macworld conference 2009
GarageBand ’09: What to expect
I use Garageband 08′ quite a bit, as a casual guitarist. Garageband is not professional recording software but is excellent for people like me who don’t necessarily need to record more than 24 tracks simultaneously or need to adjust the audio on each of those tracks. Garageband is perfect for people who record on the weekends with their buddies in, well, the garage. But let’s get to Garageband ’09…
Creative Safari at the Macworld Expo
Let me start off by saying that the “Creative Safari” has absolutely nothing to do with the Safari browser. I think someone somewhere could have come up with a better name that would not be so confusing to some people. What it does have to do with is digital photography and videography.
Mac Labs at the Macworld Expo
The Mac Labs at the Macworld Expo is kind of an in-depth training class for just about everything Apple computer related. Mac Labs is an interesting part of the Macworld Expo. Mac Labs offer intimate, hands-on instruction for specific applications and tools. I have to say if I was going to get the opportunity to go to the Macworld Expo, this is the module in which I would be most interested.
MacIT at the MacWorld Expo
IT. It is a billion dollar business. Just about every business in the United States is connect to the internet and or uses computers for point of sale transactions. This requires some kind of information technology support. A lot of small companies will call their local computer or networking shop for assistance. The larger companies, however, usually have an IT specialist on staff. Large corporations have entire departments dedicated to it. How does Apple and the Macworld Expo fit in you ask? MacIT.
Market Symposium at the Macworld Expo
Market Symposiums are full day sessions targeting specific verticals and/or job functions. All of the following classes are a full day long and are offered on January 9th.
New cooling system, processors coming to next-gen Macs at Macworld 2009 or later?
According to sources related with the Taiwanese companies that produce Apple’s Macs, the next-gen iMac due early next year will include a new cooling module. Although there isn’t much evidence of this, an article published this Monday stated that Foxconn Precision Components and Auras Technology would supply “the PC’s cooling module” for the new “magnesium-aluminum alloy chassis.” The Mac currently uses a fan based cooling system that may need to be beefed up a little more if Apple does, in fact, plan to include a new quad-core chip into their machines.
Wait, what’s going on with these new chips?















