Mac Mini and Fusion Drive

Hi,
The Fusion Drive have 128GB SSD and 1TB HDD. How much RPM have the 1TB HDD?
Thanks in advance!

Welcome to the Apple Support Communities
Fusion Drive is only compatible with the Late 2012 iMac. The hard disk is 5400 rpm instead of 7200 rpm of the older Macs

Similar Messages

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    http://buyersguide.macrumors.com/#Mac_Mini
    keep in mind this is a website based on rumors, only Apple knows.

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  • Mac Mini and USB 2.0 hubs (hubs stop working within a month)

    I have an aluminum Mini running OSX 10.6.6 (Snow Leopard). With only 4 USB ports, I have need of a USB hub to accommodate my external drives and other peripherals: keyboard/mouse, camera and iPhone have to use the existing ports in the Mini (difficult access to ports due to space limitations), leaving one port for up to 4 external drives (older drives 40-60gb used for backup and extra storage).
    I have problems using powered USB 2.0 hubs with this computer; I have 'burned out' 2 hubs since buying the Mini in February. They just flat out stop working, though they still show power (the power indicator light on the hubs); no peripheral is recognized when plugged into the hub (which worked fine for about a month). I can unplug the 'must use Mini ports' (camera, iPhone, charger, etc) and the peripheral drives are recognized and work normally when plugged directly into the Mini ports.
    One hub was a Belkin 4-port hub (about 1 year old) and the other was a GE 3-port hub with several flash card readers (19-in-1 card reader), also about a year old. Is there any reasonable explanation why powered hubs would suddenly stop working, related to use with the Mac Mini 2010 aluminum version?
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    Oh, here's something I just remembered: the last time the Belkin hub was working (last night), I had my Radtech BT mouse charger cable plugged in (not charging, mouse not attached) along with two of the external hard drives, and my Fuji camera USB cable. I got an error message onscreen (on the Mini) that a drive had been improperly ejected (or put away?), yet the hard drive in question was still mounted on the desktop. I looked at the hub, and the loose ends of the charger and the camera USB cable were touching. Could that have caused the error (and maybe the hub to fail)? (Edit: the camera cable I think was plugged into the mini's one available port; 3 external drives and the mouse charger were plugged into the hub, _but only one drive powered up and in use (3rd edit)_. The camera end of its USB cable contacted the mini-plug end of the mouse charger... could that have short-circuited the hub? +That wouldn't explain the failure of the GE hub a couple weeks before... but I don't know if any of this is connected, so to speak--2nd edit.+)
    Message was edited by: blick
    Message was edited by: blick
    Message was edited by: blick

  • Current Mac Mini and HD decoding

    Hi there,
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    480p seems to be the minis domain with H.264
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    Compression artifacting is still readily visible on this particular 480p encoding when viewed on the much sharper 2005FPW LCD monitor.
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    --add a G5 and a faster GPU and you end up with an iMac which low and behold is what Front Row ships on
    Jan J.

  • Bridging the gap between Mac Mini and iMac

    Does anyone agree that Apple needs to add another model between the Mac Mini and the iMac? I think they need something like a Mac Mini Plus. Two models, one with the 1.83GHz Core Duo and one with the 2.0GHz Core Duo. The unit itself would be slightly larger than the standard Mini and include a PCI Express slot with several video card options and a faster (7200RPM) hard drive. Personally, I hesitate to buy an iMac because of the built in monitor. I would prefer to buy a separate LCD flat panel monitor that I could keep for years and use with different Mac models as I upgrade. As for the current Mac Mini, it's video and processor options are on the low end, albeit perfect for the casual user, but for someone that wants to do some gaming or video editing, they don't quite cut it.
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    Athlon XP 1800+   Windows XP Pro  

    Yes, I'd love something in the form of a Mac Mini that was closer in spec to the iMac.
    Honestly, the only reason I won't buy an iMac CoreDuo is the built-in monitor.
    And, the only reason I won't buy a new Mac Mini is that they are underpowered.
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    I got tired of damaging the screen after every hour of work.
    The second iMac G5 was purchased a year later. That one also suffered permanent damage to it's LCD panel. But, not quite as noticeable.
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    The service tech was absolutely amazed at the appearance of my screen. And, yes we verified it was the actual panel that was damaged. He wouldn't replace it without verifying that it was the panel itself.
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    Now, after all the problems I've had with the built-in screens on the iMac G5 systems, I don't want another Apple product with a built-in screen. I want to use my own LCD panel.
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    The current Mac Mini's cost way too much for their very low specifications.
    I already have a Mac Mini G4. It's underpowered as well. But, no worse-off than the current Mac Minis.
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    Even better for them, I'd pay the same price as the current iMac to get it without the built-in monitor.
    Yes, that's right, I'd pay the full price of the iMac to get a Mac Mini without a monitor if it was of the same specifications otherwise.
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    With their product line as it is, the current Mac Mini is not a compelling machine, and the iMac is not an option because of it's built-in monitor.
    Get me a high-end Mac Mini and you've got a sale.

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