Understanding Specs: Mac Mini

First, let me apologize if this is the wrong thread; I am new to these forums.
I am currently using a MacBook as my primary computer (2.4 GHz / 2GB DDR2), and I am looking to purchase a new (or new to me) Mac Mini to use instead. Don't get me wrong - I love my MacBook, but I play a lot of games (WoW particularly = hot Mac), edit a lot of video and music, etc., basically I demand that my CPU runs hot probably more than I should and I feel I am flirting with death.
At any rate, I have been shopping around/using everymac and I'm noticing that a lot of the newer models sport processors in the neighborhood of 2.26-2.53, and the RAM is somewhere around the 2GB range. Even the newest Mac Minis on the retail store site are (standard) 2.4 GHz / 2GB (albeit DDR3) RAM. I understand that the mini is a small form factor computer built with a lot of laptop engineering, but I was hoping to buy a desktop that would at least moderately outperform my 2-year old laptop.
Am I misunderstanding specs as they relate to performance? Can I save some cash buying a used (previous gen) 2.26-2.53 GHz 2GB DDR3 Mac Mini? Or would a new Mac Mini with a 2.4 GHz processor, but 2 GB of DDR3 RAM completely blow away my early 2008 MacBook (4,1)? (i.e. is the newer one simply more expensive because of the unibody construction/design, etc.?)
...or should I just forget all that and buy an iMac (3.06 GHz / 4GB)?

I replaced a 2GHz C2D MacBook 2,1 from 2006 with 3GB RAM with a Mac mini 2.66GHz with 8GB RAM and the new certainly "moderately outperforms" the old in general responsiveness and the speed at which I can run multiple virtual machines and apps which were previously irritatingly slow e.g. Office 2008. I don't play games however.
It's also silent, compact and allows me to use my two existing *non glossy* displays. The otherwise perfectly usable MacBook is now free for use around the house and on trips.

Similar Messages

  • Top spec mac Mini as a workstation?

    Hi,
    My studio needs to replace two old G5's and i would like to know how a couple of maxed out mac Minis would perform. I'm thinking of these owing to the massive price of two Mac Pros and also because we already have monitors. The spec i am thinking of is 2.66ghz, 500gb and 8gb ram. We can't have iMacs as due to already having screens and our designers don't like the glossy screens. Also what would we need to run two monitors of each Mac mini? We would be using Photoshop, AVA (like Photoshop), printing large images to 24" printers, occasional illustrator work and general Office 2008 work.
    Question is i can buy one Mac Pro now and wait till, next year for the second but this would leave our studio a quarter Power PC and three quarters intel. All our other Macs are intel with the exception of the two G5's.
    What is my best option and will the Minis be up to the task?

    I think you would be more than happy with the minis. I really do.
    I have been using a C2D 2.4 ghz macbook pro I bought in late 2007. It replaced my 2.66 Mac Pro back at the time. I run the full Creative Suite CS4 on this. There has really never been a moment that I wished it had more power.
    I recently bought a new mini, put 4 gigs of ram in it and have been using it as a music workstation. Same 2.4 processor, but some slightly newer bits inside (but actually, a slower 5400 drive than my macbook pro). It feels very fast.
    Now, 2 weeks ago I bought a dual 2.3ghz G5 tower from a local source. Got a deal. I bought it to use for my music workstation, and was going to move the new mini somewhere else.
    However, as powerful as a dual G5 was, when I opened the same Logic Audio songs on the Mini and G5, the mini used WAY less cpu meters than the G5. It wasn't even close. It really blew me away. The C2D 2.4ghz may not be the current state of the art, but seriously, with 8 gigs of ram and a proper 7200 RPM internal drive, it will run circles around the G5.
    For $1K (700 for mini, $120 for 8 gigs ram at OWC, and if your brave, $100 for a 7200 internal) you will have a very capable machine for what you do.
    If you can buy a few years with them, then sell them you'll be ahead of the game. The resell on mini's is extremely high, even older G4 minis get a few hundred bucks.
    So, I'm with you 100%. I would love another MacPro. But after ram, tax, etc, $3K for a low end one new is crazy. Refurbs are great, but they aren't that much cheaper.
    Grab two mini's, load them up, and run.
    Oh, I'm totally with you on the iMacs. Perfect compromise on cost/performance, but no way am I going back to a glossy screen like that. Just not going to happen.

