Want to Meet People? Take an iBook to the Park
Apple gets it right with a powerful Mac notebook in a sleek little case at a reasonable price.
Rebecca Freed, PCWorld.com
Friday, June 22, 2001
Carrying an Apple
iBook is kind of like holding a baby: Whether you're in an
office or on the street, people stop to admire it. Its white-on-white case and
diminutive size (1.35 inches thick and about an inch wider than a letter-size
sheet of paper) make it hard to resist. But unlike the candy-colored first
generation of iBooks, this notebook is packed with business-class
hardware--it's not kid stuff anymore.
The model I tried comes with a combination 6X DVD and 4X/4X/24X CD-RW
drive, a 500-MHz PowerPC G3 processor, a 10GB hard drive, and a price of $1799.
Other models start at $1299; they differ mostly in optical drive options. It
also comes with the newest Mac operating system, OS X, installed, although it
starts up in OS 9.1.
Its processor and 128MB of RAM are more than enough to run general
productivity apps such as those in Microsoft Office. And if you allocate enough
RAM to graphics-intensive apps such as Adobe Photoshop Elements or Apple's
iMovie, it's plenty to run those quickly, too. (Mac OS 9.1 still lets you
allocate memory manually, although OS X manages memory automatically, just like
Windows.)
To run your older applications, you open an "OS 9.1 window." The main
drawback to this approach is waiting for the operating system to load, which
takes about as long as restarting. A handful of OS X-native applications are
available now.

The 128MB of RAM that comes installed is the minimum recommended amount
to run OS X, but you can upgrade to as much as 640MB of RAM. The 10GB hard
drive won't be enough to store many movie files, though--you'll have to burn
them to CD or hook up an external drive via the integrated IEEE 1394 port or
one of the two USB ports. DVD movies play smoothly, but the sound from the two
small speakers above the keyboard is tinny and weak; you'll want to use
headphones when listening to music or playing movies.
The 12.1-inch screen is quite usable, especially at its native 1024 by
768 resolution, although letters have softer edges than I'm used to, and the
brightness has to be turned up quite high to make them look tolerably crisp.
Despite the high burn rate, the lithium-ion battery lasted about 3 hours and 45
minutes, which is longer than the average life of batteries in PC notebooks
we've tested recently.
The iBook has some graceful design touches that live up to Apple's
reputation for elegance, such as the battery-life indicator on the back of the
case and the AC adapter spool that somewhat minimizes cord clutter. But there
were more details that tarnished that reputation--most notably the
fragile-feeling keyboard, which lifts off so you can insert an optional AirPort
wireless network card ($99) or additional RAM. In fact, typing too
energetically caused the Delete key on our test unit to pop off. The
key labeled Delete actually backspaces, and Function-delete actually forward-deletes, but
that's not labeled on the key, as other functions are. And the first thing I
noticed upon opening the notebook was that the hinge attaching the lid feels
simultaneously stiff and insubstantial: The hinge's action isn't smooth, and
the screen jiggles when you touch it. But when typing on a stable surface the
screen mostly stays put.
Powering the iBook on and plugging in headphones for the first time was
occasion for some head-scratching, because the power, headphone, and Apple RGB
(monitor) ports are labeled with cryptic icons, and the headphone and power
ports look very similar. The getting-started booklet clearly identifies them
within the first three pages, but with a Mac, I expect not to need the
manual.
Apple has finally created a portable that combines powerful components
with a price well under $2000--and has wrapped it in a case that turns heads.
Unless you're adamantly anti-Mac, it's a pretty irresistible package.
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