21st Get This Straight
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A L S O__T O D A Y


21st Log
Bill Gates vs. the MechWarrior clans



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T A B L E__T A L K

What sucks about cyberspace? Counter the abundance of Internet hype with some whining and complaining in the Digital Culture area of Table Talk



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Get the scoop on hot start-ups at barnesandnoble.com
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R E C E N T L Y

On to Mars!
By Rebecca Bryant
A grass-roots movement burns to put human beings on the Red Planet -- soon
(01/07/98)

Five fruity flavors
By Janelle Brown
Happy days are here again, at Macworld
(01/06/98)

The ecology of Java
By Peter Wayner
It's not just Sun vs. Microsoft anymore -- as the success of little Transvirtual shows
(01/05/98)

Ten predictions for 1999
By Janelle Brown, Andrew Leonard and Scott Rosenberg
Jenni in space! Palmagotchi! and other headlines for the new year
(01/04/98)

Microsoft über alles
By Janelle Brown, Andrew Leonard and Scott Rosenberg
Have Gates & Co. peaked? 21st reviews tech highs and lows of '98
(12/24/98)

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BROWSE THE
21ST LET'S GET THIS STRAIGHT ARCHIVES

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Judging computers by their covers
So iMacs have fun new colors. What's so revolutionary about tinted plastic?
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BY SCOTT ROSENBERG | At this week's Macworld conference, Apple unveiled a host of new products and technologies. But the announcement that bedazzled the media was the simplest and lowest-tech: the popular iMac will, like Lifesavers, now come in five different colors.

Under the leadership of "interim CEO" (or, as he now jokingly calls himself, "iCEO") Steve Jobs, the newly revitalized Apple is smart enough, and self-confident enough, to poke ironic fun at the superficiality of its latest innovation. "Collect them all," quipped the company's marketing materials. "What's your favorite flavor?" "iCandy." "Yum."

On the Macworld floor, Apple had assembled phalanxes of the new rainbow iMacs along white platforms lined with fluorescent back-lighting that lent the translucent boxes a cool glow. Next to the computers stood plastic cups filled with jellybeans -- as if to break up the pristine atmosphere of the display with a wisecrack.

If Apple is keeping a tongue-in-cheek perspective on its new strategy, the press is going gaga. "PC style now as important as megahertz after iMacs," a Reuters story announced, and quoted Jobs: "Color is for most consumers more important than all the mumbo jumbo over megahertz and megabytes." Wired News was even giddier: "IMacs Spell Death to Beige Boxes," its headline declared. The story quoted industrial designers soberly intoning that Apple's styling was "a radical shift" and "a major step" that "breaks paradigms."

The iMac colors are fun, though they will no doubt provide enormous headaches to retailers and distributors trying to second-guess the demand for different hues ("Hey, Joe, I've got a warehouse full of strawberry and tangerine but everybody's ordering blueberry and grape! What's in stock at Paramus?"). But let's keep a little perspective here. By repackaging the iMac in multiple colors, Apple has pulled off a smart marketing trick, not changed the computing universe. Yet Jobs' notorious "reality distortion field" has apparently persuaded virtually the entire media that you can and should judge a computer by its cover.

More significant, certainly, is the new line of PowerMac G3s that Apple announced. They, too, have bright, bold new packages -- unorthodox, iMac-inspired casings with elaborately flared plastic handles on all four corners. More importantly, they've got a very intelligently designed side door that provides the easiest access to a computer motherboard that I've ever seen. Forget about "breaking paradigms"; at least you won't have to break your fingers to install a memory upgrade.

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N E X T__P A G E .|. Where's the revolutionary consumer Internet device Apple fans dream of?



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