Considering buying New Imac

Considering buying New Imac but have some applications I won't be able to use.  Want to know how easy is it to use boot camp and partion drive to use windows 7.  Has anyone done this and how easy is it to do?  One other question.  With lion coming soon will boot camp be part of it?

Lion will be out next month.
Boot camp is as simple as running the bootcamp config program that will partiion the drive and reboot. At that point you will install windows. It is a very easy process.
Lion will also have bootcamp.

Similar Messages

  • Can i trade in my old imac air when i am buying new iMac air???

    can i trade in my old imac air when i am buying new iMac air??? cause the one that i got is 11inch, but it kinds of too small..so i thinking to buy the new one..

    Apple does not accept trade ins.  But you could certainly sell your old machine.  You say "iMac Air", and there is actually no machine with that name.  So get the name right and you can hunt around for what your old machine might be worth.
    One place to look is:
    http://www.apple.com/recycling

  • In Hongkong. I want to buy new iMac, But need to sell old one first. Where is good for sell??

    Please help me.
    Please give me a suggestion.
    I want to buy new iMac, but need to sell old one.
    About following the info.
    How much can sell and where is good for sell?
    Processor  2.93 GHz Intel Core i7
    Total Number of Cores:          4
    Processor Interconnect Speed: 4.8 GT/s
    Memory  8 GB 1333 MHz DDR3
    Graphics  ATI Radeon HD 5750 1024 MB
    Software  OS X 10.8.3 (12D78)
    1TB harddisk
    Warranty to 02/Aug/2013
    Thank you for your help.

    When you sell your iMac, please remember that if you bought Mountain Lion upgrade at the app store, the license is not transferable and you need to erase the drive and reinstall the original system (which was most likely Snow Leopard?). If you don't do that, the buyer can never reinstall Mountain Lion because the license is tied to your Apple ID forever.

  • Buying new iMac, which graphics card would be best?

    I'm getting ready to buy a new iMac. I already have a 2010 27-in with a Radeon HD 5670 512 MB graphics (card? was built in as I remember). I need an additional iMac for my studio space and am deciding between the 21.5-in. w/ Intel Iris Integrated graphics and the NVIDIA GEForce graphics models. I do photography and art related video projects with music (Final Cut, Photoshop CSS, Logic Pro).
    The 2010 iMac has worked fine for me. Which of the new iMacs would you recommend? Do I need extra dedicated graphics card or is the Intel Iris pretty comparable to what I've been getting with the Radeon?
    I wouldn't mind saving a couple of hundred dollars to use on other things like a back up drive, but if it's going to be a big difference I could spend the extra $ for the NVIDIA.
    I'm not a gamer BTW.
    thanks for your input, tech-heads!
    Christine

    Although the processor speed is slower, the i5 is much more efficient
    than the i3.  In addition, the memory bus speed is faster than your
    2010.  The result is you will have a faster computer.
    Just for some performance numbers, here are the Geekbench
    scores for your current computer and the one you are considering.
    (64 bit single core test score/64 bit multi core test score)
    2010, i3, 3.2 GHz iMac ---> 2086/4491
    late 2013, 21.5", i5, 2.7 GHz ---> 3172/10255

  • Buying New iMac Advice

    I'm seriously considering getting a new iMac. I've always had power macs, but cannot afford one now. My main uses would be for a small business...and some audio and movie recording. The new iMacs look to be very nice. I'm leaning towards the basic 24"'er with 4 gigs of RAM. I'd also need an external HD..1TB or so, maybe a WD or Seagate with Firewire..800 I'd guess. Just wondering if this is the best way to go, or to save a little dough and get the previous gen.....What do y'all think? Thanks!
    JT

    For the uses you have mentioned, the previous gen 24" imacs will more than happily do the job.
    I have the 3.06GHz and it is very fast with nvidia 512mb GPU.
    But if you want to future proof, that is another story.
    Just buy the best you can afford, it will most likely last you for longer and you won't be left wondering what you have missed out on.
    Good luck

  • Need advice, what to add to my MBA ... a 24" ACD or buy new iMac?

