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Apple Mac Mini

A Mac that's affordable, reliable and dependable?

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Last reviewed: May 17th 2005

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It's essentially a laptop in a biscuit tin

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Admit it. You're sorely tempted by Apple's new Mac because it's well priced, reasonably powerful and... well, it just looks so damn cute. It's the perfect excuse to dump that ugly old beige Wintel box in the corner of the room. Apple has finally designed a powerful computer that doesn't hog much space and looks as sleek as every other bit of kit in your living room.

So what else is so special about this mini marvel? In essence it's a laptop in a biscuit tin, minus the display and keyboard. Everything is ingeniously crammed into a surprisingly heavy square aluminium case that's a fully functioning G4 Macintosh computer with some respectable specifications. And when you consider that it isn't much larger than about five stacked CD jewel cases, it really does make for a very attractive package.

At the heart of the Mini is a 1.25 or 1.42GHz G4 chip that's cooled by a small, whisper quiet fan. The motherboard that hosts the processor is about the same size as a CD insert while the laptop hard drive offers a choice of 40 or 80GB of storage.

Nestling above the hard drive is a smart slot-loading CD/DVD combo drive. If you're feeling flush you can upgrade that to a DVD writer, AirPort wireless networking and Bluetooth. In fact, the Mini has most of the makings of a Media Center... all it needs is some suitable software and you could have a Mini sitting beneath your television, burning shows to a DVD or simply storing them on the hard drive like a Tivo.

It's not quite there yet, and Apple certainly isn't touting the Mini as an entertainment PC, but you can see where thoughts are heading.

Of course, for a mere £340 there's no keyboard or monitor bundled with this cute little device, but you can easily plug in your existing screen, keyboard and mouse. And because the Mini runs Apple's OS X operating system you can be sure there won't be any troublesome viruses or adware waiting to put your computer out of action.

At the rear of the Mini is a gamut of ports including Ethernet, V92 modem, USB 2.0, Firewire and a DVI socket driven by a Radeon Mobility chipset with 32MB of RAM. Memory is equally as stingy at just 256MB, but that's upgradeable to a maximum of 1GB in a single slot of SD RAM.

You can get Apple to fit the extra memory for you but be prepared for an eye-watering £220 bill. Alternatively do it yourself with the aid of a putty knife and a stick of RAM from Crucial.com for about £150.

The Mini belts along for a device of its diminutive proportions, and the bundled iLife software and other goodies run well enough given a decent dollop of RAM. Either model of Mac Mini is fine for email, surfing and word processing... just don't try to edit a Hollywood movie on it or attempt any complex 3D art.

plebism

4 Sep 2008 11:27 am

plebism

1.For Small, quiet, low power, it's an Apple / Against Hard to upgrade

I bought my Mac Mini out of pure curiosity. After an initial play and having it located in the office, then the lounge, then in the bedroom, it finally lay dorment for ages as I could nto find a real use for it.

Then one day, after my PC broke, I was forced to use it as my main desktop. RAM prices were at a low so I decided to upgrade to the max ram ..

whoa!! What a difference.

The Mac Mini is now my main desktop client. It only sucks about 20W at idle and as it is sooo quiet it is always on.

This means that checking emails, downloading torrents, updating podcasts ... happens all the time so there is now minimal waiting.

The OS seems rock steady and because you cannot crack the case and throw in new cards, hard drives, and even because the Apps are in less abundace than for Windows, I tend to mess about with it less.

Now I love it - if I could have my desktop time again - I think I would go for a Mac, maybe run WM Ware if I was desp for some Windows client.

I would say it would still be a big leap to convert to Mac just for the sake of it, but now the Mini can dual boot into XP, for the price and a cheap quiet sexy little always on media/web client - there is nothing that could beat my little Mac Mini.

I am just sorry it took me a year to figure this out :D

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Audio Output 1/8"Mini
CD Rewrite Speed 16
CD Write Speed 24
Chipset Type Graphics Media Accelerator 900
Colour White
Databus Speed 667
Dimensions 165.1 x 50.8 x 165.1
DVD Read Speed 2.4
DVD Rewrite Speed 4
DVD Write Speed 8
Graphics Chipset Intel GMA 950
Graphics Memory (Mb) 64
Graphics Memory Type DDR2
HDD Capacity (GB) 80
Installed Cache Memory (KB) 2000
Installed Graphics Type PCI-Express x16
Installed RAM (GB) 2
Installed RAM (MB) 8000
Operating System Apple Mac OS X
Optical Storage DVD-R/DVD-RW
OS Provided Apple Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger
Processor Speed (GHz) 1.66
Processor Type Intel Core Duo
RAM Connection DIMM
RAM Type DDR2
Video Output DVI, VGA
Weight (kg) 1.31

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Product Summary

Mac Mini

Price at launch

£340

Key specs


HDD Capacity (GB): 80 |
Installed RAM (GB): 2 |
Operating System: Apple Mac OS X |
Processor Speed (GHz): 1.66 |

Full spec

For

>

Superbly small

Inexpensive

Quiet and utterly sexy

Against

>

Meagre memory configuration

Limited expansion possibilities

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