How much do Mac parts really cost?


Recommended Posts

An article by moi, enjoy :)

Big Macs

When Apple first started using Intel processors you could only get computers made by them and they could only be embedded inside an LCD monitor but now that's changed, or at least the embedded in a monitor part you can still only buy from Apple, anyways now you have the option of buying "more powerful" Mac Pros. When Apple released Boot Camp many "technology experts" bought Macs under the impression that Windows runs better on Macs instead of PCs but is it true? Well maybe if the Macs had better hardware that would be true but PC hardware is always released later on for Mac so the answer would be no. But these people can't just be making false claims, there must be some truth in it right? Maybe Macs cost less than PCs? Well let's see for ourselves: An entry level Mac Pro costs $2,121.00 and has:

Intel Xeon "Woodcrest" Dual Core 2.0GHz

1 GB (2 X 512MB) 667 Mhz DDR2

160GB 7,200 RPM SATA 3 Gb/s

Nvidia GeForce 7300 GT 256 MB

16x "SuperDrive"

An undefined motherboard

A case and powersupply

http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebO...9dqDFdU7/2.?p=0

It also includes an Apple Keyboard and "Mighty Mouse" (you know, that tiny cube with one button and no scroll wheel?), free shipping and options for buying Mac OSX Server Edition (if only there was some kind of Operating System that was way better at being a server and free, hhhmmmmm....), some Apple Software, and AppleCare Protection Plan "world-class support" (if OSX is the world's most advanced OS, never gets viruses, and is the easist OS to use why would one need this protection plan?). Now the average person may think $2k isn’t a lot for a computer like this but let's look at how much this computer would cost if we bought the parts individually with the help of our trusted friend Newegg.com:

Intel Xeon "Woodcrest" Dual Core 2.0GHz - http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16819117086 $331.99 but I don't see why they're using processors intended for servers on a personal computer (Whoops thats what PC stands for! My bad, personal mac in that case, I'll never make the mistake of calling a Mac a computer a again!) when a Core 2 Duo E6600 (2.4 GHz 4MB) is better and cheaper at $309.00? http://www.newegg.com/product/product.asp?...N82E16819115003

1 GB (2 X 512MB) 667 Mhz DDR2 - "Mac Memory" the DDR2 667 (PC2 5300) by Kingston http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16820134374 is

$253.99; if however you bought plain old PC memory like the DDR2 667 (PC2 5400) by OCZ http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16820227059 it would be $105.99.

160GB 7,200 RPM SATA 3 Gb/s - The Apple page didn't seem to say the how much cache the hard drive had so let's assume it was 8mb. Anyways all the "mac storage" ones seem to be external (and they cost between $181 and $209 - these prices aren't considered in the total) http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList....SubCategory=552 so we'll have to go with a PC one: all the 160 GB 7,200 RPM Hard Drives with 8mb of cache cost between $54 and $65 http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList....;SubCategory=14

Nvidia GeForce 7300 GT 256 MB - all the GeForce 7300 GT 256 MB cards cost between $70 and $95 http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList....;SubCategory=48

16x "SuperDrive" - Too bad Apple is the only company cool enough to make a "SuperDive" but since no one can make hardware like Apple can we'll have to settle for some lowly PC equivelant, mind you the CD reading and writing (R not RW) on the "SuperDrive" is only 32X instead of the standard for the past half decade of 48-52X but that’s ok it's not like Mac is the world's most advanced OS or anything. Once again Apple has left out some details so let's assume that it's an IDE drive with 2MB of cache: all of the drives with 2MB cost between $24 and $27 http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList....p;SubCategory=5

Motherboard - Apple doesn't mention the motherboard included but I assume the type is changed based on requirements (i.e. how many PCIe slots, how many SATA slots, etc.) and based on our requirements (1 PCIe Slot, 1 SATA slot, Socket 775, DDR2) lets try to find an equivelant: ASUS P5L-MX Socket T (LGA 775) Intel 945G Micro ATX - DDR2 667 2 X 240pin slots - 1 PCIe x16 Slot - Retail: $75.99 OEM: $51.99 http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList....SubCategory=280