    I have the MacBook Air 1.8 / 128 SSD and now have the 24" ACD monitor it's a nice set up, but I can't help but think of another possible option that I may like more ...
    I'm considering returning the ACD and exchanging it for the 24" iMac and I'd use the iMac along with my MBA.
    I like typing on my MBA and using the trackpad, being able to move it around the office, house or desk in a second and not being tethered to the monitor is nice, I know its only two plugs but ...
    Having an iMac to use along with the MBA has many benefits, the obvious is it's a separate computer, lol, ... but you can leave the MBA on it's own at all times, use them together, lots of extra storage space, also to run windows on via boot camp on the iMac etc ....
    It's about $900 more, for many many more benefits. I love the 24" ACD monitor but can't help thinking of the added benefits of the iMac for not a whole lot more money mine be worth it and sort of complete my system, best of both worlds...
    What would you do?

    Would you buy to go with the MBA?
    So far I bought the 24" ACD, I really like it.
    Still I'm considering exchanging the ACD and getting the new 24" iMac. Reason being in a way I'd like to keep my Air separate and not attached to an external display, I really like typing on the Air, its Touchpad and the screen is great. True, when I hook up to the 24" ACD it's beatiful and the Apple BT keyboard is alright, but for whatever reason part of me wants to get the iMac and use the Air along side of it ...
    Or, I could go all out and keep the ACD to use with my Air when I like PLUS buy the iMac. In that case I'd sell my HP desktop and 24" HP monitor I have. BUT if I did that I'd loose a benefit I'm getting from the HP desktop which is HDMI ports. This is one thing that's more of a challenge with the mac because I also hook up to a 37" Panasonic Vierra for movie watching. So my HP desktop has the 24" monitor and my 37" TV attached to it.
    A lot of computers, eh? They're all used hard for our business and entertainment as well. I was cruising along fine with an x301 ... then I had to try the MBA and I'm hooked, I love that that computer! So, now with the addition of the 24" ACD I'm thinking of the iMac as well. The HP has it's quirks, non working USB ports, had to reinstall the OS a few times, so I won't mind getting rid of it. But how to hook up the iMac to the Panasonic, it has no DVI port.
    From a minimalist viewpoint I could probably get by with just my Air as my main machine, and use an external hard drive for extra storage / back up. Then when I required the use of a large monitor or to run Windows App's I could use the HP desktop. In one way this 'could' be the least aggravating too, my TV already hooks up easily via HDMI, the HP monitor on the desktop is good, then just use the Air when I'm away from my desk. (Plus I have to get my wife a new pc regardless of what I do, realistically a 13" MB will suilt her, it's small/light but has the power and peripherals she needs.
    From a 'maximalist' view I could keep the ACD for my Air, add the iMac as my desktop, sell the HP or give to my wife to use at her desk and get her the MBA ! PLUS replace my Linksys dual band $200 router with Time Capsule and the whole system would be complete. I'd install windows on the iMac ... is all that worth the cost and effort ... I don't know.
    It's not a matter of cost, we're a low overhead busy company and I haven't redone our computer set up for some time now ...

  • Upgrade eMac or Buy New iMac

    I've got an obsolete ol' eMac running Mac OSX 1.3.9, as I never upgraded to Tiger. Well now that Leopard's come along, I figure I might as well go for it. However, my eMac's only got 512MB of memory and I'd need to spend like $100 or more on 1GB of memory alone just to run Leopard. On top of that, I need another external hard drive, and my eMac's fan is loud (though I guess there's nothing wrong with it exactly, it's just being loud and weird).
    All that said, would it be worth it to even bother upgrading my eMac and everything, or should I just get a new iMac? I mean eMac's are already obsolete as it is, and it'd be a waste of money if I upgraded it now and in a year or so just ended up having to buy a new computer for some reason anyway (such as if this one dies, like if the wack fan leads to it's demise or something)...

