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Be careful what you wish for. It would make for a quieter experience at the lower end of the market, but you lose the RAM access door.
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A different colour anodised version might be interesting (Product RED anyone?) or Gold for the far east markets might play out there.
The big thing would be FaceID in a Mac. If not this year it has to be coming soon. It's also a reason for assuming that Apple could rethink the Mac Mini as a keyboard computer with TouchID on it - but that's fairly far fetched, especially with Apple's recent record with keyboards![]()
We don’t have any evidence to indicate that the cooling system for the iMac Pro necessitates losing the RAM access door. I believe that losing the RAM access door is a business decision and has nothing to do with the cooling system.
I don’t believe Apple would go to the trouble of tooling-up their manufacturing line to produce a gold iMac just for one market. And again the taste piece comes into play - I think Apple would dismiss the idea as garish.
Face ID presumably wouldn’t necessitate a chassis redesign.
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My prediction is none of the non-Pro iMacs will get Vega this time around, so that’s a pretty big differentiator already, i7 or not.
BTW, if they got rid of 8700K due to TDP concerns, they’d probably have to get rid of 8600K as well.
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It’s a completely different machine internally. I suspect Apple won’t bother changing the i7 internals. And if they did, we could lose memory upgradability.
Again, we don’t have any evidence to indicate that the cooling system for the iMac Pro necessitates losing the RAM access door. I believe that losing the RAM access door is a business decision and has nothing to do with the cooling system.
But I agree that Apple won’t change the cooling system for the non-Pro iMac unless they have to - the question is whether the thermal characteristics of newer CPUs will necessitate that or not. My point was that it doesn’t make sense to say that Apple has to redesign the iMac because of newer CPUs, when it’s already clear that Apple can accommodate hotter components in the current chassis if it needs to - as evidenced by the iMac Pro.