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DESKTOP

Desktops Disguise - All-In-One Computers (Part 3) : Apple iMac 27-inch

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Apple iMac 27-inch

Apple's iMac is doubtlessly, the quintessential single-piece PC. The latest update slims the chassis down to just

5inm at the outer edges, and 40% of the previous design's volume. The largest iMac is no longer unwieldy in its bulk, and is more a thing of beauty than ever.

The screen tilts through 65-95 degrees. That's not as flexible as many Windows 8 all-in-ones, but the iMac's lack of a touchscreen makes a super- shallow tilt angle unnecessary.

In the box is Apple's ergonomic nightmare the Magic Mouse, and an awfully chic wireless keyboard without angle adjustment or a numeric keypad.

The largest iMac is no longer unwieldy in its bulk, and is more a thing of beauty than ever.

The largest iMac is no longer unwieldy in its bulk, and is more a thing of beauty than ever.

Both look gorgeous, but have proven time and again to be finicky and uncomfortable for long-time use. Some of that is personal preference, but it's truly hard to believe that either device was designed with ergonomics or practicality as a priority.

The iMac's screen is exceptional, though I'd expect nothing less from a company as devoted to the design and photography markets as Apple. The 2560 x l440-pixel display scored well in all areas when tested with the Spyder4 Elite, achieving an overall rating of4.5/5, and covering 100% of the sRGB color space.

Apple have reduced the distance between the LCD panel and screen surface, making for a gorgeously crisp and vibrant picture.

For photo or video editing, graphic design or other image-heavy pursuits, the iMac's screen is its greatest advantage and helps to justify the premium you'll pay for the iMac over its competitors.

Apple have reduced the distance between the LCD panel and screen surface, making for a gorgeously crisp and vibrant picture.

Apple have reduced the distance between the LCD panel and screen surface, making for a gorgeously crisp and vibrant picture.

Our test model was based on the Intel Core i5-3470S, a quad-core 2.9 - 3.6GHz CPU without hyper threading. The 3470S base model sells for a rather reasonable $2,799. It has 8GB of RAM, an Nvidia GeForce GTX 660M graphics chip with 512MB of dedicated memory, and a 1TB hard drive. However, our model included Apple's ITB Fusion Drive instead - a hybrid of ITB hard drive and I28GB SSD. That adds S400 to the price, elevating our model to a more 'premium' $3,199.

Overall performance was solid - not quite matching Lenovo's eight-core ThinkCentre Edge 92z in raw computing power, but sufficient to comfortably run Adobe Creative Suite, to encode video, or other such CPU-heavy tasks. Graphics performance was exceptional - Nvidia's GTX 660M is a powerful mobile graphics chip indeed, and gave near chart-topping results in our gaming and rendering benchmarks.

The 660M's only downside is its limited 512MB of dedicated memory. It's a great card for accelerating rendering in design, photo and video applications, but hardcore Mac gamers may want to spring for the next version up. That goes for $3,599 (assuming you also add the Fusion drive), and includes an Nvidia GeForce GTX 675MX with 1GB of dedicated memory.

If you’re going to be doing a lot of video work, compression, or encryption, you can upgrade to an Intel Core i7 3.4-3.9GF4z CPU, and up to a maximum of32GB of RAM.

The 660M's only downside is its limited 512MB of dedicated memory.

The 660M's only downside is its limited 512MB of dedicated memory.

The slimming-down has eliminated the optical drive, so if you need to read or write DVDs, you'll need an external drive.

There's a card reader, four USB 3.0 ports, two Thunderbolt ports, a headphone socket which doubles as an optical S/PDIF output for digital audio, and a gigabit Ethernet port. Wirelessly you get 802.1 in, and Bluetooth 4.0.

Comprehensive, but there's one problem: all of the wired connections are lined up along the back of the screen, completely out of sight. I don't know about you, but I'm constantly inserting and removing flash drives, USB cables and SD cards. The iMac's port positioning makes that overly difficult.

If you want an all-in-one PC for design work, though, it's truly hard to recommend anything else. For home, it's equally easy to endorse - huge screen for web browsing, enough power for gaming, and you can always dual- boot with Windows if you need to.

There's a card reader, four USB 3.0 ports, two Thunderbolt ports, a headphone socket which doubles as an optical S/PDIF output for digital audio, and a gigabit Ethernet port.

There's a card reader, four USB 3.0 ports, two Thunderbolt ports, a headphone socket which doubles as an optical S/PDIF output for digital audio, and a gigabit Ethernet port.

At A Glance

·         27-inch 2560 x 1440-pixel display

·         Intel Core i5-3470S quad-core CPU

·         8GB RAM

·         Nvidia GeForce GTX 660IVt graphics (512MB)

·         1TB hard drive + 128GB SSD (Apple Fusion Drive)

Apple iMac 27-Inch (Md095x/A)

  • RRP incl GST: $2,799 (base model), $3,199 (as tested)
  • Contact: apple.co.nz
  • Rating: 4/5

Great graphical performance, a strong all-rounder, but it places form over function where ports and peripherals are concerned.

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  •  Windows Home Server 2011 : Monitoring Performance (part 5) - Monitoring Performance with Performance Monitor
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  •  Windows Home Server 2011 : Monitoring Performance (part 3) - Monitoring Performance with Task Manager - Monitoring Network Performance
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