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In lieu of the two previous size options—21.5 inches (55 cm) and 27 inches (69 cm)—the Apple silicon iMac comes in a single 23.5-inch (60 cm) (rounded to 24-inch) display size. [1] [2] The computer is flat-backed and 0.45 inches (11 mm) thick, with half the volume and roughly 30 percent smaller footprint than the 21.5-inch iMac. As it does ...
The 21.5 inch iMac with 4K Retina Display was discontinued on April 20, 2021, after the announcement of the first Apple silicon-based iMac. The 27-inch model was discontinued on March 8, 2022, after the announcement of the Mac Studio and 27-inch Apple Studio Display, and marked the end of Intel-based iMac models, and the return of the iMac to a ...
In 2014, the iMac added high-resolution "retina" 4K and 5K displays, and a more powerful, professional-oriented model, the iMac Pro, was introduced in 2017. Apple announced a shift from Intel processors to its own Apple Silicon in June 2020. Apple announced redesigned iMacs with a 24-inch display and Apple M1 chip in April 2021. These new ...
iMac (21.5-inch, 2017) iMac: October 30, 2021 iMac (Retina 4K, 21.5-inch, 2017) iMac: March 19, 2019 iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, 2017) iMac: March 19, 2019 Magic Keyboard with Numeric Keypad: Keyboards: current September 22, 2017 Apple TV 4K (1st generation) Apple TV: April 20, 2021 Apple Watch Series 3: Apple Watch: September 7, 2022 Apple Watch ...
The 23-inch model, dubbed the "Cinema HD Display," was introduced on March 20, 2002, and supported full 1:1 1080p playback on a 1920x1200 pixel display.. On June 28, 2004, Apple introduced a redesigned line of Cinema Displays, along with a new 30-inch model that, like the 23-inch model, carried the "Cinema HD Display" name.
The 13-inch and 15-inch MacBook Pros (2016–19) were criticized for its keyboard's unreliability, and the USB-C-only port configuration. The Touch Bar MacBook Pro was released in October 2016. It was the thinnest MacBook Pro ever made, replaced all ports with four Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C) ports, gained a thinner "Butterfly" keyboard, and replaced ...
The Studio Display features a 27-inch, 5K LED-backlit panel, with 5120×2880 resolution at 218 pixels per inch and 600 nits of brightness, an increase from the 500 nits panel used in the LG UltraFine and 27-inch iMac. [4] [5] The panel also supports P3 wide color and True Tone technology. [6] It does not support HDR content. [7]
The Apple Thunderbolt Display is a 27-inch flat panel computer monitor developed by Apple Inc. and sold from July 2011 to June 2016. Originally priced at $999, [1] it replaced Apple’s 27-inch Cinema Display. For displays it can only connect with computers with a Thunderbolt port (for data it has a Gigabit Ethernet and FireWire 800).