

Judging by the leaks and rumors, the next iMac could do just that.
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Apple once again finds itself needing to restate its desktop credibility, showing the world that it still knows how to build an all-in-one machine that pushes the boundaries of design. It has kept the same design since 2012, and while the swooping back and razor-thin edges were supremely fashionable back then, the iMac’s huge bezels and oversized “chin” stick out like a sore thumb in today’s bezel-less world. Today, the iMac finds itself in a similar situation. It gives you permission to touch.” Christophe Guinet/Monsieur Plant The device had a handle on top, not because Apple expected you to carry it around a lot, but, in the words of Ive, “it makes a relationship possible. Jobs and his design guru Jony Ive sought to change that by making the iMac fun and approachable, with a bubble-shaped housing and bright, inviting colors. By the time it launched in 1998, personal computers had been around for two decades, yet were no closer to popular adoption, instead remaining the domain of the nerdy and the technically gifted. It was all a far cry from the days of the pirate-flag startup, the Apple that would later tell us to Think Different.Īnd then came the iMac G3. The company had done all-in-one computers before - the original Macintosh from 1984 was just such a machine - but on the eve of Steve Jobs’ return in 1997, it was making standard computer towers like everyone else. It churned out a succession of boring gray boxes, just like the rest of the competition. In the mid-1990s, Apple was a company lost in the computing wilderness. The design revolution The third-generation iMac, nicknamed “Bondi Blue” Marcin Wichary/Flickr Waiting for the M3 iMac? We’ve got bad news for Apple fans IMac 27-inch: Everything we know about Apple’s larger, more powerful iMac
