OK, all the non-techies can skip this post . . . Kaylee asked, so I am giving my thoughts on MacWorld and Steve Job's Keynote.
Steve went over four items
#1 Was Leopard (new operating system). The most interesting thing here is an enhancement to Time Machine (backup program) that is a new piece of hardware. For $299 you can buy a combination Airport Extreme router / 500gb Hard drive called Time Capsule, that will automatically do backups of all the Macs in your house wired and through Airport (Wi-Fi).
#2 was iPhone. Since no one here seems to have or talk about iPhones (including me) I'll make it brief. Some new apps, (maps with directions as an example) rolled out for free to current owners, and the same apps now available on the iPod touch for a $20 upgrade charge. Mail is one of them, so now you can get your email on an iPod touch with a Wi-Fi connection. But, no 3g phone, no larger capacity. I am still holding out for an updated touch with more memory - maybe even a built in camera like the iPhone.
#3 was Movie rentals through the iTunes store. You will now be able to buy or rent movies through iTunes - both Mac and PC. All major studios are covered, and thousands of titles will soon be available - 30 days after DVD release. Cost for standard def movies is $3.99, streamed instantly to your computer. $1.00 more for HD. Library titles (old) for $2.99. Once you rent, you have 30 days to start watching, and once you start, you have 24 hours to watch as many times as you want. This part is pretty standard with other digital rentals. The part that is cool is you can watch on your PC, your iPod, your iPhone OR, your Apple TV. You can even start watching on your computer and finish on your iPod. Apple TV is a set top box companion to iTunes. New software was rolled out for Apple TV to permit direct purchase without a computer through the iTunes store, and direct download of free content too like Podcasts. This has me excited as I was an early Apple TV adopter - for now it has just been a great way to play my music collection, or view my photos on a widescreen HD TV. This new software will make it way cooler.
Something very interesting was glossed over. The head of Fox Studios showed a DVD of the new Family Guy Star Wars Spoof that now ALLOWS you to COPY the DVD to your computer (read Rip) so that you can play it on your iPod! About time someone woke up to this!
#4 the big announcement was the MacBook Air. The MacBook Air is the thinest computer on the Planet. It is so thin it fits inside an office envelope. All aluminum, razor thin at the edge (one guy said you could shave with it), full 13" LED display, full-size backlit keyboard, 5 hour battery life, 80gb HD (for $1,000 more you can get a 64gb SSD drive - flash memory), 2gb Memory, multi-touch trackpad, and Intel Core2 Duo at 1.6ghz. Weighs in at 3 pounds and at it's thinest point is .16 of an inch. Super cool - too cool for school. $1,799. No optical drive, but you can buy an external for $99, OR you can "borrow" the optical drive of another Mac or PC through the "air" with software loaded through Wi-Fi.
This was not really the computer most expected - most expected a smaller sub-notebook like the 12" Powerbook. Apple fooled us. Instead of shrinking the package width wise, they shrunk the thickness. My opinion however is that this appeals to only those who want the coolest greatest looking hardware no matter the price, or someone who has to travel very light. I would love one of these, but would never buy it. It is not meant to be a "main" computer, but more of a travel accessory device. The battery is not replaceable by the consumer and neither is the hard drive or ram, and there are limited ports.
Personally, If I were spending that much, I would buy a much more capable MacBook Pro for $200 more, or spend $300 less for a top of the line and again much more capable MacBook.
Good news for everyone who bought MacBooks or iMacs for Christmas. Your hardware isn't obsolete - YET!
That's my summary Kaylee.
Hope I didn't bore anyone. Some guys like Go-Carts, I love gadgets and computers - especially Macs.