Friday, January 19th 2007
Apple confirms $2 fee to allow people running Macintosh OS X to use 802.11 N
Early rumors stated that Apple was going to charge people who own a copy of their latest operating system, Macintosh OS X 10, $5 to run 802.11N technology. Apple will only be charging users $1.99 to run 802.11N compatible hardware. While most people would complain that these costs should have been factored in with the cost of the actual operating system, Apple claims that the "nominal fee" is to ensure that Apple complies with various regulations in the USA.
Source:
The Register
24 Comments on Apple confirms $2 fee to allow people running Macintosh OS X to use 802.11 N
-Dan
However, the question remains as to why they are charging $2 and not $1 or less. All they need is any kind of fee.
im aware that more recently they've fallen in line with pc pricing, but once bitten twice scorned
hey im just getting used to nvidia and intel not being crap anymore, give me time, and i may get used to apple being acceptable too
Windows Vista is far better than Mac OS X.
And Mac OS X is copied completely from Windows.. kinda like Christianity if that helps.
As for this "fee" I want to know the whole story behind it. Whats apple gonna do, mail everyone a $2 bill? :rolleyes:
Way to report the whole story. Apple news != pc news, its never whole.
And OS X is completely different from any Earlier versions of Windows, I don't see many similarities at all, besides them both being a gui for an operating system. OS X is also based on Unix, nothing like Windows at all.
It sounds to me that you haven't even tried OS X for any length of time, or you tried briefly, weren't used to the way it works, and decided it sucked based on the fact that you don't know how to use it. You shouldn't bash things you know nothing about.
Edit: back on topic, you do get the upgrade free if you buy apple's wireless N router I think.
img.techpowerup.org/070121/Picture 2.jpg
My Vista Ultimate install is currently not booting, so I can't post a screen as of yet. It quit booting after I tried to install the ATI drivers(Which seemed to fail. After waiting for 7min, I tried to open the Task Manager, but the system hung. Had to hard reset). But on fresh boot last night I recall somewhere it being around 370MB, with absolutely nothing installed. (Installed last night, just trying the RTM for the first time since its release. It stays on the green bars, any tips welcome. lol)
So, what exactly did apple confirm with this anyways? :confused:
And I think Apple basically confirmed that the Airport Extreme cards in the new machines are actually 802.11n capable, they just locked it out in software and plan to charge people to activate it. I personally find that stupid, they should've just left it unlocked to begin with.
Its the PPC Code itself, that takes up the extra space. ;)
OFF TOPIC:Gonna post this in the Handy OS X apps thread also. Intel only, Boot Camp and Parallels. You try Parallels yet, Dip? It's coherence mode is awesome(runs guest operating system transparently on top of OS X, you have the Windows taskbar on the bottom of the screen and the OS X tool bar at the top, and it works with Boot Camp partitions.)