Other stuff: - There's also a few other things those being a case and a power supply, you can get a pretty good case for around $50 and based in this setup we'd proably need a 400W power supply now the prices are pretty varied but the majority of them cost between $20 and $50 with a few costing more and a few costing less. http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList....;SubCategory=58

Total cost: Depending on many factors including whether or not you want the (overpriced) "mac" part or a PC equivelant and which OEM you get it from: $684.98 - $948.97. Wow, I wasn't even expecting that much of a price gap! Assuming Apple pays around $700 for all the parts (they get it in bulk with no markup) plus the assembling they're making over $1,400 in profit per sale!

EDIT: The cost of one Mac OSX license ($129.00) should be included as well.

Keep in mind you can also buy parts which are "open box" which will cost even less and New Egg has to make money too so they have a little markup but Apple has bulk manufacturing contracts with the companies that make the parts for their computer so they’re saving even more than any of us on parts.

I didn't post this just to **** you guys off however, I also realize that some of my facts may be wrong because I've never actually used a physical Mac, I installed Mac OSX it on my PC (legitimately of course :whistle:) so If you have something constructive to say about my article I'd like to hear it.

Edited by black_death
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/526410-how-much-do-mac-parts-really-cost/
Share on other sites

Breaking news: Adding up the costs of materials used to build a Lexus shows that you are charged a lot, too. Perhaps you can evaluate the "real cost of a Vista Ultimate box". The materials aren't that expensive there, either.

First, if this is a serious evaluation, the childish snide remarks should be dropped if you wanted to be taken seriously.

Secondly, you ought to compare against equivalent assembled systems available from Dell, etc.

Third, you need to consider the OS and applications into your cost evaluation.

Alright my bad, I'll include the cost of a $129.00 Mac OSX license into the final price. I dont know Apple's manufacturing costs but they're a large multi bullion dollar company that makes millions of computers so I assume it's not alot. As for my remarks Apple makes plenty of similar remarks and they're taken seriously, and many people make similar remarks about Microsoft and they're also taken seriously so why should keep my opnions to my self if I'm talking about Apple?

Because it is called flame-baiting, if you are pretending to be serious and unbiased, yet post these things to lure people into flaming you for them.

It is against the rules to flame-bait.

But whatever floats your boat. Welcome to Neowin.

Sorry Mark I wasn't aware of that rule but I wasn't tyring to get people to flame me I was trying to make a point using sarcasm but I guess it can be viewed that way. And Nezer that specific part about the Xeons wasn't part of my bashing but a legitimate question, thank you for answering it. Thank you for your welcomes whether or not they were sarcastic :)

I stopped reading at "Mighty Mouse" (you know, that tiny cube with one button and no scroll wheel?). If you have no clue that the Mighty Mouse actually has 3 buttons and a clickable scroll ball, I seriously doubt the rest of your info.

If someone gets convinced by an article like that, I shoot myself.

You took all the cheapest parts for the PC, and the SuperDrive of Apple can also write DVDs and rewrite them. Maybe you should reevaluate that part, as well as the cost of Vista. The OCZ memory is a value kit - it's poor quality. You're choosing a different processor for the PC also... don't be afraid to choose the real one. You chose the worse power supply ever. Don't make me believe that for 20 bucks you get a good power supply.

Very poor article, and yeah, it's a flame-bait article too.

Thank you, come again.

Edit : The one aove me is right, you have no clue what the mighty mouse is. Keep looking.

Wow, this is nothing BUT flamebait.

It also includes an Apple Keyboard and "Mighty Mouse" (you know, that tiny cube with one button and no scroll wheel?),
The Mighty Mouse is a normal mouse-shaped object with 4 buttons and a 360? scrollwheel.
free shipping and options for buying Mac OSX Server Edition (if only there was some kind of Operating System that was way better at being a server and free, hhhmmmmm....)

No, this doesn't sound biased at all. Also some people just might prefer OSX Server.

some Apple Software, and AppleCare Protection Plan "world-class support" (if OSX is the world's most advanced OS, never gets viruses, and is the easist OS to use why would one need this protection plan?).
The protection plan is for hardware.
Now the average person may think $2k isn?t a lot for a computer like this but let's look at how much this computer would cost if we bought the parts individually with the help of our trusted friend Newegg.com:

Of course any computer is going to be cheaper when you buy the parts individually on Newegg, but the Mac Pro isn't a computer made from parts you bought on Newegg. It's already built, has an OS you can't just install on a machine from Newegg (not legally at least), and has protection/support that's important to a lot of people.

Also, your component comparison isn't realistic. The Mac Pro's motherboard has 4 PCI-E slots, the one you listed has one. The Mac Pro's mobo has 8 RAM slots, the one you listed has 2. Also, the "SuperDrive" you compared to is just a CD writer, DVD reader, whereas Apple's SuperDrives are dual-layer DVD burners.

That said: Oh god, companies are making PROFIT?

Ok I stated in my closing paragraph that my facts may be wrong and that the reason I posted this here is to get my facts verified! I was't sure about the mighty mouse but I used it in a computer store once and thats how it felt to me. If all the responses are going to be like this then I don't know why I even bothered posting this.

EDIT: Yes I realize that some things cannot be compared but in reason!!! All those extra incomparible factors would only end up a few hundred dollars more, the point of my article is that Apple is making HUGE profit on their sales!

Ok I stated in my closing paragraph that my facts may be wrong and that the reason I posted this here is to get my facts verified! I was't sure about the mighty mouse but I used it in a computer store once and thats how it felt to me. If all the responses are going to be like this then I don't know why I even bothered posting this.

EDIT: Yes I realize that some things cannot be compared but in reason!!! All those extra incomparible factors would only end up a few hundred dollars more, the point of my article is that Apple is making HUGE profit on their sales!

It just seems to me that the point of posting an article like this is to GIVE information, not get it, especially since the missing/wrong information is easily accessible from Apple's site, regardless of a disclaimer at the end that basically says "I didn't do any research so don't flame me for posting misinformation." And what's the point of making a hardware component comparison at all if you're not even comparing the same components?

Apple is making HUGE profit on their sales!

Isn't that kind of the point?

Edit: Oh yeah, you also didn't factor the cost of the mouse/keyboard on the "cheap" version you constructed on Newegg.

I configured a simular computer on Dells website and it came in at $1895 without an OS so I don't think that there is much difference. And as everyone knows you are paying a premium for a premium product when you get an apple. Of course if you bought the parts seperate and assembled it yourself it would be cheaper but if you are going to make a comparison then you should compare apples to apples. Or I guess you could say Dell is making a huge profit on the parts as well.

It just seems to me that the point of posting an article like this is to GIVE information, not get it, especially since the missing/wrong information is easily accessible from Apple's site, regardless of a disclaimer at the end that basically says "I didn't do any research so don't flame me for posting misinformation." And what's the point of making a hardware component comparison at all if you're not even comparing the same components?
I'm receiving information as well, I included the price of the OS, I didn't know about the mobo configuration I just assumed Apple would want it's customers not to pay for features it doesn't need, I didn't know why it used Xeons insted of normal Core 2 Duo's, maybe because I'm getting such a swarm of replies I can't incorporate all those changes quickly? And no research? How many other people have tried something like this? I spent hours working on this and you have the nerve to say I did no research because I don't know about a ****ing mouse!!
Isn't that kind of the point?

No the point is Mac users have no choice but to pay extra where as Windows and Linux users can build there own PCs for less.

Edit: Oh yeah, you also didn't factor the cost of the mouse/keyboard on the "cheap" version you constructed on Newegg.

Oh my bad, a mouse and keyboard, damn that's really gonna hike up the price isn't it? Mice and keyboards are to peoples own descresion based on how comfortable they, if I just included the price of any old keyboard and mouse then I'd get flamed for that too.

I'm receiving information as well, I included the price of the OS, I didn't know about the mobo configuration I just assumed Apple would want it's customers not to pay for features it doesn't need, I didn't know why it used Xeons insted of normal Core 2 Duo's, maybe because I'm getting such a swarm of replies I can't incorporate all those changes quickly? And no research? How many other people have tried something like this? I spent hours working on this and you have the nerve to say I did no research because I don't know about a ****ing mouse!!

No the point is Mac users have no choice but to pay extra where as Windows and Linux users can build there own PCs for less.

Oh my bad, a mouse and keyboard, damn that's really gonna hike up the price isn't it? Mice and keyboards are to peoples own descresion based on how comfortable they, if I just included the price of any old keyboard and mouse then I'd get flamed for that too.

I wouldn't personally say it would take that much research. You go to Apple's Mac Pro page, look at the specs, then find the same parts on Newegg. Drop the links in Notepad, post, and you're done. It's not like you configured and compared similar systems from multiple OEMs. I have the nerve to say you didn't do any research because it's obvious you didn't. At the very least I would think you knew about a mouse, which is why I used it as an example. At any other rate you should be willing to look into expandability (ie number of RAM slots), features (SuperDrive), and maybe even what the warranty does ("protection" = hardware).

Also, whether or not a mouse and keyboard is going to severely hike up the price doesn't matter. Not including them makes you come off as neglectful, biased, or both. And yeah, you would get flamed for just including any old mouse and keyboard, as some people prefer the Apple Keyboard (which has a USB hub) and the mighty mouse (whose ball isn't found on other mice). If you're comparing apples to apples (no pun intended), I'd say it would make the most sense to either find a best match or just the same keyboard/mouse, since they're available without buying a Mac.

Comparing prebuilt Macs to home built PCs is not a fair or logical comparison, as Apple isn't competing with parts, they're competing with other OEMs who sell complete systems.

Alright and the biggest thing that he's missing here with saying the Mac Pro. Lets take a second here and read the Pro ending.

Pro is short for Professional you may view the definition here http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/professional

The Mac Pro is made for the Professional High End Users. Hence the Xeon processor and other things that come configured with it. If you're a home users you get the Mac Mini or iMac if you're a Pro User again look for the word following the product name MacBook Pro, Mac Pro, or in the case of software Final Cut Pro. Apple users pay what they pay because they expect quality, I bought a Toshiba Laptop 2 years ago had nothing but problems with it and their support, I bought a MacBook Pro because i needed something that would meet my needs and work since I do presentations and video and all sorts of other things and I haven't had a single problem with it since September when I bought it.

Apple care is mainly harware cover so the bit about not needing it is wrong.

They also have a 1Kw Power supply not 400W.

The build quality is far superior to any PC I have ever seen. It's also consistantly good, I have upgraded/worked on hundered of these and they are always solid, I have never had so send on back after getting it out of the box, which is more than I can say about most major PC manufacturers.

The Drives have 16MB cache.

You will be hard pressed to find a comparable Motherboard with configurable PCIe slots, 6 SATA connectors (there are 2 spare) and two power sockets for high power video cards.

There is also the fact that the hardware has all been tested to ensure it all gets along with no conflicts which can cause crashes.

And I can tell you apple charge ?300 for the cases (That is a bit steep)

Yes the price is high for the sum of the individual parts, but It has long been known that Apples cost more. However if you look at what they used to charge they are now cheaper than ever. I remember when the base PowerBook G3 cost at least ?2500 now you can get the top model for ?1900

Breaking news: Adding up the costs of materials used to build a Lexus shows that you are charged a lot, too. Perhaps you can evaluate the "real cost of a Vista Ultimate box". The materials aren't that expensive there, either.

First, if this is a serious evaluation, the childish snide remarks should be dropped if you wanted to be taken seriously.

Secondly, you ought to compare against equivalent assembled systems available from Dell, etc.

Third, you need to consider the OS and applications into your cost evaluation.

Why do we have to compare a Mac to a pre-built Windows machine from Dell or another manufacturer? One of the benefits of using Windows is that we don't HAVE to buy a pre-built. (Unlike OS X, which works fine as long as you want the same hardware in your computer that Apple does.) Also, it's fair to exclude the OS price. Or do you think Apple charges itself a licensing fee?

