Which iMac do you want to know about? You can easily do the RAM an all models. In the Revision A/B iMac G5's the optical and hard drives were easy as well. The later iSight G5 (Revision C) and Intels are a nightmare on the inside for the average user. If you want a machine that's easy to upgrade go with the Power Mac. You can't upgrade the video on an iMac.nostrum said:Has anyone upgraded the components on their iMac, like the Hardrive, graphics card? Is it easy to do?
In terms of ease of upgradeability is a Powermac a better bet?
MacRumorUser said:But on the same token the prospect of upgrading to a memron...
Trying to keep a machine up to date, with the exception of RAM, is a fools game. Either the parts aren't replaceable (CPU, graphics card) or they are more expensive than the marginal improvement is worth.nostrum said:Thanks, thats what I needed to know. I was thinking about the latest versions.
If I buy a machine I want to know that I can keep it as up to date as I can, as easily as I can. The Power Mac looked like it was the easiest to upgrade.
CanadaRAM said:Trying to keep a machine up to date, with the exception of RAM, is a fools game. Either the parts aren't replaceable (CPU, graphics card) or they are more expensive than the marginal improvement is worth.
Instead, count on adding disk storage with external Firewire or networked drives *better from a backup point of view anyway* and plan on replacing the entire machine when you outgrow it *because by then you will want to use software that requires new CPUs, new OS and or new graphics cards anyway*