This year's MacWorld was the subject of intense speculation and rumor mongering, including the rumor of a large plasma display running OSX, a Mac Mini PVR (which would have been nice), even the perennial favorite, iPhone. What actually happened this year?
Intel Macs Released Ahead-of-Schedule
Making its debut at MacWorld 2006 was the MacBook Pro. This new laptop sports an Intel Core Duo processor, quadrupling the speed of the 15-inch PowerBook G4. An Updated graphics chipset, integrated iSight camera (like the iMac G5) and FrontRow software are all included.
The MacBook Pro also debuts a new power cord connector. This connector is held in place magnetically, not by friction, meaning that when your pets, children, or coworkers trip on the cord, the cord will simply disconnect without causing your laptop to fall or damaging the connector itself. This point of vulnerability has been one of the most annoying things about laptops, especially since WiFi came along with its promise of wireless computing.
iMac
The iMac G5 design has been updated with Intel Core Duo processors as well, doubling the performance. Along with the MacBook Pro, the iMac ships with fully native for Intel iLife 2006, Pages 2, and Keynote 3.
iLife 2006
The entire suite has been updated to run as a Universal Binary, allowing it to run natively on the Intel Core Duo platform that Apple is rolling out. Each application has performance enhancements and new features are threaded throughout the suite, with most of the new functionality centering around iWeb, their new integration with .Mac services.
GarageBand now has features designed to make Podcasting - quality podcasting - extremely easy. Recording and even post production are accounted for, including noise reduction and easy uploading to .Mac.
iPhoto gets full screen editing, a very cool Calendar feature, and Photocasting - Podcasting for Photos - automatically synced through .Mac and polled by your subscribers' own iPhoto clients or any RSS reader.
iWeb makes it all happen- blogging is supported, of course, as well as any other kind of web layout. Apple supplies some nice templates, and adding content is all drag-and-drop.
iMovie HD is upgraded with templating features and Video Podcast support through iWeb.
The Vision
I have to try this out before I can comment on it, but the demo of iWeb and the other new features threaded throughout iLife 2006 have me excited. The iLife suite has thus far been a set of useful, simple yet powerful tools for me, but these new integrated features reflect the kind of vision that I alwyas talk about. Apple seems to get the idea that web services are so much more than mashup site enablers. Really, web services and RSS can be applied behind the scenes to make slick consumer apps talk to each other in startling ways. Like Jobs says, ignore the machinery and it's like magic. I wonder if FrontRow can automagically display photo albums you've subscribed to. I also imagine that it's technically possible to publish iWeb content to other WebDav servers.... something surely worth taking a crack at for those who run their own servers rather than .Mac.
iPod
Last quarter, Apple sold 14 Million iPods, with a total of 32 million in 2005. With the iTunes store selling 3 million songs a day, they are on target to reach 1 billion songs sold over the iTunes music store so far. New this MacWorld to the iPod is the FM remote, which brings FM radio capability to the iPod, a feature that has been in demand for some time. Jobs also announced Chrysler's offering of iPod integration in their automotive lines.
For details and demos, watch the SteveNote here:
http://macworld.apple.com.edgesuite.net/mw/index.html