  • What spec Mac Mini would you recommend for running XCode 4?

    Our organisation is starting to develop apps for IOS and the first step is purchasing a Mac to run XCode 4 on.
    We are on a budget and the Mac Mini is within our price range but after some initial research we are concerned that we would need more RAM in order to run XCode 4 comfortably.
    Below is the spec of the Mac Mini we are considering using:
    2.3GHz dual-core Intel Core i5
    2GB memory
    500GB hard drive
    Intel HD Graphics 3000
    OS X Lion
    Just wondering what people use to run XCode 4 and how happy they are with the performance.
    Many Thanks
    Richard

    If your development will be iOS apps, the base model
    should be more than sufficient provided you bump
    up to at least 4 gig RAM, preferably 8.  However,
    don't purchase the RAM from Apple as it is way over
    priced.  Go to Newegg or OWC to purchase it.
    If the app requires some signifigant graphics development
    and need to use image processing software to create them,
    I would suggest bumping up to the next model with the
    discrete graphics chip.

  • Good Spec Mac Mini got painfully slow

    Hi All
    Following reading posts on this forum, I have upgraded my 2011 Mac Mini from 4gb to 8gb Memory, but it is still painfully slow, with the spinning beach ball always in play.
    I now have a Core i7, 2.7ghz Mac Mini, with 8GB DDR3 memory, 500 mb disc (with 300gb free), running OSX 10.9.1.  I run Microsoft office and Iphoto and thats pretty much it, but even using Iphoto can take seconds for ecah photo to move, and typing emails often means waiting for the text to catch up with my typing.
    In my frustration I copied everything off, re formatted the hard disc, and re installed everything, but its still the same speed.  The Activity monitor shows very little CPU activity, although the memory shows as 7.87GB used out of 8GB, not sure if that is normal.
    Any ideas would be really welcome, as its getting very frustrating to use, when I first purchased the MAC mini it was blindingly fast on everything.
    Thanks
    Martyn

    If you don't already have a current backup, back up all data before doing anything else. This procedure is a diagnostic  test. It changes nothing, for better or worse, and therefore will not, in itself, solve your problem. The backup is necessary on general principle, not because of anything suggested in this comment. There are ways to back up a computer that isn't fully functional. Ask if you need guidance.
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    ☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the icon grid. 
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    Copy the selected text to the Clipboard by pressing the key combination command-C. Then click anywhere in the Terminal window and paste (command-V). I've tested these instructions only with the Safari web browser. If you use another browser, you may have to press the return key after pasting.
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    PR () { [[ "$o" ]] && o=$(sed 's/^/   /' <<< "$o") && printf '\n%s:\n\n%s\n' "$1" "$o"; }; { o=$(sudo launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.(apple|openssh|vix\.cron)|org\.(amav|apac|calendarse|cups|dove|isc|ntp|post[fg]|x)/{print $3}'); PR "Loaded extrinsic daemons"; o=$(sudo defaults read com.apple.loginwindow LoginHook); PR "Login hook"; o=$(sudo crontab -l | grep [^[:blank:]]); PR "Root cron tasks"; o=$(syslog -k Sender kernel -k Message CReq 'GPU |hfs: Ru|I/O e|find tok|n Cause: -|NVDA\(|pagin|timed? ?o' | tail -n25 | awk '/:/{$4=""; print}'); PR "Log check"; } 2>&- | pbcopy; echo $'\nStep 2 done'
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  • High Spec Mac Mini v Macbook

    I want a Mac with 1GB Ram/DVD RW and about 120GB HD
    The Mini comes out a little cheaper but doesn't have the webcam or a screen.
    The Macbook also has the faster chip Core 2 and 2.0 v the 1.83 on the mini.
    I can't really see why anyone would want the mini
    Am I missing something?

