New Mac mini review

AnimalMagnetism

Self Imposed Exile
Apr 21, 2006
3,742
0
36
Toronto
New Mac Mini Review

Score 6/10

The Good:

Gorgeous design
Thunderbolt port
Snappy performance

The Bad:
No optical drive
Too pricey
Sluggish hard drive

Wrap-up:
It's not often that Apple products take a turn for the worse when a new revision comes out, but there's no question that the design of 2010's mini is superior to the design of this guy. Sure, the revised edition is a heck of a lot more powerful and $100 cheaper, but it's in the same infelicitous spot that it's always been in: by the time you invest in a halfway decent keyboard, mouse and monitor, you're pushing $850+ for a mid-level machine with a sluggish hard drive, the bare minimum amount of RAM that we'd recommend for Lion, no USB 3.0 and no optical drive. For whatever reason, Apple's made the new mini even less useful than the last, and while a Benjamin off the sticker is appreciated, it hardly puts it in a new class in terms of value.

On the upside, OS X Lion is a superbly polished operating system, and the mini itself is easily the most stunning SFF PC on the market today. It's also eerily quiet, power efficient and cool, and it's everything the average college student or studio apartment dweller needs. Handling 1080p multimedia, basic video / photo editing and even gaming is no problem, but we just can't get over the paradoxes here. Apple dumbs down the back panel so the DIYers among us can't access the hard drive, but selling a computer without three essential peripherals (monitor, keyboard and mouse) ensures that the target market will be one that's at least remotely familiar with technobabble.

In isolation, the Mac mini is a fine computer. It's quick on its feet, and it's happy both beside your TV or in the office. As with all Macs, there's an elusive premium that comes with the overall software experience, and those placing a high value on OS X and the bundled iLife suite may find the compromises here acceptable. But imagining how stellar this bundle of joy could have been with a Blu-ray drive (or any drive) is an impossible vision to shake. Perhaps it's just getting more difficult to logically recommend a Mac desktop, particularly one that's underpowered for serious AV work and near impossible to upgrade. Apple has fine-tuned its laptop options in such a way that makes the revamped mini look underwhelming -- grandiose thoughts of an entry-level MacBook Air docked to a (reasonably priced) 27-inch Thunderbolt Display continue to find their way into our brains.

If you're still fixated on the beauty here, our honest recommendation is to pick up last year's model as it inevitably drops in price (and in turn, increases in value). We've been looking long and hard for an ideal use-case for this guy, and sadly, we've yet to find it.


comes with no optical drive,no monitor, no keyboard and mouse, minimal memory, slow hard drive...but it looks cute ;)
for that kind of money you can do much much better. Maybe Apple are using it as a loss leader to steer you to an iPad lol
 

onthebottom

Never Been Justly Banned
Jan 10, 2002
40,881
197
63
Hooterville
www.scubadiving.com
I'm actually surprised they didn't go with a SSD and use the Apple TV form factor.....

OTB
 

Powershot

Active member
May 18, 2003
2,055
1
38
I have an external optical drive, the last time I used was to install OSX about 6 months ago. Haven't used a floppy drive in a long time either :).

It is configurable with SSD from apple but I doubt it is user replaceable.
 

Cobster

New member
Apr 29, 2002
10,420
0
0
Sluggish hard drive?
Wonder what the upgrade costs are? lol :D
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts