For 20 years the Mac Mini had the power button at the back, which is of course not ideal, especially if you want to have the device under your desk.
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For 20 years the Mac Mini had the power button at the back, which is of course not ideal, especially if you want to have the device under your desk.
But now they finally fixed this design flaw.
The new Mac Minis have the power button on the bottom.
Seriously, are people at Apple even using their own devices?
They make phones that cost upwards of 1000 Dollars, and yet they can't make them so they lie flat on a table. And now a computer with a power button on the bottom?
https://appleinsider.com/articles/24/10/29/apple-stuck-the-mac-mini-power-button-on-the-bottom
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R. L. Dane :debian: :openbsd:replied to Andreas (82mhz) last edited by
This was the best placement, ever.
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Jon :fedora: :linux:replied to Andreas (82mhz) last edited by
@82mhz It's not ideal but I rarely turn mine off unless there's a storm coming with a chance of losing power.
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Jon :fedora: :linux:replied to R. L. Dane :debian: :openbsd: last edited by
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R. L. Dane :debian: :openbsd:replied to Jon :fedora: :linux: last edited by
IIRC, none of the USB macs had power on the keyboard (not counting laptops). It might be something that was specific to ADB.
They'd have to do something like have a power MCU connected to USB that looks for the power on keycode and then transfers the USB connection to the CPU or something.
I always thought power-on on the keyboard was pretty magical ^__^
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Simone Sreplied to R. L. Dane :debian: :openbsd: last edited by
The first iMac had a keyboard with a power button.
https://www.daskeyboard.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/imac-keyboard.jpeg
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R. L. Dane :debian: :openbsd:replied to Simone S last edited by
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Jon :fedora: :linux:replied to R. L. Dane :debian: :openbsd: last edited by