I miss the point of this thread. You can go out and pick any electronic item and then dissect it to find out how much you could build it for, and I bet you could always do so for less then what the maker charges. What Apple did is they priced the Mac Pro competitively, just go look at a Dell that has similar specs, and you'll see it is actually more expensive.

Because it is called flame-baiting, if you are pretending to be serious and unbiased, yet post these things to lure people into flaming you for them.

It is against the rules to flame-bait.

But whatever floats your boat. Welcome to Neowin.

And you're unbiased, Mark?

Why do we have to compare a Mac to a pre-built Windows machine from Dell or another manufacturer? One of the benefits of using Windows is that we don't HAVE to buy a pre-built. (Unlike OS X, which works fine as long as you want the same hardware in your computer that Apple does.) Also, it's fair to exclude the OS price. Or do you think Apple charges itself a licensing fee?

Apple doesn't sell individual components to build their computers, they just sell computers, like Dell and HP. Why would you compare a bunch of parts to a fully assembled car, then claim the parts are a better buy?

Apple computers have a proprietary motherboard. You can't just pick a motherboard and claim they are the same. Your spec comparison sounds like a typical Mac bashing rant.

I'm pretty sure the Mac Pro's motherboard uses an Intel 945 chipset. It's not as proprietory as you think.

Why do we have to compare a Mac to a pre-built Windows machine from Dell or another manufacturer? One of the benefits of using Windows is that we don't HAVE to buy a pre-built. (Unlike OS X, which works fine as long as you want the same hardware in your computer that Apple does.) Also, it's fair to exclude the OS price. Or do you think Apple charges itself a licensing fee?
Why? Oh, because it is reasonable thing to do? I mean comparing costs of fully assembled and loaded systems against each other seems fair. Comparing an assembled, warranteed, and loaded with software system against a series of separate and wrong parts is ludicrous. It is a farce of a comparison.
And you're unbiased, Mark?
Almost everyone has a bit of "bias". However, some people lack the ability to step back and view from a more fair (and less disdain-filled) viewpoint. I don't use Windows. I don't use OSX. I don't care which way this evaluation turns out. I don't hate Apple. I don't hate Microsoft. I merely do not use either of them.

