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zoran

macrumors 601
Original poster
Jun 30, 2005
4,791
132
Not likely, simply because enclosures in brushed aluminum, we have only seen on Pro series Macs. Other than MacBookPros and MacPros, everything else is in plastic, and its either white or black. Therefore, if u realize that the iMac does not belong in the pro series, then brushed aluminum seems strange for it! Not to say that my taste prefers white for the iMac! Black for my taste is awe full and degrades the great machine that the iMac is!
 

Vidd

macrumors 65816
Mar 7, 2006
1,001
108
Wow, you're right. Especially with the cool aluminum Mac Mini with its top of the range GMA!
Pro, indeed.
 

Cormier6083

macrumors regular
Sep 6, 2006
187
0
Louisiana
iMac will be Aluminum while the Mac Mini's and the MacBooks will stay plastic. iMac will move a step ahead and be the "middle man".
 

siurpeeman

macrumors 603
Dec 2, 2006
6,321
24
the OC
in addition to the mac mini mentioned, the apple tv has the aluminum color. so what if the imacs and the pro mac line have similar enclosure materials. it wouldn't be the first time. the blue and white g3 towers mimicked the look of the original imac. aluminum ftw!
 

zoran

macrumors 601
Original poster
Jun 30, 2005
4,791
132
in addition to the mac mini mentioned, the apple tv has the aluminum color. so what if the imacs and the pro mac line have similar enclosure materials. it wouldn't be the first time. the blue and white g3 towers mimicked the look of the original imac. aluminum ftw!
still apple tv isnt a computer!
as for the G3 macs, then apple, was at its start of making pro or not user oriented macs, so u cant count what happened then. now all pro macs are alluminium period and i think apple will go along with this unless theres a new redesign of the Pro "species"!
anyhow i think iMac in aluminium will be ugly, i hope it keeps the white "pure/innocent" style! :D
 

zoran

macrumors 601
Original poster
Jun 30, 2005
4,791
132
Sorry, I disagree, along with the fact that I don't take anyone seriously who uses "u" for "you".
I can accept the disagree part, as for the what u take for serious part i couldnt care less. This isnt grammar school or whatever, so id advise you to stick with the substantials, they are more important in our little threads in here!
 

JPT

macrumors regular
May 4, 2006
247
0
I can accept the disagree part, as for the what u take for serious part i couldnt care less. This isnt grammar school or whatever, so id advise you to stick with the substantials, they are more important in our little threads in here!

Grammar School? Didn't know grammar included spelling... huh... :p

Anyway, my take on the new iMacs is. I will believe it when I see it. There have been way to many rumors about it.

NEW IMACS WEEK BEFORE WWDC!!!! Then only MacBook Pros...
NEW IMACS AT WWDC!!!!! No hardware was announced/released at WWDC.
NEW IMACS AT END OF JUNE! Only iPhone came out.
NEW IMACS IN AUGUST!!!!

An update is indeed imminent but there have been too many rumors around hyping a non-existent update to believe any more. Rumors aren't going to make them come faster. Apple might just be waiting for something. Perhaps even a brand new processor that no one else has? (Like they did with the 8-Core Mac Pro)
 

zoran

macrumors 601
Original poster
Jun 30, 2005
4,791
132
Grammar School? Didn't know grammar included spelling... huh... :p

Anyway, my take on the new iMacs is. I will believe it when I see it. There have been way to many rumors about it.

NEW IMACS WEEK BEFORE WWDC!!!! Then only MacBook Pros...
NEW IMACS AT WWDC!!!!! No hardware was announced/released at WWDC.
NEW IMACS AT END OF JUNE! Only iPhone came out.
NEW IMACS IN AUGUST!!!!

An update is indeed imminent but there have been too many rumors around hyping a non-existent update to believe any more. Rumors aren't going to make them come faster. Apple might just be waiting for something. Perhaps even a brand new processor that no one else has? (Like they did with the 8-Core Mac Pro)
I said grammar school or whatever actually :D and to be frank i dont excpect anything now, specially because there are no new processors to fit in, or are there, any?
 

e.magnusson

macrumors member
Apr 15, 2007
72
0
Lethbridge, Alberta
If we're going for grammar and spelling perfection, it should be noted that periods go inside quotation marks.

i.e. "you."


