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Apple Mac Mini Review - Tech Radar

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Tech Radar have published their review of the new Apple Mac Mini. 'The new Mac Mini boasts a unibody casing. Using the construction process pioneered by Apple for its MacBook Pro range, the enclosure is carved from a single block of aluminium, making it light but strong. At 19.7cm wide and long it has a slightly bigger footprint than the previous model, but it's substantially thinner and 20 per cent smaller by volume. The transformer is now housed inside the casing, so there's no power brick. Great news for people who carry their Mac Mini around with them.'

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Computeractive have published a review of the new 2010 Apple Mac Mini desktop. 'The new Mini is smaller than last year's model, housed in a slimline metallic casing that measures a mere 1.4in high, and 7.7in wide and deep. It's certainly a lot more attractive than most small PCs, which makes the Mac Mini particularly suitable for use as a media centre computer that can be hooked up to a TV in the front room. With that in mind, Apple has given the Mini an HDMI socket for the first time, which allows it to connect easily to a suitably equipped flat-panel television.'

Apple Mac Mini Review - CNET

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CNET have published a review of the new Apple Mac Mini (2.53GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 320GB, Fall 2009). 'The new Mac Mini, introduced by Apple back in October, received no changes to its physical design or external features compared with the last revision this past March. The case is still made from a combination of aluminum and plastic, and the size remains a svelte 2 inches high, by 6 inches wide and deep. Ports appear on the back of the Mac Mini only, and include five USB 2.0 ports, analog audio jacks, a Gigabit Ethernet output, a FireWire 800 port, and both Mini DVI and Mini DisplayPort outputs for video. Unlike the new 27-inch iMac, the Mini DisplayPort on the new Mac Mini does not double as a video input. A Mini DVI-to-DVI adapter comes in the box. You'll need to pay extra for adapters in other formats.'

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Pocket-lint have published a review of the new Apple Mac mini 2.53GHz. 'The Mac mini represents the cheapest option for entering the Mac world, with the 2.26GHz version costing you £499, whilst our test model will set you back £649, which now comes in at £150 cheaper than the new MacBook. As it is, the Mac mini is simply a compact mini desktop computer. We've seen a growing trend in mini PC computers or "nettops" late, but the Mac mini shouldn't be confused with some of those budget models, as the Mac mini packs in the power to complete pretty much all of your home computing needs.'

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