Click the link.
Click the link I will post.
If you are seeing it on the Apple website the specifications are listed there.
apple man
The iMac G5 used a G5 processor - hence the name. This was the last of the PPC processors that Apple used before switching to the Intel processors. It followed on from the G3 and G4 processors found in earlier iMacs and iBooks.
The technical specifications of the new iMac depend on which one you buy. There are 21.5" and 27" version which have processors ranging from 2.7GHz to 3.2GHz.
Depends on what year and what particular model. A new iMac base model comes with an Intel 2.5 GHz Quad Core i5 processor.
The first Mac with Quad Core processors went on sale in 2009.
Before Apple started using Intel processors in their iMacs they used a Power PC processor. The G3 was the third generation of these processors. It was followed by the G4 and G5. The G3 iMac was discontinued in 2003 and is not powerful enough to run today's software although it would suffice for basic email, text editing type work.
This device works with Windows Operating Systems
At the time the iMac was created computer marketing had become a numbers game with processor speeds and memory sizes being used to sell the latest fastest product. Apple realised that computers were fast enough and large enough for the needs of most consumers, who were increasingly wanting to connect to the Internet, and so the iMac was marketed as a simple solution to meet the computing needs of the average consumer without emphasising processor speeds etc. The advertising compared the clean all in one design of the iMac with the wired tangle that was the average PC of the time; and explained the 3 Steps needed to connect with the Internet - there was no step 3. (See links below)
No, you can only get that discount on a new iMac not a refurbished iMac.
The original iMac was the G3 which came out in (1998). It was followed by the G4 (2002), then the G5 (2004), then the Intel iMac plastic version (2006). The 5th iMac was the aluminum iMac which came out in (August 2007), followed by the iMac Aluminum Unibody (2009). The newest iMac is simply called 2012 iMac and it came out on November 30, 2012.