The flat-panel iMac comes with either a 15-inch or 17-inch flat-panel monitor, which pivots off a swinging arm attached to the computer's dome base. The larger model, which also comes with a DVD recording drive, is Apple's best-selling consumer Mac. "The 17-inch (model) became a big hit for us," Joswiak said. "We've sold more of that 17-inch since its introduction than any other consumer model we have. If we look at the second-most successful, far and away above the rest was the 15-inch combo (drive model)." Kay said he's not surprised the 17-inch iMac is a top seller. "If you're in the 'gaga' design business, you stand to sell a lot of high-end stuff," he said. About 50 percent of buyers choose to move up to a DVD recording model, according to Apple. Under the new pricing structure, consumers looking for a Mac with DVD recording capabilities could get an eMac for as low as £999 but spend no more than £1,449 for the high-end iMac. Still, Sony's Vaio Digital Studio PCV-RS100, which also packs a DVD recording drive, sells for even less than the eMac, coming in at $799 without a monitor. "This is going to be a home run for Sony," Duboise said. "Sony is Apple's No. 1 competitor, so far as PCs go." In fact, the Vaio PCV-RS100 is priced at the sweet spot of the US market, which at retail is around $750 (about £455) right now. "For the last four months, the average selling price has been under $800 every single month," Baker said. "Our value is about having everything you need in that system, so that you can work better than on any competing system," Joswiak said. "We make things so they work very well together. Certainly our friends over at Sony have made strides in that direction. But only Apple is in the unique position to not only make the operating system (and) the hardware but also the key digital applications." The repricing comes about a week after Apple cut prices on new Power Mac G4 computers by more than 40 percent. Power Mac is Apple's line of computers aimed at creative professionals, content creators and businesses. On Friday, Apple also released its iLife digital media suite, which includes iDVD 3, iMovie 3, iPhoto 2 and iTunes 3. The suite ships free on all new Macs, but otherwise costs £39. "Adding to those two releases a revived iMac line would put Apple in a much stronger position as it tries to lure Windows users to the Mac," said Richard McPike, a Mac user and college student at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. Inner beauty?
McPike described Macs as "gorgeous from the outside" but desperately "in need of an upgrade on the inside. I bought the top-of-the-line machine last January, when the new systems were announced, and since then Apple has yet to make any changes that would entice me to upgrade." But the new top-end iMac meets McPike's wish list. "A new iMac line, with 1GHz G4 chips, AirPort Extreme compatibility, built-in Bluetooth and FireWire 800, at the same or lower price points, would be a much-needed refresh," he said, before learning about the upgrades. Besides the faster processor, up from 800MHz in the older model, the new 17-inch iMac moves up to DDR SDRAM, doubles the graphics memory, and adds support for Bluetooth and 802.11g wireless capabilities -- or what Apple calls AirPort Extreme. Bluetooth costs an extra £41.13 and AirPort Extreme an extra £79. The entry-level iMac comes with an 800MHz PowerPC G4 processor, a 15-inch flat-panel monitor, 256MB of SDRAM, a 60GB hard drive, a CD-RW/DVD combo drive, 32MB GeForce2 MX graphics, a 56kbps modem, 10/100 networking, USB 1.1, FireWire and Mac OS X 10.2. But the 800MHz system supports 802.11b wireless, which at 11 megabits per second (Mbps) is a fair bit slower than the 54Mbps of 802.11g . The eMac configurations are unchanged from earlier models. The entry-level model comes with a 700MHz PowerPC G4 processor, 128MB of SDRAM, a 40GB hard drive, a CD-RW/DVD combo drive, 32MB GeForce2 MX graphics, a 56kbps modem, 10/100 networking, USB 1.1, FireWire and Mac OS X 10.2. The $£999 model bumps up to an 800MHz processor, 256MB of SDRAM, a 60GB hard drive and a DVD recording drive. Both eMacs are built around a 17-inch cathode-ray tube (CRT) monitor. Overall, Apple is moving in the right direction, but it's not enough, Duboise asserted. "They need to join the party," she said. "To join the party, you have to increase the performance and reduce price."





