The introduction of the G5 Power Mac in June 2003 promised a bright 3 GHz future, and failure to achieve that paved the way to today’s Intel Macs. Snow Leopard and the Death of PowerPC Support, Carl Nygren, Classic Macs in the Intel Age, 2008.06.23. It looks like Mac OS X 10.6 will only support Intel Macs – and possibly only 64-bit ones at. Aside from the Power Mac G5, running 10.4.11, and the Mac Pro on 10.5.6, we have a 1.25GHz G4 iMac running 10.2.8, a 1.8GHz iMac G5 running 10.3.9, and a 2.4GHz Aluminum iMac running 10.5.6. Will having different versions of OS X on each computer be a problem? Will having some Intel and some PowerPC macs be a problem? The Power Mac G4 Cube is a small form factor Macintosh personal computer from Apple Computer, Inc., sold between 2000 and 2001.Designed by Jonathan Ive, the Cube was Apple's attempt to miniaturize a powerful desktop computer into a cube less than 8 inches (20 cm) to a side.Apple's designers pioneered new technologies and production to create the product citation needed, which Apple aimed at. The Apple Power Macintosh G5/2.0 DP (PCI-X), along with the Power Macintosh G5/1.6 and Power Macintosh G5 1.8, is a member of the first Mac series to use the 64-bit PowerPC 970 (G5) processor, and consequently are arguably the first 'desktop' computers to use 64-bit chips. In addition to higher clock speeds, the PowerPC 970 (G5) has a 'new.
New Power Mac Features Dual 2.7 GHz Processors & Mac OS X “Tiger”
Mac Os X Power Mac G5 Specs
The new dual processor Power Mac G5 models will be available this week through the Apple Store® (www.apple.com), at Apple’s retail stores and Apple Authorized Resellers. The new dual Power Mac G5 models complement the existing 1.8 GHz single processor Power Mac G5, providing customers with an affordable entry-level system priced at just $1,499 (US).
- Dual 2.0 GHz 64-bit PowerPC G5;
- 512MB 400 MHz DDR SDRAM (4GB maximum);
- 160GB Serial ATA 7200 rpm hard drive;
- AGP 8X Pro graphics slot;
- ATI Radeon 9600 with 128MB DDR SDRAM;
- 3 PCI slots (64-bit 33MHz); and
- 16X SuperDrive (DVD+R DL/DVD±R/CD-RW).
- Dual 2.3 GHz 64-bit PowerPC G5;
- 512MB 400 MHz DDR SDRAM (8GB maximum);
- 250GB Serial ATA 7200 rpm hard drive;
- AGP 8X Pro graphics slot;
- ATI Radeon 9600 with 128MB DDR SDRAM;
- 3 PCI-X slots (one 64-bit 133 MHz, two 64-bit 100 MHz); and
- 16X SuperDrive (DVD+R DL/DVD±R/CD-RW).
- Dual 2.7 GHz 64-bit PowerPC G5;
- 512MB 400 MHz DDR SDRAM (8GB maximum);
- 250GB Serial ATA 7200 rpm hard drive;
- AGP 8X Pro graphics slot;
- ATI Radeon 9650 with 256MB DDR SDRAM and support for one 30-inch Apple Cinema HD Display;
- 3 PCI-X slots (one 64-bit 133 MHz, two 64-bit 100 MHz); and
- 16X SuperDrive (DVD+R DL/DVD±R/CD-RW).
Mac Os X Power Mac G5 Pro
Nathalie Welch
Apple
(408) 974-5430
welch@apple.com
Apple, the Apple logo, Mac, Mac OS, Macintosh, Power Mac, SuperDrive, FireWire, Spotlight, Apple Store and AirPort are trademarks of Apple. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners.
Power Mac G5 Mac Os X 10.6
I am looking for advice about how to upgrade this wonderful machine and the OS. Really love it - have it since forever - 2006, I think - and hope I can still upgrade the OS to the Snow Leopard ...eventually (?).
Do I need to buy CD box set from Apple? (My support with Apple ended longest time ago.)
Do I need to change something in the computer /hardware?
Like is it a big problem that it does not have an Intel processor (sorry if this is a silly question and if I actually have such)?
Thank you!
The 'About this Mac' details:
Mac OS X
version: 10.4.11
processor: Dual 2 GHz Power PC G5
memory: 1.5 GB DDR SDRAM
machine name: Power Mac g5
machine model: Power Mac 7,3
CPU type: Power PC G5 (2.2)
number of CPUs: 2
CPU speed: 2 GHz
L2 Cache (per CPU): 512 KB
memory: 1.5 BG
bus speed: 1 GHz
boot ROM version: 5.1.8f7