>I like to think that I think for myself and so far nobody
>has made (much) of a case for the G5.
>
>John A.
For those of us with the very early G4's and older, a G5 would be an awsome upgrade. Like I mentioned in a previous post, I have one of the original G4/450's, it's almost 4 years old, and it's starting to feel a bit slow. I mainly have speed problems in Adobe Photoshop, Adobe InDesign, and when compiling something. Actually I wouldn't mind speeding up mailbox operations in Eudora either (the OS X version is a lot slower than the old classic version I was using).
On the G5, the combination of Hypertransport, faster RAM (PC3200 DDR vs. PC100 SDRAM), AGP 8x vs. AGP 2x, SATA vs. ATA66, USB 2.0 vs. USB 1.1, a 4x DVD-R/W drive, and lastly a significantly faster processor (or two significantly processors) make for a very good case for me upgrading. However, I'll be limping along with my G4/450 for probably at least another year.
Zane
--
--
| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Administrator |
| healyzh_at_aracnet.com (primary) | OpenVMS Enthusiast |
| | Classic Computer Collector |
+----------------------------------+----------------------------+
| Empire of the Petal Throne and Traveller Role Playing, |
| PDP-10 Emulation and Zane's Computer Museum. |
| http://www.aracnet.com/~healyzh/ |
Received on Fri Jul 18 2003 - 10:15:00 BST