    At $1299, the reason a MacBook wouldn't be on my shopping list is that the screen is perfect for mobility, but too small for serious use or for ready use in presentations etc. Added to that, I would not generally want to spend money on an Apple slot-loading DVD burner if it was for serious use, since I've never found these to be particularly likable devices or all that reliable on a variety of media. Thus, not only would I need USB keyboard and mouse because I dislike having to use inbuilt laptop devices for these functions unless I have no option, but I'd also have to add an additional 17 or 19 inch LCD display and an external hard drive for backups, along with an external burner for more trustworthy performance.
    Of course, I'd want the same extras for the mini, but with the base model plus 1Gb RAM that would bring the total to $674, allowing me another $600 to add the screen, a couple of external drives (one for added storage and the other for backups) and an external high-performance dual layer DVD burner, and still have a fair bit of change for a system that was capable of pretty much exactly the same thing the MacBook would do, with much the same performance, for somewhat less money, and all I'd sacrifice is portability.
    The compromise would seem to be the iMac, but the base model, while having a good 17" display, would still need a memory upgrade, has the same integrated graphics as the mini and would of course need an extra hard drive for backups and DVD burner anyway. The next model up also has 17" screen, but at $1199 is $100 less than a MacBook, somewhat faster due to the faster drive, and has an ATI graphics system. It would still need the extra drive for backups, and an external burner to obviate the potential shortcoming of the slot-loading drive of course.
    Thus for me, the choice would be between entry-level mini (for best flexibility in allowing me to pick what I want my system to comprise while staying within the budget) or 2nd in the range 17" iMac (for best performance).
    On balance, I'd likely go for the mini. Performance is not something that is typically as critical a factor as many believe, and as evidenced by the fact that there are countless G4 Macs (and G3s too come to that) still in active service doing complex work (I have several). We tend to think we need the latest/greatest/fastest/best, but in reality we rarely do for the tasks we have in mind. Of course, on the PC side, performance does count for a great deal since Windows grows and slows with every patch, fix and update and software tends to become bloated over time, but MacOS isn't quite so bad in that respect, so for example, even most (almost all) of today's most power-hungry Mac software will run on yesterday's Macs quite happily... as will MacOS itself.
    Oh, and did I mention the countless G5 systems in regular use also..... These incredibly powerful Macs would be expected to do heavy-lifting work since they were so good in their day of course. But even the basic entry-level mini has processing power on a general par with those systems, so the mini can't be so easily dismissed in terms of practical usability and value.
    But then I admit I am biased slightly. In my office there are several systems including dual core Intel and AMD systems running Windows 2000, XP and Vista - but my system of choice is typically my 7-year-old G4 powermac (with a CPU upgrade added a couple of years ago), and which still does stirling service for both routine tasks and video and image editing work, plus web development and publishing duties too.

  • Specs of new Mac Mini worse than the old Mac Mini?

    I just looked at the new Mac Mini, released today I think, but it seems that you can no longer select SSDs, and the highest-spec Mac Mini had TWO SSDs available - not available anymore!
    Also, I waited for this update with the hope that MORE RAM would be available - I really want a 32GB machine to run as a slave, and I need LOTS of RAM for this machine, but there's no option for that without buying the Trash Can Mac Pro, which has all sorts of features that I DON'T need.
    What is the go with Mac Mini specs going BACKWARDS?
    Also, any advice would be great. I'm considering having a PC made for my slave computer, but I'd rather not do that, PCs suck. lol.
    Thanks!

    The new Mac mini does support 'flash' storage aka SSD storage. The difference is that the Apple listed options for the new Mac mini for flash aka. SSD storage now use the PCIe interface and not the old SATA interface. PCIe is much faster than SATA.
    The new Mac mini does support a 'Fusion' drive, this is Apple's 'hybrid' drive approach which combines a traditional hard disk with a 128GB of Flash storage. Since the new Mac mini does support a Fusion drive and a Fusion drive includes a traditional hard disk we can safely deduce that the new Mac mini does have at least one traditional SATA drive bay.
    What is not yet clear is how many PCIe flash storage connectors it has and how many SATA connectors it has. It could be for example that the 1TB flash storage choice is actually made up from 2 x 512GB, however since the new Mac Pro also lists the same PCIe flash storage choices of 256GB, 512GB, and 1TB and the new Mac Pro only has a single PCIe SSD connector it is highly likely the new Mac mini also only has a single PCIe connector.
    While it would be nice if it still had the option of two SATA drives and also a single PCIe flash drive, I think it is more likely that there is only one SATA connector. This makes internal RAID1 less practical, not only would it now be very hard to get two matching capacity 'drives' but even if you did they would be at vastly different speeds. One can still use external RAID storage.

