Strengths:MacOS X, Integrated web cam, Beautiful wide LCD screen, Industrial yet gorgeous cohesive design
Weaknesses:Price, lack of Universal binaries, Wireless mouse
Posted Jun 30, 2006 - I started out on Macs back in the days before System 6 (Mac Plus, SE, and the uber-cool color Mac II), moved on to Windows due to software availability, and have come full circle back to the iMac Core Duo. The beauty of Boot Camp is that you can now have the best of both worlds, being able to run both MacOS and Windows on the same machine.
Not having used MacOS since System 7, I had over 15 years worth of catching up to do on the OS. In some ways it's just like the old days, but in other ways MacOS is drastically different (obviously under the hood are where you'd find the truly revolutionary changes). But I quickly got back up to speed. Networking the imac with the rest of my equipment was refreshingly easy. My ethernet-based printers were detected automatically, and I had no problems file sharing between other Windows PCs and the iMac.
As for software, I haven't done a ton of exploring with the ILife suite, but it does look like a great bundle and certainly opens up many avenues for the amateur artist, filmmaker, musician, or podcaster. I was dissapointed to find that most software titles aren't yet available in the Universal Binary format (which will run at full-speed on the Intel-based Macs). In particular, Microsoft's Office suite is still at the 2004 version, which relies on a piece of Apple middleware (Rosetta Stone) in order to run on the Intel iMac. It works fine... just a bit slower than I know the machine is capable of.
I recommend going for the Gig of RAM for the machine, especially if you will be relying on Rosetta Stone for commonly-used apps like Office.
I love how Apple is going for the "wireless" brass ring, in that you can configure the iMac such that there is only one cable used in the entire setup--the power cable. With the optional bluetooth keyboard and mouse, using WiFi for your network and either wireless or network printers, you can attain this nirvana. To have such a capable machine packed into a deceptively simple package is what Apple does best.
The Apple wireless kb and mouse work great except for that the mouse is still the old 1-button design (that Apple FINALLY dumped for its new corded mouse). I've used Windows so long I have really gotten used to not only multiple buttons, but also some kind of scrolling mechanism (whether it be wheel, button, or whatever). How Apple could sell its flagship mouse without a scroll feature is bewildering. You're left to either purchase a 3rd party mouse (which inevitably doesn't match the Apple design of everything else), deal with another cable and use the Apple corded mouse, or suck it up and live without advanced mouse functionality (I chose the second option until Apple gets a decent wireless mouse released).
Other than those nitpicks, I have no other complaints about this computer. I'm glad Apple hung in there through the 90s, because they are back in a big way and getting bigger all the time. They've done many things right over the years and the 20" iMac Duo is one of 'em.
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