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The iMac G4 [a] is an all-in-one personal computer designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer from January 2002 to August 2004. The computer is composed of a hemispheric base that holds the computer components, including the PowerPC G4 processor, with a flatscreen liquid-crystal display (LCD) mounted above.
The Power Mac G4 is a series of personal computers designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer from 1999 to 2004 as part of the Power Macintosh line. Built around the PowerPC G4 series of microprocessors, the Power Mac G4 was marketed by Apple as the first "personal supercomputers", [1] reaching speeds of 4 to 20 gigaFLOPS.
iMac (Mid 2011) 2.8–3.4 4×256 8 4 Yes Yes May 2011 October 2012 Mac mini Server (Mid 2011) 2.0 4×256 6 4 Yes Yes July 2011 October 2012 Core i3 (2-core) iMac (Late 2011 education only) 3.1 2×256 3 2 Yes Yes February 2011 March 2013 Core i5 (4-core) iMac (Mid 2011) 2.5–3.1 4×256 6 4 No Yes May 2011 October 2012 Core i5 CULV (2-core)
The iMac is a series of all-in-one computers from Apple Inc., sold as part of the company's Mac family of computers. First introduced in 1998, it has remained a primary part of Apple's consumer desktop offerings since and evolved through seven distinct forms.
iMac G4 1.0 15" (USB 2.0) iMac: July 1, 2004 iMac G4 1.25 17" (USB 2.0) iMac: July 1, 2004 September 16, 2003 PowerBook G4 Aluminum 15" PowerBook G4: February 14, 2006 October 22, 2003 iBook G4 (Late 2003) iBook: May 16, 2006 November 18, 2003 iMac G4 1.25 20" (USB 2.0) iMac: July 1, 2004 2004 January 6, 2004 Xserve G5 Xserve: August 7, 2006 ...
As part of the Mac transition to Apple's own processors, the Intel-based iMac was succeeded by the Apple silicon iMac beginning in 2021. Apple discontinued the 21.5-inch Intel iMacs the same year, with the 27-inch model discontinued in March 2022, following the announcement of the Mac Studio and 27-inch Apple Studio Display .
Apple completely phased out the G4 series for desktop models after it selected the 64-bit IBM-produced PowerPC 970 processor as the basis for its PowerPC G5 series. The last desktop model that used the G4 was the Mac Mini. The last portable to use the G4 was the iBook G4, which was replaced by the Intel-based MacBook.
The eMac (short for education Mac) is a discontinued all-in-one Mac desktop computer that was produced and designed by Apple Computer.Released in 2002, it was originally aimed at the education market but was later made available as a cheaper mass-market alternative to Apple's "Sunflower" iMac G4.