- Apr 2, 2003
- 2,906
- 5
- 81
Before I get any kind of hate...I love Macs. I use one at work, my laptop is a Mac, and I use PCs too.
There have now been:
1. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
2. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
3. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
4. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
revisions of the Mac Mini before the current gen. I do not understand how the low and mid range G4 Mac Minis are still selling for -over- $200 when some of them come with 512mb of ram and a 40/80gb hard drive and a G4!
I'm trying to determine what makes this such a self perpetuating cycle of non-depreciation. I understand that they are well built systems, but there doesn't appear to be a sloping price scale. The old Intel minis are almost selling for the same as a vastly superior new mini, and the latest mini does not appear to have had any effect on the price of the oldest G4s.
Reality distortion field?
There have now been:
1. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
2. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
3. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
4. http://www.apple-history.com/?...=date&order=ASC&range=
revisions of the Mac Mini before the current gen. I do not understand how the low and mid range G4 Mac Minis are still selling for -over- $200 when some of them come with 512mb of ram and a 40/80gb hard drive and a G4!
I'm trying to determine what makes this such a self perpetuating cycle of non-depreciation. I understand that they are well built systems, but there doesn't appear to be a sloping price scale. The old Intel minis are almost selling for the same as a vastly superior new mini, and the latest mini does not appear to have had any effect on the price of the oldest G4s.
Reality distortion field?