  • écran mac mini 2015

    bonjour a tous,
    je suis sur le point d'acheter une tv panasonic 55ax630e en 4K.
    pour l'instant mon mac mini est relié a un moniteur qui est une autre tv samsung de 40" en 1080p et tout va bien.
    mes questions sont :
    - la sortie du mac mini limite la 4k en 30Hz. ça va être genant sur la Panasonic ? des petits lag etc ?
    - plus important ... y aura des salades si je met les deux écrans en meme temps ? le mac mini est assez puissant sachant que j'ai le modele de base avec l'intel HD5000 ?
    - si vraiment rien ne marche, je changerais de modele pour reprendre une tv en 1080p. dans ce cas la, plus de problemes ?
    je pense mettre la tv 4k sur le HDMI, et le samsung en 40" 1080p avec un adaptateur thunderbolt HDMI. c'est bon ?
    merci pour vos réponses;
    cordialement

    Pardonnez mon français de Google. Si votre anglais ne est pas bon, vous pouvez trouver le forum à http://forum.macbidouille.com/ préférable d'obtenir une réponse compréhensible.
    1. Vous pouvez trouver les spécifications à http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-3.0-late-2 014-specs.html utile pour déterminer si ce est le adaptateur vous donnant des problèmes avec l'écran, ou si ce est vraiment une limitation du matériel de Mac.
    2. Vérifiez avec le fabricant de l'écran se ils ont de l'expérience connexion au Mac Mini et si il ya certains paramètres qui fonctionnent mieux. Parfois, un cadre entre 1080p et 4K existe qui offre un meilleur support de fréquence.
    3. SwitchResX et DisplayConfigX sont des logiciels qui offrent un meilleur réglage fin de la résolution que ce qui est intégré à Mac:
    http://www.madrau.com/
    http://3dexpress.de/
    4. Voir la fois http://www.translate.google.com/ et http://www.systransoft.com/lp/free-online-translation/ pour les traducteurs.
    Bonne chance!
    Pardon my French from Google.
    If your English is not good, you may find the forum at http://forum.macbidouille.com/ better to get an understandable answer.   
    1. You may find the specs at http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-3.0-late-2 014-specs.html useful to determine if it is the adapter giving you trouble with the display, or if it really is a limitation of the Mac's hardware.
    2. Check with the display manufacturer if they have experience connecting to the Mac Mini and if there are certain settings that work better.   Sometimes a setting in between 1080p and 4k exists that offers better frequency support.
    3. SwitchResX and DisplayConfigX are software that offer better fine tuning of resolution than is built-in to the Mac:
    http://www.madrau.com/
    http://3dexpress.de/
    4. See both http://www.translate.google.com/ and http://www.systransoft.com/lp/free-online-translation/ for translators.
    Good luck!

  • Probleme ecran devient rose avec mac mini et tv philips en hdmi!!!!! quelqu'un a une solution?

