GB of RAM, and the 27-inch
iMacs now have four RAM slots, with a total potential memory allocation of
32GB, doubling their previous amount (both models start out with 8GB of RAM,
but the larger model has the capacity to upgrade further).
One of the most exciting Apple memory
solutions to launch in previous years, though, is the Fusion Drive, which uses flash memory like the memory found on the iPad to improve
hard disk access speeds. SSDs (solid-state drives) often offer higher levels of
performance on other devices, but with their storage space compromised; the
Fusion Drive solves this issue by pairing a smaller SSD with a hard disk equal
to or larger than 1TB. The operating system and the core apps which run on
every Apple system are preloaded onto this new, faster SSD, and the intelligent
drive even adds the ‘most-used’ apps to its storage too, to ensure their access
times are the fastest possible.
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