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Not only has “Macnews.de”:http://www.macnews.de/ already received a Mac Mini, they’ve already ripped it to pieces and “posted”:http://www.macnews.de/gallery/displayimage.php?album=16&pos=18 the gory pictures on the internet for all to see.
Of note, the hard drive inside is in fact a small laptop hard drive, not a full sized one like in most desktop computers, so figure that difference into your upgrade pricing… They are quite a bit more expensive than the full size ones.
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8 Responses for "First Mac Mini Dissection"
January 13th, 2005 at 2:37 pm
1look at the power connector – it’s got more contacts than it needs. something is going to plug in there between the power cord and the mac mini… something like the DVR/Elgato/Asteriod device mentioned on studio2f:
http://www.studio2f.com/misc/2005/01/12mac_mini_less_is_more.php
(fingers crossed!)
January 13th, 2005 at 2:53 pm
2I wonder if the harddrive also runs at the slow laptop speeds…if so this gets less enticing.
January 13th, 2005 at 3:02 pm
3I wonder if it’s possible for people to retrofit this logic board into a fruity iBook to give it new life…
January 13th, 2005 at 3:06 pm
4I would guess it does run at the slower speeds. 5400 at the fastest. I just think of it as a cheap, small powerbook. Which is pretty fast for me.
January 13th, 2005 at 3:16 pm
5I wouldn’t completely rule out 7200, which I got for about $120 for 60gig last year(hitachi). So I’m guessing price for 40gig a year later is fairly affordable even for a value system. And if it is 7200, it’s the same speed as the ones in other value systems.
January 13th, 2005 at 3:40 pm
6hmm.. they didn’t show how hard it was to open it up.
If it’s not terribly difficult (hacksaw!) you can at least upgrade the RAM instead of paying out many orifices for apple’s ridiculously overpriced memory… if there’s enough room, you might be able to pop in a full-size hard drive, if not a 7200 (which would run hotter and take more juice)
January 13th, 2005 at 7:52 pm
7You might not of heard but there are two connectors called USB and Firewire. You plug in a connector and instantly, you have 50 to 400 GB without having to rip open the machine. And you can keep adding hard drives. We have an eMac here with slower specs and it powers 6 HDD’s just fine. And the speed is great.
January 13th, 2005 at 10:45 pm
8From what I’ve been reading its not terribly difficult to do and the RAM slot is extremely easy to access though the hard drive poses more a problem as does the connection on the motherboard for the airport extreme/bluetooth adapter.
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