Originally posted by: Elemental007
How often does Apple do price cuts?
Originally posted by: sk560
for ibook, apple is trying to add features (larger HDD, faster cpu etc) and maintain the price.
however, recently apple is adding some entry level models such as the $999 ibook and the $1799 15" Powerbook.
yeap.. check w/ the university book store or look for some friends/relatives working for apple... usually will get some discounts.
Originally posted by: mpitts
Originally posted by: sk560
for ibook, apple is trying to add features (larger HDD, faster cpu etc) and maintain the price.
however, recently apple is adding some entry level models such as the $999 ibook and the $1799 15" Powerbook.
yeap.. check w/ the university book store or look for some friends/relatives working for apple... usually will get some discounts.
There is not a $1799 15" Powerbook. The cheapest 15" is $2299.
The 12" Powerbook is $1799.
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
Apple usually times their price decreases to coinside with Steve Jobs' keynote speeches at the MacWorld expo. I wouldn't expect any hot deals, though, because Apple seems to consistantly stick with a 25% price premium over a comparively featured system from Gateway or Dell.
Oh well. I guess that buying an Apple is like buying consumer electronics from Bose or Sony. You're going to pay extra for the cool styling and the prestige brand name.
Originally posted by: Elemental007
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
Apple usually times their price decreases to coinside with Steve Jobs' keynote speeches at the MacWorld expo. I wouldn't expect any hot deals, though, because Apple seems to consistantly stick with a 25% price premium over a comparively featured system from Gateway or Dell.
Oh well. I guess that buying an Apple is like buying consumer electronics from Bose or Sony. You're going to pay extra for the cool styling and the prestige brand name.
Or perhaps just a laptop that has a longer battery life, runs cooler, is lighter, and arugably has a more powerful, stable OS? That performs at *effectively* the same speed as a PC laptop.