Only if someone is writing a sentence and someone is speaking it.
For instance: "Take out the trash." Period in quotations, however, since the person wasn't quoting an entire sentence the period goes outside the quotation marks.
 

buffalo

macrumors 65816
Jun 5, 2005
1,085
2
Tacoma, WA
Only if someone is writing a sentence and someone is speaking it.
For instance: "Take out the trash." Period in quotations, however, since the person wasn't quoting an entire sentence the period goes outside the quotation marks.

Well I learned something new today. Sorry for wrongly correcting you MovieCutter!!!
 

JPT

macrumors regular
May 4, 2006
247
0
I said grammar school or whatever actually :D and to be frank i dont excpect anything now, specially because there are no new processors to fit in, or are there, any?

Santa Rosa? :p Even though it's not THAT much of an upgrade...

What they REALLY need to do is up the RAM to 2GB for the 20"/24" :)
 

CaptainCanuck

macrumors member
Aug 15, 2005
70
2
Only if someone is writing a sentence and someone is speaking it.
For instance: "Take out the trash." Period in quotations, however, since the person wasn't quoting an entire sentence the period goes outside the quotation marks.

Depends on where you are from. American style dictates that periods and other punctuation goes inside the quotation marks at the end of the sentence, regardless of the situation. The only exception is when you're dealing with single letters or numbers such as "A" or "10".

However, the Queen's english depends on the situation, with punctuation usually inside quotation marks for direct quotes and outside for most other cases.

Basically, unless its a direct quote or a single letter/number, it's up to the writer to decide where to put the punctuation unless you want to follow the strictly American Style.

Sorry, didn't mean to hijack the thread. I guess that's why I'm a writer.:rolleyes:
 

JPT

macrumors regular
May 4, 2006
247
0
Depends on where you are from. American style dictates that periods and other punctuation goes inside the quotation marks at the end of the sentence, regardless of the situation. The only exception is when you're dealing with single letters or numbers such as "A" or "10".

However, the Queen's english depends on the situation, with punctuation usually inside quotation marks for direct quotes and outside for most other cases.

Basically, unless its a direct quote or a single letter/number, it's up to the writer to decide where to put the punctuation unless you want to follow the strictly American Style.

Sorry, didn't mean to hijack the thread. I guess that's why I'm a writer.:rolleyes:


I think it makes more sense to do it this way:

Quote: Apple makes the bestest computers ever.

Sentence with the quote: Shouldn't it be "Apple makes the best computers ever."?

I say if you are quoting something with a period put the period inside the quotation marks and if your sentence is finished after that quote put another period there signaling that the sentence is finished. Also if there is no period in what you are quoting then why put a period inside the quote? There is no period to quote!

It just gives it more structure and less chance of misinterpretation.

I don't even really know if I just made sense... Too tired... lol
 

JPT

macrumors regular
May 4, 2006
247
0
Please help me I think I'm being educated. :rolleyes: And all I was trying see was something about brushed or simulated aluminum iMacs.

Shouldn't it be "Please help me. I think.."? LOL jkjkjkjk :p

Yeah this has gotten a bit off topic... haha
 

zoran

macrumors 601
Original poster
Jun 30, 2005
4,791
132
Stop the nonsense we are way of topic and they are going to close down this thread! :mad:
 

imac/cheese

macrumors 6502a
Jun 7, 2007
555
2
It the days of the printing press the period and comma were fairly fragile characters that would often break off during the printing process. When using quotations, printers would insert the smaller character inside the quotation marks to protect them. This typesetting practice created the American English standard for including the punctuation inside the quotes. The British base their usage on grammatical rules rather than typesetting pactices.
 

Shaduu

macrumors 6502a
Jan 31, 2007
750
0
Southsea
still apple tv isnt a computer!

Just thought I'd be really picky and point out AppleTV actually is a computer. Albeit a very small and crippled computer.

The 160GB version is a better spec than my PowerBook when I bought it. :eek:
 

zoran

macrumors 601
Original poster
Jun 30, 2005
4,791
132
Just thought I'd be really picky and point out AppleTV actually is a computer. Albeit a very small and crippled computer.

The 160GB version is a better spec than my PowerBook when I bought it. :eek:
only speqwise, yes, u can say it is a computer, still, lets not stray of thread here, our subject is that the brushed aluminium iMac is not likely to come...ever!
 
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