Feel free to look through my posts (go all the way back to 2003, if you like) and see for yourself. I, on the other hand, can clearly see your feelings when it comes to Apple.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • UniGetUI 2026.2.1 by Razvan Serea UniGetUI is an application whose main goal is to create an intuitive GUI for the most common CLI package managers for Windows 10 and Windows 11, such as Winget, Scoop and Chocolatey. With UniGetUI, you'll be able to download, install, update and uninstall any software that's published on the supported package managers — and so much more. UniGetUI features Install, update and remove software from your system easily at one click: UniGetUI combines the packages from the most used package managers for windows: WinGet, Chocolatey, Scoop, Pip, Npm and .NET Tool. Discover new packages and filter them to easily find the package you want. View detailed metadata about any package before installing it. Get the direct download URL or the name of the publisher, as well as the size of the download. Easily bulk-install, update or uninstall multiple packages at once selecting multiple packages before performing an operation Automatically update packages, or be notified when updates become available. Skip versions or completely ignore updates in a per-package basis. Manage your available updates at the touch of a button from the Widgets pane or from Dev Home pane with UniGetUI Widgets. The system tray icon will also show the available updates and installed package, to efficiently update a program or remove a package from your system. Easily customize how and where packages are installed. Select different installation options and switches for each package. Install an older version or force to install a 32bit architecture. [But don't worry, those options will be saved for future updates for this package] Share packages with your friends to show them off that program you found. Here is an example: Hey @friend, Check out this program! Export custom lists of packages to then import them to another machine and install those packages with previously-specified, custom installation parameters. Setting up machines or configuring a specific software setup has never been easier. Backup your packages to a local file to easily recover your setup in a matter of seconds when migrating to a new machine Devolutions UniGetUI 2026.2.1 changelog: This release brings several quality-of-life improvements, new troubleshooting features, privacy enhancements, and a collection of fixes and stability improvements across UniGetUI. New Features Added an operation counter to provide better visibility into ongoing package operations. Added a setting to automatically redact usernames from exported logs, making it easier to share diagnostic information while protecting personal data. UniGetUI now opens the release notes page after updating by default, helping users discover new features, improvements, and fixes. This behavior can be disabled from Settings. Expanded diagnostics and troubleshooting capabilities to simplify issue reporting and support. Improvements Improved update reliability and handling of update-related edge cases. Enhanced installer behavior when updating running UniGetUI instances. Improved package manager integrations and package metadata processing. Refined various user interface elements for a more consistent experience. Updated package screenshots, icons, and bundled resources. Improved logging and error reporting throughout the application. Bug Fixes Fixed multiple issues affecting application updates and self-update workflows. Resolved several package installation and upgrade edge cases. Fixed UI inconsistencies and unexpected behaviors across different pages. Improved handling of package manager responses and failure scenarios. Addressed issues affecting package discovery and metadata retrieval. Fixed a number of stability issues reported by the community. Performance & Stability Improved overall application stability during package operations. Reduced the likelihood of update interruptions and inconsistent update states. Various reliability and performance optimizations across the codebase. Download: UniGetUI 64-bit | Portable | ~200.0 MB (Open Source) Download: UniGetUI ARM64 | Portable Links: UniGetUI Home Page | GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 by Razvan Serea PDF4QT is a free and open-source application created to provide a complete solution for working with PDF documents in a simple, flexible, and effective way. It offers all the essential tools you need to handle your files: you can view PDFs with smooth navigation, edit content, annotate pages, and highlight key sections for better collaboration. It also allows you to compare two versions of a document, making it easy to spot changes. Built-in security features give you control over protecting sensitive information and managing access. Applications PDF4QT Viewer Profi: Advanced PDF browsing with encryption, digital signature verification, annotation editing, regex text search, page-to-image conversion, and plugin support. PDF4QT Viewer Lite: Lightweight viewer with essential, user-friendly PDF viewing functions. PDF4QT DocPage Organizer: Merge, split, move, clone, or add pages easily with an intuitive interface. PDF4QT DocDiff: Compare two PDFs, highlight differences page-to-page, and export results to XML. Key Features Multithreading Support for faster PDF processing Hardware Accelerated Rendering for smooth, high-quality display Encryption to secure documents Color Management to preserve accurate color profiles Optional Content Handling to control visibility of content Text Layout Analysis for better text extraction and editing Signature Validation for verifying digital signatures Annotations and Form Filling for interactivity Text-to-Speech Conversion to listen to PDFs Advanced Annotation Tools (images, text, etc.) File Attachments Management to view and save attachments Optimization to reduce file size without losing quality Command Line Tool for automation Audio Book Conversion from PDFs Internal Structure Inspector to explore PDF structure Compare Documents to detect differences Redaction to remove sensitive information Document Signing for digital authentication PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 release notes: PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 brings a major image compression and optimization update, especially for PageMaster and assembled output documents. Image compression is now integrated into the assembly/export workflow, backed by new optimizer infrastructure, UI controls, feedback fixes, and tests. This should make PageMaster much more useful for producing smaller output PDFs directly from assembled or reorganized documents. The release also contains a large PageMaster refresh with improved drag and drop, recent files, crop pages, save/restore functionality, rotation and size indicators, a reworked icon set, and faster output preview rendering. Viewer and Editor workflows were improved with wildcard Advanced Find, Enter-to-search behavior, better outline keyboard selection, startup settings, fullscreen support, side-to-side scrolling, smoother scrolling, text selection, snapping, and expanded annotation controls. Compatibility and platform behavior were improved as well, including fixes for embedded files, fonts, checkboxes, invisible text, menu colors, highlights, XMP metadata, Windows color management, AppImage packaging, MSIX generation, installer behavior, translations, and newer compiler/Qt warnings. The commit history also includes a new scan-and-edit plugin foundation and color management performance work. Changelog: Highlights Image compression for PageMaster / DocPage Organizer and assembled output documents (#92) Major PageMaster UX refresh, including drag and drop, recent files, crop pages, save/restore, icons, and output preview performance (#383, #18) Improved image optimization feedback, including final resolution and DPI updates (#384) Better Viewer and Editor navigation: fullscreen, side-to-side scrolling, smoother scrolling, text selection, snapping, and outline keyboard selection (#242, #368, #136, #321, #250, #373) Advanced Find wildcard mode and Enter-to-search behavior (#379, #378) PDF compatibility fixes for embedded files, fonts, checkboxes, invisible text, form content suppression, and Windows color management (#225, #356, #256, #230, #326, #224, #385, #388) Startup settings, custom settings directory support, Linux double-click viewer separation, and packaging/build fixes (#382, #380, #381) Scan-and-edit plugin foundation and broader translation updates from the 1.6.0.0 development cycle Resolved Issues Issue #389: Adding hyperlink to internal object in PDF Issue #388: Update Windows color management system Issue #385: PDFTextLayoutGenerator::isContentKindSuppressed(ContentKind kind) is missing ContentKind::Form Issue #384: In the "Optimize Images" dialog, the info on the final image resolution and final DPI does not update Issue #383: UX improvements for PDF4QT PageMaster tool (v1.5.3.1) (ex. DocPage Organizer) Issue #382: Startup Settings Issue #381: Separated apps for double-click viewer in Linux Issue #380: Ability to run app with custom settings directory - executable parameter with path Issue #379: Advanced Find - Wildcard Mode Issue #378: Advanced Find - Should start searching if Enter key is pressed Issue #376: Deleting a note jumps to Outline Issue #375: Not enough maximum compiled page cache Issue #373: Ctrl/Shift keyboard selection for Outline Issue #372: Option to not color images Issue #370: Extracting pages within a range Issue #369: Keeping redact box on Issue #368: Side-to-side scrolling Issue #357: Bulk delete/add/edit of page labels Issue #356: Compatibility issues - font problems Issue #354: Color blend mode for highlights Issue #352: Icon size of the sidebar Issue #349: Add inherit zoom to bookmark zoom options Issue #338: Editor toolbox higher than editor window Issue #334: Impossible to set French language Issue #326: Checkboxes don't render in PDF4QT Issue #324: Menu text not rendered with correct color Issue #321: Select text in Viewer Issue #291: Support for editing XMP metadata or exporting to PDF/UA format Issue #282: Editor outline view: always zooms to around 50% Issue #256: PDF4QT cannot show some specific fonts correctly Issue #253: Undo/redo doesn't work in "edit page content" mode Issue #250: Snapping Issue #242: Full screen Issue #234: Setting font, font size and area of text annotations Issue #230: Garbled characters when opening PDF files with PDF4QT Issue #225: PDF4QT cannot open PDF files with embedded files Issue #224: Option to remove invisible text Issue #194: Change page size Issue #160: Color | Custom (green/black) does not work Issue #136: Smooth scrolling of document with mouse middle wheel - flywheel Issue #92: Add image compression to PDF DocPage Organizer Issue #18: Performance optimization - OutputPreview Renderer Download: PDF4QT 1.6.0.0 | Portable | ~30.0 MB (Open Source) Download: PDF4QT MSIX | 29.4 MB Links: PDF4QT Home Page | PDF4QT @GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Same here or that Opera Max was not a thing anymore. Nothing lost... Who the hell would be considering Opera or Samsung when needing a VPN? LOL
    • If you go to the game developer website you can see that indeed Cyril Paciullo is the game director and developer https://www.pluralys.ca/about-us/ and when clicking on his name it lists Messenger Plus! as part of his CV. In case you wondered what happened to Patchou
    • A difficult position to be in. Either they cater to us users or they cater to news curators to potentially increase traffic. Personally, I wasn't being sarcastic. Hosting a website isn't free, so without traffic this site stops existing, and if you want traffic you have to play the game. I legitimately thought the title was good. Not because I like it, but because it's the kind of title people will click on. This site needs that.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
    • Reacting Well
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      Cosminus earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Year In
      ThatGuyOnline earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      181
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      120
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      85
    5. 5
      neufuse
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!