Expectations were high...
I can understand the disappointment. After reading through threads here last night about the new release - I was anxious to see what would really be released. I guess I was expecting for there to be some sort of surprise vs what everyone else was speculating. When I first saw what the update was - I was pretty disappointed. I don't think the disappointed was entirely due to this update - but maybe towards Apple (formerly Apple COMPUTER) as a whole.
Personally, I haven't owned a Mac for a few years now. Way back I had an old Mac SE/30 and of more recent times a couple Power Macs. I sold the last one, a G5, with the intention of replacing it with an intel Mac desktop at some point.
I think I have been waiting all of this time for that tower desktop that Apple refuses to make. I am a software developer by trade, and with the exception of light development work in Java on Solaris, most of my work is done in C# on Windows. So the purchase of a Mac is somewhat frivolous - and has been put on the back burner until Apple released something that I was looking for.
I have to admit that after over 20 years in the IT industry (80% of which has been on Windows), I am starting to get bored and looking for something new. I started out working on Mainframes and AS/400s, went to Solaris/Unix briefly, but have been stuck in the Windows world for quite a while. I'm interested in Mac, not for the style or because of it being the 'in' thing - but purely from a technical perspective - OS X is the UNIX that no one has ever been able to do before. I'm ready to make the switch to OS X professionally, but I just don't think Apple wants people like me interested in it.
In the professional realm, I can't imagine OS X gaining any ground with only having 1 choice of server. I am frustrated that OS X is not being aggressively pushed in the Unix/Linux server market. For a long time, I hoped that Apple would partner with a server hardware company that has a good reputation in the market, and good customer base (like Sun for instance) and let them build and sell the licensed server hardware. With ZFS and some other cooperation between Sun and Apple, I would think this would work out well... But instead I feel that professionally I need to disregard OS X and concentrate on 'Enterprise' systems like Solaris, which really disappoints me because I think that OS X is among the best Unix out there. The only thing that would have been better is if OS X was built on top of something like Solaris instead of BSD, then in my mind it would be unbeatable, unstoppable and Microsoft would not even have a chance... In the server market, an OS needs to be able to be run on many different levels of hardware - and trying to dictate the hardware choices (um, I mean hardware choice - as in one), is a surefire way of guaranteeing a superior OS never sees the light of day.
So Apple has frustrated me professionally for some time. But for recreation, I was still waiting for the right desktop, which I also found frustrating. I would go Mac Pro - but just cannot justify spending well over $2K on a workstation when I can get really nice server hardware for the same price (which I do actually need). Realizing that an upgradeable sub $1K apple mini tower was just not going to happen, I turned my attention to the Mac Mini (the iMacs are nice, but I have an aversion to all in one's - I usually keep my monitors far longer than my computers).
So I have been looking forward to seeing the long overdue upgrade to the mini. Secretly I was hoping that we were going to see a quad core mini tower replace the mini. So when I first looked at the updated specs, my jaw dropped. The same Core 2 Duo 2 GHZ processor that has been in these things for so long, really got me irritated. I was hoping for the option of more cores and the ability to utilize 8 GB. That would have made me feel that my waiting was worth it... Instead I felt like Apple was trying to do the unthinkable in the computer industry, repackage the same (years) old tech and try to force it on people at unreasonable prices.
But now I have had time to cool down and reassess what I was originally looking for when I first started looking that the mini.
This update release is not really that bad. And it might just be enough to get me to finally switch back to a Mac. The graphics upgrade, is significant in my mind. The addition of Firewire 800 is a really big deal. I was under the assumption Apple was going to drop Firewire on the Mini, and to see that they put FW 800 on it is great. Now we can hook up an external FW array and get some decent speed (not eSATA speed, but much better than USB 2). The memory limit of 4 GB has me a little concerned, but I am really hoping to read in the next couple of days that the real limit is actually higher.
So, in the morning I was upset about the Mini update, but now after looking at the changes - I might be closer to purchasing one than I have ever been before.
Now if only Apple would let me give them $450 for a licensed copy of OS X that I could run on the hardware of my choice (no support required), then I would feel I had arrived...