    Obsolete! Older, yes. No longer sold, yes, but gosh dag nabbit, my old eMac is still my primary machine and does the job very well with everything I need it to do (video editing, iTunes, iPod, etc.). That said, I have been drooling over the new iMacs lately, but this eMac still has a lot of life left in it.
    But back to your eMac. First thing I would do is invest in a nice external hard drive if you do not have one. Get one that can be connected via Firewire so you can take advantage of Firewire speed if your eMac is an older model without USB2 ports. Then back up everything important to that external.
    An external is not a bad investment at all, even for an old machine, because it can go with you when you upgrade so there is no risk of "leaving it behind" if the eMac dies. If and when you get a new iMac, the drive can simple be moved to that machine and you keep using it. So regardless of which way you go, keep the eMac or move to an iMac, the external hard drive is still a great idea to protect your irreplaceable data (family digital photos, home videos, etc.).
    As to the eMac, if you wanted to upgrade the operating system, I would look into getting a copy of Tiger. It is a nice upgrade to Panther (10.3.9) and with Leopard (10.5) out, will should start to see copies of Tiger for very affordable prices. While more would be better, under Tiger, you can probably do fine with the 512MB RAM you have now if you don't do any sort of heavy processing.
    So like the others, a new iMac would be fantastic and you wouldn't regret it. But if you want to stick with the eMac for a bit more, get the external hard drive anyway as you will want it to backup even if you get the iMac. Now either continue to use the eMac as is (10.3.9 & 512MB) or find a cheap copy of Tiger and upgrade to that and stick with the same RAM and just turn off some of the memory hogging eye candy in Tiger like the Widgets. I bet if you looked around you might be able to find Tiger for $50-ish so your total upgrade cost is $50 (the external hard drive I don't count since it will go with you to the iMac).
    Patrick

  • Upgrade mac pro or buy new imac

    Really need some help here.  My base machine is a quad-core Nehalem Mac Pro running at 3.33 with 8Gb of RAM and using a ATI Radeon HD 5870 video card.  My choices are:
       Buy a new iMac 3.4 Ghz quad core i7, 16 Gb RAM, nVidia GTX 680MX, 750 Gb SSD drive (about $3500)
    OR
      Buy 16 Gb RAM, nVidia GTX 680 (about 900 dollars)
    Is there much of a performance differece between the 2 to justify the difference in cost?

    The Mac Pro you own has way more headroom to upgrade for short money.
    The 2009 and later can upgrade RAM DIMM modules by the each -- don't buy new memory modules for these Macs smaller than 8GB per module (cheaper than two 4GB). These are as cheap as US$70 + shipping from Mac-Centric vendors such as Data Memory Systems:
    http://www.datamemorysystems.com/apple-mac-pro-quad-core-intel-xeon-nehalem-3-2g hz-mc560ll/a-cto-mid-2010-memory-upgrades/

  • Buy Leopard vs Tiger for IMAC G 5 or simple give in and buy new IMac??

    After reviewing this topic, I am still confused as to what to do. The Leopard OS looks complicated to load and I am not at all savy about Mac's and trouble shooting problems!! Is the Tiger a better way to go for a simple Mac user like me? I am even thinking about a new IMac with updated software and Leopard. My IMac works great but the Panther OS and ILife are probably getting outdated (but still meets all my needs still, though Turbo Tax will now not run on it.). Any suggestions or advice? Dazed and confused!

    Hi Stephen,
    I agree with MGW that you seem to be looking for confirmation or approval that it would be a good idea to buy a new Mac. I have a feeling that if you install Leopard into your old Mac, it may run slower that on a stronger Mac which would have more RAM and power. Leopard would also take up more space from your current 80 HD. Furthermore, by purchasing a new iMac, you will be able to benefit from a SuperDrive instead of a ComboDrive, a bigger HD, and more RAM can't hurt.
    Anyway, I'm cheering for you! Good luck with your decision! I never regretted my move from an old Quick Silver G4 tower (CD-R) to my current MacPro. It took me many years to get the courage and the money to finally go for it and NO REGRETS!
    Best wishes...
    Rio.