    Quelqu'un peut m'aider???????????,,,,,,,,

    Pardonnez mon français de Google. Si votre anglais ne est pas bon, vous pouvez trouver le forum à http://forum.macbidouille.com/ préférable d'obtenir une réponse compréhensible.
    1. Vous pouvez trouver les spécifications à http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-3.0-late-2 014-specs.html utile pour déterminer si ce est le adaptateur vous donnant des problèmes avec l'écran, ou si ce est vraiment une limitation du matériel de Mac.
    2. Vérifiez avec le fabricant de l'écran se ils ont de l'expérience connexion au Mac Mini et si il ya certains paramètres qui fonctionnent mieux. Parfois, un cadre entre 1080p et 4K existe qui offre un meilleur support de fréquence.
    3. SwitchResX et DisplayConfigX sont des logiciels qui offrent un meilleur réglage fin de la résolution que ce qui est intégré à Mac:
    http://www.madrau.com/
    http://3dexpress.de/
    4. Voir la fois http://www.translate.google.com/ et http://www.systransoft.com/lp/free-online-translation/ pour les traducteurs.
    Bonne chance!
    Pardon my French from Google.
    If your English is not good, you may find the forum at http://forum.macbidouille.com/ better to get an understandable answer.   
    1. You may find the specs at http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-3.0-late-2 014-specs.html useful to determine if it is the adapter giving you trouble with the display, or if it really is a limitation of the Mac's hardware.
    2. Check with the display manufacturer if they have experience connecting to the Mac Mini and if there are certain settings that work better.   Sometimes a setting in between 1080p and 4k exists that offers better frequency support.
    3. SwitchResX and DisplayConfigX are software that offer better fine tuning of resolution than is built-in to the Mac:
    http://www.madrau.com/
    http://3dexpress.de/
    4. See both http://www.translate.google.com/ and http://www.systransoft.com/lp/free-online-translation/ for translators.
    Good luck!

  • Can I connect multiple displays using a mac mini

    Can I connect 2 displays using the mac mini? If so, are there any accessories that I need? Are there certain monitors or connections that I should use?

    Hello,
    Assuming this is a 2012 Mini...
    2nd Display Support:
    Dual/Mirroring*
    2nd Max. Resolution:
    2560x1600*
    Details:
    *This model simultaneously supports 1920x1200 on an HDMI or a DVI display (using the included HDMI-to-DVI adapter) and 2560x1600 on a Thunderbolt or Mini DisplayPort display or even a VGA display (with an optional Mini DisplayPort-to-VGA adapter, which is compatible with the Thunderbolt port).
    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-2.6-late-2 012-specs.html
    If you need more...
    http://eshop.macsales.com/item/NewerTech/VIDU3HDMIDV/
    http://eshop.macsales.com/item/NewerTech/VIDU2DVIA/

  • Mac Mini 2012 and I want to use a new 27" Lighting Display and my old 27" Cinema Display as a second Monitor

    Evening all,
    I have a Mac Mini that I have been using a 27" Cinema Display on for a couple years - works GREAT, love the Mini and that display. The Cinema Display has Power for a Laptop, USB connector and a Mini Display Port connection on it.
    I am a Guitarist / Songwriter and I use Pro Tools a lot. So I thought I would invest in the new Lightning Display for my Mac Mini. I would get the extra ports for Firewire, and USB, as well as now I could "Daisy Chain" my old Cinema Display off the new Lightning Display.
    WHAT A PAIN IN THE BUTT THIS HAS TURNED INTO !!!!  I have honestly spent more than 6 hours trying to find adapters or ways to make these monitors BOTH work at the same time with the Mac Mini ( you know, a Dual Monitor Setup . . .)
    HELP !!!
    1 - If I could find a HDMI MALE to Mini Display Port FEMALE adapter, I would run it on the HDMI interface - apparently no such adapter exists.
    2 - You apparently can NOT daisy chaine the Cinema Display off the Thunderbolt Port on the new Monitor ( silly that that does not work, but it does not )
    I am really stuck here - how do I get these monitors to work as "Dual Monitors" on the Mac Mini ???
    Thanks !

    The HDMI port won't work for a 27" monitor, it maxes out at 1920*1200...
    Supports dual simultaneous displays -- 1920x1200 on an HDMI display or a DVI display using the included HDMI-to-DVI adapter and 2560x1600 on a Thunderbolt or Mini DisplayPort display or even a VGA display (with adapter). Thunderbolt is backwards-compatible with Mini DisplayPort-equipped displays as well as adapters that are compatible with Mini DisplayPort (DVI, VGA, dual-link DVI and HDMI).
    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-2.3-late-2 012-specs.html

  • How to connect Cinema Display A1081 to Mac Mini 2009

    This may seem an obvious question but the problem is that I am currently abroad, having bought a Mac Mini to replace my very old PowerMac G4, so I cant check if the cable that currently connects the old machine to my Cinema Display will also fit into the new Mac Mini.
    Any help or suggestions are gratefully received.

