Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
The idea of a 17in unibody doesn't require a huge leap. Apple revamped the 15in model last year, so bumping the 17in version to a unibody chassis with the NVIDIA GeForce 9400M/9600M GT combo and a LED backlight would hardly come as a surprise.
What does seem more surprising is the suggestion that the 17in MacBook Pro will feature an iPhone/MacBook Air style fixed battery.
The idea is that a fixed battery would save weight and allow a thinner chassis. There's also a suggestion that the weight saving will be used to fit a higher capacity battery (perhaps using a technology other than lithium ion) than would otherwise be possible, reducing the need to carry a second battery around.
Despite the outcry from some quarters about the iPhone and the MacBook Air lacking user-replacable batteries, this feature (or misfeature, depending on your point of view) doesn't seem to have hurt sales significantly. After all, power points seem more widely available in conference rooms and on long-haul aircraft than they were a few years ago.
There will be a similar fuss if a new MacBook Pro does arrive with a fixed battery, but since relatively few people travel with multiple batteries it's likely that Apple would barely notice any lost sales brought about by this as yet hypothetical design choice.
Some commentators claim a fixed battery would be a negative from an environmental perspective, but that might not be true. Swapping batteries only at service centres would likely result in a significant reduction in the number of old batteries that end up in landfill, and a corresponding increase in those sent for recycling.
Also, a built-in battery might need less packaging - not in the 'cardboard box' sense, but in terms of the strength and therefore thickness of the shell around the cells.
As for the Mac mini, rumours have it that the revised version of Apple's tiniest desktop will use the GeForce 9400M chipset like the 15in MacBook Pro (and supposedly a forthcoming iMac update).
Graphics performance is currently one of the mini's weakest points. The switch would allow support for dual displays, and one suggestion is that the 2009 mini will sport mini DisplayPort and Mini DVI connectors. The 9400M supports DisplayPoty, VGA. HDMI and DVI.
Other rumours include the use of a more powerful CPU and greater disk capacity. It's also suggested that the current Firewire 400 port will be replaced by a Firewire 800 interface, and that there will also be a fifth USB port.
David Bass
| For the fourth year in a row, IDC has placed content security provider Websense (NASDAQ: WBSN) at the top of the IDC Worldwide Web Security 2011 –…
How to Make Business Discovery Work for Your Business
Business Discovery takes its cues from consumer apps. Like Google, it encourages us- ers to hunt for and explore data without worrying about or even noticing the underly- ing technology. Their entire experience is working within an intuitive interface to get real-time, self-service results with only minimal training. ...more
Try an easy-to-use set of web-enabled
tools for business-class productivity services. Office 365 provides
anywhere-access to email, important documents, contacts, and calendars
on almost any device.