Darius Chang | May 07, 2009

Would you buy an Apple Netbook? To some, this may seem like an extremely stupid question. After all, the company is one which can sell anything, from phones which cannot MMS or even copy-and-paste to MP3 players that can transfer songs only from one computer. Though there have been speculation that the Cupertino company is in the midst .of producing a minilaptop, we feel that a Mac OS X-based Netbook will probably never happen.
One of the key selling points of a Mac lies in its usability, and a Netbook will not be unable to deliver the full Mac experience with its small screen and slow single-core processor. Moreover, an Apple minilaptop will be unlikely to compete in price cuts and may cost as much as another premium Atom machine, the
Sony Vaio P.
Does this mean a no go for a subportable Apple PC? One possibility is that instead of Mac OS X, the company may create a Netbook based on the iPhone interface. This makes a lot of sense as not only will a mobile platform require less processing power and battery drawn than the full PC operating system, it will also provide access to the App Store and possess instant-on features. Such a machine will likely come with 3G access for mobile broadband, since the code is already available in the iPhone 3G.
With Android-based Netbooks soon to hit store shelves, an iPhone OS-based minilaptop doesn't seem all that far off.
Perhaps things might change when the Intel GN45 and dual-core Atom processors hit the scene. For now, this is what we expect to happen should Apple announce a minilaptop in June at the World Wide Developers Conference.
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shadowgb
actually my video teacher at my college has already does this. bought a netbook and put the apple OS on there. even ran final cut pro. works pretty well really. I don't know why anyone would think this wouldn't work. no one has an imagination.
May 08, 2009 07:59