X

New Mac mini: photos

Apple's upgraded Mac mini brings improved graphics performance, an HDMI port, an SD card slot and a unibody aluminium chassis.
By Rupert Goodwins, Contributor
applemacminimain.jpg
1 of 6 Rupert Goodwins/ZDNET

The Apple Mac mini, launched on Monday, is aimed at homes and small businesses. It adds an HDMI digital media port for TV use at home, and there's a 1TB version with Snow Leopard Server for organisations. Both models now come in a smart aluminium unibody, and an optical drive slot sits at the front for non-server versions, which start at £649 including VAT. The server version — available from £929 including VAT — drops the optical drive to make room for two 500GB hard disks. As the power supply is now internal, the retail packaging is a lot smaller.

applemacminitop.jpg
2 of 6 Rupert Goodwins/ZDNET

You get a power lead and an HDMI-to-DVI adapter in the box, and that's all. The Mac mini remains compatible with the Apple remote control, but this is now extra. The brushed aluminium finish elicited strong positive responses from Apple enthusiasts in the office: it will also help to cool the unit — especially useful given the internal power supply.

applemacminiwires.jpg
3 of 6 Rupert Goodwins/ZDNET

The Mac mini's power and HDMI-to-DVI cables in place.

applemacminiback.jpg
4 of 6 Rupert Goodwins/ZDNET

From the left: power switch, mains input, Gigabit Ethernet port, 800Mbps FireWire, HDMI, Mini DisplayPort, four USB 2 sockets, audio in/out and an SDXC slot capable of supporting up to 64GB cards. The slot along the bottom is for cooling.

applemacminiclosed.jpg
5 of 6 Rupert Goodwins/ZDNET

Aside from the case itself, the biggest change to the outside of the new Mac mini is a large round cover that can be removed by hand from the base. Although it has finger holes and a couple of alignment guides, it's a little fiddly to remove and replace — but that's an operation you'll perform at most a couple of times during the unit's lifetime, so this matters little.

applemacminiopen.jpg
6 of 6 Rupert Goodwins/ZDNET

With the base cover removed, its purpose is revealed: user-upgradeable DDR3 memory modules. You get 2GB, and up to 8GB can be fitted. The black circle on the grid to the top is the wireless antenna, which relies on the plastic base to avoid being shielded by the metal case. Beneath that is the fan responsible for removing the heat from the 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor, the NVIDIA GeForce 320M graphics processor and the internal power supply. The whole lot takes less than ten watts in idle mode: we'll report back on how much it takes when running at full tilt.

Related Galleries

Holiday wallpaper for your phone: Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year's, and winter scenes
Holiday lights in Central Park background

Related Galleries

Holiday wallpaper for your phone: Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year's, and winter scenes

21 Photos
Winter backgrounds for your next virtual meeting
Wooden lodge in pine forest with heavy snow reflection on Lake O'hara at Yoho national park

Related Galleries

Winter backgrounds for your next virtual meeting

21 Photos
Holiday backgrounds for Zoom: Christmas cheer, New Year's Eve, Hanukkah and winter scenes
3D Rendering Christmas interior

Related Galleries

Holiday backgrounds for Zoom: Christmas cheer, New Year's Eve, Hanukkah and winter scenes

21 Photos
Hyundai Ioniq 5 and Kia EV6: Electric vehicle extravaganza
img-8825

Related Galleries

Hyundai Ioniq 5 and Kia EV6: Electric vehicle extravaganza

26 Photos
A weekend with Google's Chrome OS Flex
img-9792-2

Related Galleries

A weekend with Google's Chrome OS Flex

22 Photos
Cybersecurity flaws, customer experiences, smartphone losses, and more: ZDNet's research roundup
shutterstock-1024665187.jpg

Related Galleries

Cybersecurity flaws, customer experiences, smartphone losses, and more: ZDNet's research roundup

8 Photos
Inside a fake $20 '16TB external M.2 SSD'
Full of promises!

Related Galleries

Inside a fake $20 '16TB external M.2 SSD'

8 Photos