Sound Impressions

The Mac mini is basically the quietest desktop computer that you can get with a fan.  Unless you put your ear next to the unit, you cannot hear it.  There have been reports that the 1.42GHz models are louder, but we haven't been able to confirm first hand.  From our experience, the 1.25GHz Mac mini is as close to silent as you can get with a hard drive and a fan.  We'd love to post audio clips or SPL readings, but we don't have equipment that can register something that quiet. 

The slot-loading Combo Drive (DVD-ROM/CD-RW) is definitely noisy though, especially when inserting a disc.  Operational noise of the drive is the loudest consistent noise that the mini will emit, but even taking it into consideration, we were quite happy with the mini from a sound perspective.  The $499 mini is quiet enough to be in the living room or bedroom, something that we haven't been able to say about too many manufacturer-built computers. 


A Couple of Surprises: 5400RPM and DDR400

Although it uses desktop memory, the Mac mini uses a 2.5" notebook hard drive.  The base $499 version comes with a 40GB drive and the $599 version comes with a 80GB drive.  What is surprising, however, is that some units appear to come with Seagate's 5400RPM Momentus ST94011A drive, including the unit reviewed here today.  The 5400RPM drive is fairly snappy for a 2.5" drive. It's still much, much slower than a 3.5" desktop drive, but it's a nice surprise to see a 5400RPM drive used in the mini.  We have been getting reports of some units coming with 4200RPM drives, however. Right now, it seems to be a luck of the draw as to which drive you get. 

The other surprise was that the memory installed in the mini was in fact CAS 3 DDR400 and not DDR333, as Apple's spec sheet suggests.  Granted, anything above DDR333 does absolutely nothing for the mini as the G4 is FSB limited to the bandwidth of single channel DDR333 SDRAM. 

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  • karlreading - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    #23:

    You kick up against mac bashers and then u have a pop at AMD fans. HOW RUDE. It's quiet obvisouse your a intel fan. your no better than the people you try to show up, claiming they do things whilst you do exactly the same things yourself.
    Im a AMD fan, but i dont find that i have to have a pop at intel, mac, or anyone else. AMD make fine products. Intel make fines products. Apple make fine products. just each ones products match diffrent peoples expectations and needs.

    as for the mac mini, i think its a excellent little machine. As Anand says, more appliance than computer. i think they will do well.

    karlos
  • Dranzerk - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    #2 in response to #1 Im talking about how lots of people will buy these because it's the "it" thing to do, and I will be looking on Ebay for when they are sold cheaper.

    How was that hard to understand?
  • michael2k - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    Well, if it's within the return period, you can technically 'return it' and get another, with the Tiger CDs/DVDs, or just tell the Apple person, "It would be better for you to send me the Tiger CDs, wouldn't it, than to return this one to CompUSA and get a new one with the new OS right?"

    So within two weeks I would expect it free, basically (though it takes some social engineering). I don't know about the 'heavy discount' however.
  • bupkus - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    Perhaps Apple should have offered the mini with 512MB as standard and then offered a downgrade option rather than their upgrade option.
  • bob661 - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    If you want Tiger, just wait till it's released then by the Mac.
  • msva124 - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    You say if tiger comes out right after you buy your machine, it is heavily discounted. Define "right after".
  • Draco - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    Great article. Very refreshing to see so much Mac coverage. Look forward to more.
  • Ecgtheow - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    #59: If Tiger comes out right after you get your machine, you can get it for $30 through the "Up-to-date" program.
  • sluramod - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    #57: good news for apple then ... $499 now + $100 or so later
  • Burbot - Tuesday, January 25, 2005 - link

    #40: Thanks for correction.
    #53: Very true. A lot of people do not understand the connection between memory amount and performance. I've seen that more then once - folks have a machine with 128 megs of RAM that is just dying under load, and when I suggest them a memory upgrade they say "But isn't Ghz the thing that makes it go faster?".

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