  • Buying new iMac 3.06 which windows program for boot camp to get

    I am buying a iMac 3.06 and their is a deal to get boot camp with several windows options:
    Vista, XP versions either standard or premium or pro versions.
    I am retired and do not have any need for windows. once in a while someone sends something that I cannot open in e-mail and my grandson has a PC with standard vista.
    If it were not a nominal charge I would not even consider it.
    Any thoughts about which windows program to go with,
    Greg

    Your system and needs sounds like you might want to forgo native dual-boot of Windows and invest in Parallels or Fusion, both are virtual machines so you can run Windows inside OS X, side by side.
    Or you might just need a program like OpenOffice, NeoOffice. I'd wait and see if OS X can help you manage files. Or tell us what type of files you need to view. Your iMac comes with iWork which can open some files. You may not need Office for Mac or Windows.
    XP tends to be common choice and just 32-bit with SP2 (or later).

  • Buying new iMac - Advices

    Hello, in a few days I'll buy a new iMac, I'm already a holder of an old 2010 iMac 21,5.
    I thought to remain on a 21,5 because for how expensive it can be, it is less than a 27, even if in this one there is the possibility to add RAM in future, wouldn't be bad.
    I usually use iMac for Photography (Photoshop, Ligtroom, Plugins) and sometimes After Effects for very simple things.
    The configuration I thought to choose is this:
    Intet Core i5 quad-core a 2,9GHz Turbo Boost fino a 3,6GHz
    16GB di SDRAM DDR3 a 1600MHz
    Unità di memoria flash da 256GB
    NVIDIA GeForce GT 750M 1GB GDDR5
    do you think this configuration could be ok for what I do with the iMac?
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    That iMac as a server will either be just right, massive overkill, or far too small.
    What are you planning on doing with OS X Server here?    Mail?  Web server?  File and disk?  Computes?  DNS? Profile management?  How much of {whatever}?
    Are you planning on starting up and shutting down and reconfiguring your new iMac (as is common with a desktop Mac), or are you planning on leaving it alone and leaving it running all the time (as is the norm with servers)?
    If you're working with various systems on your local network, are you using WiFi, wired gigabit, or slower wired connection?  Servers serving lots of files locally will generally provide the best results with wired gigabit Ethernet.
    Do you have a static IP address, or is only dynamic (DHCP) IP available from your ISP?  (You'll usually want static IP, if you're going to be running a mail server, hosting external sites or similar tasks, too.)  (Over the lifetime of the server, static IP connection from various ISPs can end up costing more than the entire server, too.)

  • Buying new IMac for IMovie use

    I am purchasing a new IMac. What kind of memory do you recommend for using iMovie. If you recommend 1G, do you recommend buying one 1G, or 2 512s?
    What kind of routine problems have been occurring with iMovie? With my five year old Mac I routinely had a problem with video and audio not synching and I know from reading posts that that was a problem for many people
    IMAC   Mac OS X (10.2.x)  
    IMAC   Mac OS X (10.2.x)  

    If you recommend 1G, do you recommend buying one 1G, or 2 512s?
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    As for the sync problem, it can be avoided by recording 16-bit audio.
    iMovie: Audio and Video Lose Synchronization
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=61636
    iMovie: Improving audio and video synchronization
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=42974

  • Considering purchasing new iMac from MacMall

    Is MacMall reputable?  Anyone have any experiences with them?  Does Apple honor the regular warranty with them?
    Why should I even bother buying from them you ask?
    They seem to offer new iMac's for $100-$150 cheaper than apple store.  Another main reason is no sales tax.  That's another $120 savings.  So, it will be about $240 savings for the same new computer from them.--assuming I get a real new computer and not some repackaged problem computer.
    I checked amazon but they don't offer the new iMac's now.
    Thanks

