Skip to navigation
   
Mark Tennent's Blog
Cheap as chips

By Mark Tennent in Reader

Posted in Apple on June 26, 2008 at 8:09 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

Apple’s products are often derided as over-priced and over-hyped even though real-life comparisons of like-for-like computers would show otherwise. Certainly, Apple’s products are never cheap but there is a way to get them at a considerably lower cost and it doesn’t mean talking to a bloke in the pub.

How does saving 65% off the cost of an 8-core 3.0GHz Mac Pro sound? The usual price would be nearly five grand but it could be could be delivered to you for fifteen hundred quid, complete with Apple’s cast iron guarantee. Maybe you are looking for a laptop or iMac or even an Apple Xserve

12345
Rated: 100% (2 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Comment by Jacques Daviault - June 27, 2008 on 3:25 am

Unfortunately for me, ringing Gerard won’t do me any good. However, your post does beg the question… did you? I’m at least 2 years away from an Intel Mac purchase… and that’s not good news to a fellow used to using the latest and greatest. Oh well, I’ll just have to visit you more often. :-)

Comment by Mark Tennent - June 27, 2008 on 7:17 am

Too right I did. Er… two Mac Pro 2×2.8 quad cores, except one has to go back (it’s a long story). Anyway, what would I do with 4 Macs all to myself?

The best part is how easy Time Machine made the setting-up. The worst part is I can’t get QuarkXPress 7 running yet and it’s too early for their Customer Support to be open.

Comment by Jacques Daviault - June 27, 2008 on 3:56 pm

I’d love to hear the long story. As for Quark… try InDesign. ;-)

Comment by Mark Tennent - June 27, 2008 on 4:08 pm

Try making the book publishing industry move to inDesign. I did for 4 years but got nowhere. A lot of corporate design studios are still linked to XPress although most now keep a foot in both camps, as I do.

Then QuarkXPress 7 arrived and surprisingly it’s better than inDesign CS3, a hell of a lot quicker and arguably better typography. What happens when XPress 8 arrives next month compared with inDesign CS4 arriving next year, remains to be seen.

Quark have made Illustrator and Acrobat Pro unnecessary. Marksware converters make it easy to open Xpress docs in inDesign and vice versa and it’s the latter that is important. As a recent CS3 doc showed when it converted to XPress 7 with little tidying up to do. That means it’s only Photoshop we’ll need to keep up with unless an alternative appears - and it’s about time one did.

Comment by Stranger - January 20, 2010 on 11:24 am

Rather cool place you’ve got here. Thank you for it. I like such themes and anything that is connected to this matter. BTW, why don’t you change design :).

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

font manager Moho Books Lotus Notes compression Hotpoint Aquiss Bellhop HP FontAgent Pro Gauloise Moondrop to Gascony WordService iChat Ofcom Mac OS X Mac Pro Rogue Amoeba FTP Carbonized paperless bills BT Connect QuarkXPress France Telecom MacWorld Expo Cisco Dell broadband Nano Jamie Oliver Panic Inc MacWorld magazine Apple iMac softwear Joan of Arc FourTrack EDS Windows 7 Audio Books for Free Public Enemies onOne Software Apple Macintosh iTunes Rick Stein Hat Full of Sky iPod Genuine Fractals Lawrence Dudley Q2ID PDF Seagate Barracudas Acrobat Simon Pinkerton Motorola unilities uplink Government App Store Snow Leopard Parexcel BT Central Pipes Apple ADSL BT French Resistance Linotype FontExplorer Pro CRB checks Gestapo Linotype FontExplorer Gennaro Contaldo Transmit vBulletin SimplyRAR 21CN Suitcase Fusion TV and Video Gil Amelio 'Library of Congress' 'digital images' 'Image Engineering' 'Matthew Brady' photography 'Samuel Morse' 1802 20CN Cocoa Macromedia Siemens EST Mac OS X 10.6 Logmein for the iPhone Firewire SuperDuper Honfleur Safari-tweaks FontDoctor EyeTV Elgato iPlayer Downloader Apple Portable Steve Jobs Apple TV Anarchy iPhone Safari 4 BST CyTV Lucidcake 'Andreas Junghans' Orange MacBook Air ADSL2+ Napster Dell Studio Hybrid Cheltenham and Gloucester Mike Markkola Coding Monkeys SpeedMail Apple Mac Mini SETI Spamhaus Steve Linford Spam CAN-SPAM Western Digital MyBook Pro Phil Schiller broadband speed wifi Ron Wayne Markzware Mighty Mouse Zune Linksys Civinfo encryption entertainment industry Fetch portforward SoundSource OpenCL TNT Claris HomePage satnav Optiplex Netgear Many Tricks software FileMaker WordPress TomTom pontum Apple iPhone insurance cellphone Coffee break French Time zones Adobe Flash 'Flash Cookies' Macromedia Logmein Ignition Time Capsule O2 Leopard Logmein Mosaic CalcService web browsers Tobias Meyerhoff British Telecom HSBC phpBB PC Tools iAntiVirus CoPilot Live Windows XP Honda Civic LaserWriter GMT Lotus iPlayer Muscadet MacPro Mike Spindler 32- or 64- bit Kernel Startup Mode Selector IBM Jim Kidwell The 88 Xendai Extensis gopher veronica Vidahost Back to My Mac Lewis Hamilton Bacchus MarkWahlberg Smart Guides Media Player Andrew Tomazos spy satellite images Apple Newton Broadband Max pxl SmartScale CAPTCHA Telefonica Jonathan Ives Hamlet Fatboy iPod proxy server manager BBC iPlayer Maggie Thatcher 18185.co.uk Quark Service Scrubber AppleTV Andrew Potts Phototshop atvFlash CoPilot Growl Adobe Call of Duty Port Map Helen Mirren anarchie Mac OS X Services Apple Cube ClamXav Service menu CS Suite Suitcase Fusion 2 iPad Mini Michael Mann MacBook EyeTV3 Elgato CYTV Andreas Junghans Bonjour remote control Kira Knightley Entanet iPad Insider Software Freehand Kate Beckinsale 1Password Dr Who Garmin Adobe PageMill
Advertisement
Advertisement