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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Apple iMac (24-inch, 2.8GHz) By Matthew Elliot, CNET.com May 05, 2008 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/hardware/desktops/soa/-Apple-iMac-24-inch-2-8GHz-/0,139023402,339288670,00.htm
A slight bump to the specifications for the same price, the option to upgrade the graphics means the 24-inch iMac keeps the Editors' Choice it earned last year. A bump to the frontside bus and a smidge more L2 cache can safely be classified as a minor update. But even slightly improved specifications, when they come at a lower price than those they replace, are appreciated. Last September, we tested the highest-end 24-inch model, which carried a baseline price of AU$3,339 and featured Intel's 2.8GHz Core 2 Extreme X7900 processor. We're happy to report that the new AU$2,399 iMac sped past the previous model in CNET Labs, though it features roughly the same specs: a 2.8GHz Core 2 Duo processor, 2GB of faster 800MHz RAM, a 320GB hard drive, and a midrange ATI Radeon graphics card. What's changed is that this model uses a Penryn-class processor that serves up 6MB of L2 cache, compared to the 4MB the previous Merom-class chip provided, while operating on a faster 1,066MHz frontside bus — up from 800MHz. The biggest upgrade comes with the top-of-the-line iMac, the $2,999 model that sees the iMac top the 3GHz mark with 3.06GHz Core 2 Duo chip. That model also features a 512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GS graphics card. The 3.06GHz chip is an AU$300 upgrade on the lower-end 24-inch model we reviewed here, while the GeForce card adds AU$220 to the bill. Contrary to earlier reports, the 3.06GHz chip is not the Core 2 Duo X9100, which is expected out later this summer when Intel launches its Centrino 2 (Montevina) platform. Instead, it's another Apple exclusive from Intel, which operates at the same clockspeed and on the same 1,066MHz bus as the forthcoming X9100 chip, but at a higher wattage. The updates the iMac received aren't game changing by any means, but they certainly do enough to maintain the iMac's Editors' Choice award and a strong recommendation among all-in-one PCs and mainstream desktops in general. In fact, we rate it higher than last year's model because the 24-inch iMac finally includes a graphics upgrade. The design remains unchanged from last September's iMac models, which marked a change from the white Lucite design to the brushed-aluminium-and-glass chassis. For more on the design, please see our full review of the 20-inch iMac that introduced the new design last August. We were impressed with the 24-inch iMac's showing last year in the labs, and this latest update showed marked improvement on our multitasking test as well as with CineBench. We weren't surprised to see iTunes performance stay the same, since it's largely dependent on CPU clockspeed. What we didn't expect was a 22-percent increase on our multimedia multitasking benchmark compared with that of last year's model, which was already way ahead of Dells' and Gateway's all-in-one PCs. On CineBench 10, a 3D rendering test that taxes the CPU and graphics subsystems, the new iMac outpaced the older 24-inch model by eight percent, which is about the margin we'd expect between two systems released seven months apart. This iMac's faster frontside bus, faster memory, and larger L2 cache each plays a role in its improved performance over last year's model, as does the new version of Leopard (10.5.2), we suspect (we've experienced some problems with our Photoshop CS3 script recently, on this and other systems, so unfortunately we have no Photoshop results to report at this time).
Apple iTunes encoding test (in seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance) Apple iMac
(24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2008 model)
138
Apple iMac
(24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2007 model)
139
Apple iMac
(20-inch, 2.4GHz)
161
Dell XPS One
174
HP Pavilion
Slimeline s3330f
193
Apple Mac Mini
194
Gateway One
207
Multimedia multitasking test (in seconds)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance) Apple iMac
(24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2008 model)
407
Apple iMac
(24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2007 model)
522
Apple iMac
(20-inch, 2.4GHz)
597
Apple Mac Mini
721
Gateway One
938
HP Pavilion
Slimeline s3330f
957
Dell XPS One
1070
CineBench
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Apple iMac
(24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2008 model)
6180
3244
Apple iMac
(24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2007 model)
5709
3035
Apple iMac
(20-inch, 2.4GHz)
4624
2599
Dell XPS One
4507
2368
HP Pavilion
Slimeline s3330f
4316
2247
Apple Mac Mini
4069
2168
Gateway One
3787
1998
System configurations: Apple iMac (20-inch, 2.4GHz) Apple iMac (24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2007 model) Apple iMac (24-inch, 2.8GHz, 2008 model) Apple Mac Mini Dell XPS One Gateway One HP Pavilion Slimline S3330f
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