    Well, I went ahead with the purchase and I received it yesterday.  Shipping was reasonable-Free UPS ground 3-5 days.  I ordered a new iMAC 27 inch, which normally retails for $1699.  It cost $1607 plus another 3% off through some link which took me to MacMall for a total of $1559.
    Everything appeared brand new with all the packaging.  The computer looks and works perfectly so far.
    I also saved on sales tax by buying online and having it shipped to my home.  Macmall has not retail stores in my state so they do not have to charge and collect sales tax.  They are based in California, so CA residents would be charged tax.  That's how the state tax codes work.  I'm a CPA, so I'm fully aware of the tax laws.  So total savings were $258 lower than the apple store (again thanks in large part to no sales tax).
    If I have a waaranty issue, the computer comes with the same 1 year warranty.  I'm not entirely sure if I would have to deal with MacMall or Apple in this event, but I'm crossing my fingers for now.
    I read some unfavorable and scary reviews of MacMall, but my experience worked out.  I also did verify they are listing as an authorized resller on apple's website.

  • Should I Bother Buying New iMac, Final Cut?

    I currently own a seven-year-old G5 running 10.4.11. I'm using FCS and have been trying to upgrade to FCS2 since buying it several months ago, but it won't recognize the serial number from FCS, but that's not my problem/question.
    I desperately need to buy a new(er) computer because I'm maxed out at 4GB of RAM, which just isn't cutting it any more. I've also begun shooting HD with a Panasonic HPX170. The camera creates MXF files that FCS is not able to import. I want to keep using Final Cut because I prefer it to Premiere Pro, but the news I've been reading about FCX is not encouraging.
    If I buy the newest Studio version (prior to X), will it work on a new iMac? I just can't afford a Mac Pro right now, and I've heard the new iMacs scream, but it won't do me any good if I can't run Final Cut Pro on it, and I really don't want to use Premiere.
    I also publish several magazines and use Adobe CS3 and 4, but those are less of a concern right now.
    Any suggestions?
    Thanks,
    Lloyd

    >I've also begun shooting HD with a Panasonic HPX170. The camera creates MXF files that FCS is not able to import.
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    http://library.creativecow.net/articles/ross_shane/p2_workflow.php
    FCP 5.1 TOTALLY supports that format.
    >If I buy the newest Studio version (prior to X), will it work on a new iMac?
    FCS 2009...or FCS 3...totally.  Absolutely.  If you can find it. Apple pulled it, then re-released it if you called them direct.  But who knows if that is still happening.  The new iMac will run FCS 2, if you install Rosetta on it from a previous OS installer (custom install Rosetta). 

  • Buying New Imac 27 inch

    Hi all
    I am looking for input into what Imac i should get, at the moment i have a Imac 24 inch but its getting old and I need to get a new one so here is what i need it for.
    I use my desktop mostly for photography and I use Photoshop CC and Lightroom 5 I will not use it to play games but the photos I import from my camera is 36 million pixels at a time, I also use it for Skype and Facetime also all my music.
    Hope I have explained enough and I only use the computer to do my hobbies but dont know the ins and outs of them so the more help I get the better it will be
    Thanks to all in advance 

    Just about any 27" will work, if you are buying new (refurbs are available) I'd recommend getting a Fusion drive to improve performance. I'd also recommend upgrading the RAM to 16GB or more.  You can easily upgrade the RAM yourself, buy from a reliable source such as OWC (www.macsales.com) or Crucial.
    Also when the new machine arrives,  you will be using Setup Assistant, remember to migrate from your old iMac to the new one. Use your Time Machine or bootable clone backup to do this. Instructions can be found at:
    http://pondini.org/OSX/SetupLion.html
    Good luck and enjoy your new machine.

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