    Just other users here, no replies from Apple itself.
    Besides the included adapter working, there's a MDP to DVI adapter you can buy...
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MB570Z/B/mini-displayport-to-dvi-adapter
    http://km.support.apple.com/library/APPLE/APPLECARE_ALLGEOS/HT3382/HT3382_4-mdp_ dvi_adapter--001-mul.png
    Video Card:
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    VRAM Type:
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    Details:
    This model has an Intel HD Graphics 4000 graphics processor that shares memory with the system. Also see: What type of video system is provided by the Aluminum Mac mini models? Which are integrated and which are dedicated? Can the video be upgraded?
    Standard VRAM:
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    Details:
    *Apple quietly reports that with 4 GB of RAM installed, this model uses 512 MB of RAM for graphics. With additional RAM installed, more RAM may be reserved for graphics use.
    Display Support:
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    Details:
    *This model simultaneously supports 1920x1200 on an HDMI display or a DVI display using the included HDMI-to-DVI adapter and 2560x1600 on a Thunderbolt or Mini DisplayPort display or even a VGA display (with an optional Mini DisplayPort-to-VGA adapter, which is compatible with the Thunderbolt port).
    2nd Display Support:
    Dual/Mirroring*
    2nd Max. Resolution:
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    Details:
    *This model simultaneously supports 1920x1200 on an HDMI or a DVI display (using the included HDMI-to-DVI adapter) and 2560x1600 on a Thunderbolt or Mini DisplayPort display or even a VGA display (with an optional Mini DisplayPort-to-VGA adapter, which is compatible with the Thunderbolt port).
    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i5-2.5-late-2 012-specs.html

  • New Mac Mini thunderbolt to DVI adapter issues

    Hi there,
    I'm working on a new studio installation. We have a new Mac Mini that we're trying to connect up to a 30-inch Cinema HD display with DVI input. We have a Kanex C30 Mini DisplayPort to Dual-Link DVI adapter that plugs into the Thunderbolt port and one of the USB ports (for power) on the back of the Mini, but despite our best efforts we aren't getting anything on the display. Going Mac - adapter - display results in about 7/8ths of the screen going white and displaying two green and misshapen Apple logos for about 5 seconds before it goes blank.
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    Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. This whole process has been a very long headache!
    Many thanks,
    Josh

    Hi Josh,
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    Video Card:
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    VRAM Type:
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    Details:
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    Standard VRAM:
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    Display Support:
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    Resolution Support:
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    2nd Display Support:
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    Details:
    *This model simultaneously supports 1920x1200 on an HDMI or a DVI display (using the included HDMI-to-DVI adapter) and 2560x1600 on a Thunderbolt or Mini DisplayPort display or even a VGA display (with an optional Mini DisplayPort-to-VGA adapter, which is compatible with the Thunderbolt port).
    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-2.6-late-2 012-specs.html

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    Hi there
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    Thank you for reading and helping out !
    All of a sudden, my left click on microsoft optical mouse stopped working. Then it worked for sometime then permanently stopped working after an hour. (its been 24 hours now). It was working fine before.
    Here is what I have tried so far.
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    unplugged keyboard  and still left click on mouse not working.
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    Java for OS X 2012-006: How to re-enable the Apple-provided Java SE 6 applet plug-in and Web Start functionality

  • How many large screens can I run on a Mac Mini?

    We have several Mac Mini's around the network running large HD "TVs" without issue. However, I have a new install that requires two of the 40" screens running in a mirrored view. The Mini will be running Windows 7 32-bit (Sorry). Will the current generation of Mini handle two of these?  What dongles would I need?
    Thanx...Jon

    Hello Jon, if you're talking the latest Mini...
    Video Card:
    HD Graphics 4000
    VRAM Type:
    Integrated
    Details:
    This model has an Intel HD Graphics 4000 graphics processor that shares memory with the system. Also see: What type of video system is provided by the Aluminum Mac mini models? Which are integrated and which are dedicated? Can the video be upgraded?
    Standard VRAM:
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    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-2.6-late-2 012-specs.html

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