Jobs unveiled a new version of Apple's flat-screen iMac: a $2,000 top-of-the-line edition with a spectacular 17-inch flat screen instead of the usual 15-incher. Still, there was plenty to make computer fans happy, or at least enough to get them talking, from new portable music players to software for keeping multiple gadgets in sync.įor example, Mr. Apple had no completely new machine to unveil, and the audience at the keynote was less frenzied than usual. Like all computer trade shows lately, however, this one is smaller than usual. In his reality-distortion field, every new machine is a revolution, every new program is a revelation - and for two blissful hours, Microsoft and its 95 percent market share don't exist. But to call his presentation a speech would be like calling Noah's flood a puddle. Jobs, took the stage at the Javits Center, as he does each summer, to unveil Apple's latest work. Yesterday Apple's chief executive, Steven P. For the true-blue Macintosh fan, they pale next to the greatest show on earth: the keynote speech at the annual Macworld Expo in New York. YOU can have your Springsteen concert, your big Vegas magic show, your East River fireworks.
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