> Also lets face it, Apple is losing ground in the artistic and creative industries.
This is sort of "in the eye of the behoulder" thing. Even though Adobe and Apple haven't been getting along after the Final Cut Pro vs. Premiere incident, it would be a cold day in you-know-where before Photoshop or Illustrator ever left the Mac. Moreover, Apple now owns a lot of the big names in high-end rendering and media, including Shake (which was used in the Lord of the Rings movies) and Logic, and these are so entrenched that they're basically money machines without Apple even having to touch them. Naturally, the Mac versions are being pushed, and used. What's more, Avid, the market leader in non-linear editing technology, is now releasing Mac versions of their software and hardware, including the very attractively priced Avid Express.
PCs do have the same problem w/r/t upgradability, you realise -- you're having to get a new motherboard every so often, too, which is pretty much what you're doing when you buy a new Mac (except you get the new CPU, new hardware, and so on). This (2003 model) Mac has a Pioneer DVD-R/CD-RW burner, a Radeon AGP4x, PC2700 DDR SDRAM, an off-the-shelf SCSI card, ATA/100 drives ... pretty much everything's the same as a desktop PC, except the CPU, the design and the support chipset.
The G5 is not a frozen chip, too. First of all, its FSB is faster than the Pentium 4's current offering (1GHz versus 800MHz), and estimates on the next generation of the G5 place it at the 2.5 to 3.0GHz mark *in a smaller 90 nanometer process die* for a chip that clock-for-clock is already doing more with a clock tick than the CISC P4 (remember that AMD suffers the same PR problem; they tend to have chips with lower clockspeeds that still bench out faster than P4s that have higher clocks, but people only pay attention to the *-hertz rating). Moreover, the soon-to-be-released 2.5GHz 970FX G5's power dissipation is a miniscule 25W (Prescott winds up at a boiling 90W), meaning the clock can ramp up higher and higher before power and heat become a concern, *and* since IBM's silicon-on-insulator technology has less of a penalty in power use for increasing clock, the potential yields in speed would get proportionately higher.
In any case, consider these benchmarks:
http://www.titleofsite.com/archives/000042.html
Regardless, back to OS X. The point is, OS X *can't* gain enough ground against Windows to make it profitable to junk selling Macs (which is what a PC OS X would do -- cause it to be impossible for Apple to sell Macintoshes). Look at what happened to Be and NeXT's market presence, both of whom tried to do the same kind of jump. Leaping to Intel didn't help them at all.
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