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MacCulture New forum topics |
Submitted by Alexandros Roussos on Thu, 2005-03-10 15:59.
AppleInsider reports that Apple is planning to increase the minimum amount of memory that comes in standard with every Mac, in an effort by the company to improve the Macintosh user's experience. Along with the release of Tiger, every Mac will be shipping with a minimum of 512MB of memory according the the site. Apple currently ships its entry-level Macs with only 256MB of memory which is not enough to even use Apple's software like Final Cut Express and is making software like GarageBand run slow. Apple has already made 512MB of memory standard for its latest Powerbooks early this year and it would be quite good news if increased the memory of its entry-level Macs such as the Mac mini or the iBook. It is not clear yet if Apple plans to also increase high-end Mac's standard memory to 1GB though. Bookmark/Search this post with:
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