15" iMac G4 with speakers and peripherals | |
| Manufacturer | Apple Computer |
|---|---|
| Product family | iMac |
| Type | All-in-one |
| Release date | January 7, 2002; 23 years ago (2002-01-07) |
| Discontinued | August 31, 2004; 21 years ago (2004-08-31) |
| Predecessor | iMac G3 |
| Successor | iMac G5 |
TheiMac G4[a] is anall-in-onepersonal computer designed, manufactured, and sold byApple Computer from January 2002 to August 2004. The computer is comprised of a hemispheric base that holds the components, including aPowerPC G4 processor, and a flatscreenliquid-crystal display (LCD) mounted above. The display is connected to the base via an adjustable arm that allows the monitor to be tilted and swiveled.
Apple's previous release, theiMac G3 (1998), was a commercial success at a time when the company was close to bankruptcy. As component prices fell, Apple envisioned a replacement that would use an LCD instead of the G3's bulkycathode-ray tube. The resulting iMac G4 took two years to develop. The new shape was inspired by a sunflower, with Apple's design team exploring different ways of attaching the monitor to the base before settling on a single stainless steel arm. The iMac G4 eschewed the colorful translucency of the iMac G3 in favor of opaque white with silver accents.
The iMac G4 was announced at theMacworld San Francisco trade show on January 7, 2002, and began shipping that month. It was updated over the years with faster internal components and larger LCDs. The iMac G4 was a critical and commercial success, selling more than 1.3 million units in its first year and roughly 3.1 million units alongside theeMac in its lifetime. It was succeeded by theiMac G5 in 2004, which replaced the G4's bold design language with a more conservative look that influenced later iMac models.
The iMac G4, originally marketed as "the new iMac",[a] is anall-in-one personal computer. The machine has an integrated, flatscreen,liquid-crystal display (LCD) mounted on an adjustable stainless steel arm. The arm allows the display to tilt up and down across 35 degrees, swivel the monitor 180 degrees side to side, and raise or lower it by 7 inches (18 cm).[2][3] A clear plastic "halo" frames the display.[4] The 10.6-inch (27 cm) diameter hemispherical base that contains the computer components is heavy enough to support the display, with the neck strong enough to support the weight of the entire computer for carrying.[5][6] The machine is designed for ease of use; the included instructions consist only of six pictures.[7]
The iMac G4 is powered by aPowerPC G4 processor similar to the one in thePower Mac G4, albeit missing 1 MB ofL3 cache.[8] The computer has a quiet fan to cool the G4 processor through vents at the top of the base, unlike the iMac G3, which was cooled via convection.[9][10] The power button, power plug, andinput/output ports are arranged on the back of the base, while the tray-loadingoptical drive sits in front, sporting a mirror finish Apple logo.[11][12] The power supply is also integrated into the base.[6] The machine features threeUniversal Serial Bus ports, twoIEEE 1394 (Firewire) ports,Video Graphics Array (VGA) out, 100 Mbit/sEthernet and 56 kbit/smodem connections.[6][11][13] After-purchase expansion is limited to additionalrandom access memory or anAirPort wireless networking card; these are added by removing an access plate secured with captive screws on the underside of the base.[13][14]
The machine was initially sold with theApple Pro Keyboard andApple Pro Mouse in white.[11] While the iMac has a built-in speaker, some models shipped with externalApple Pro Speakers, introduced for the "Digital Audio" Power Mac G4. These use a proprietary connector instead of a 3.5mmheadphone jack and have a higher output signal.[6][15] The iMac G4 was the first Mac to boot by default intoMac OS X, although it can also boot intoOS 9 to use older software.[11][13][16]Pre-installed software included productivity applications (AppleWorks,iPhoto,iMovie,iTunes,iDVD,Quicken, and FaxSTF) internet connectivity services (Earthlink andAOL), thePangea Software gameOtto Matic, andWorld Book Encyclopedia.[17]
TheiMac G3 was released in 1998 and was a major success for Apple; it sparked a 400% rise in the company's stock price over the next two years and sold six million units.[18] It helped reverse Apple's financial fortunes, marked the first major collaboration between returning CEOSteve Jobs andhead of designJony Ive, and was manufactured using new methodologies at Apple that would be applied to their future products.[19][20] After the iMac's release, Apple revamped its product offerings for other consumer segments, including thePower Mac G3 andG4 and theiBook. Apple's industrial designers increasingly held more sway, and the engineering department saw significant turnover in the wake of the industrial design group's demands.[21] In 2001, the design team moved from a separate building to a new space at the company's headquarters, offering a larger area to generate ideas, prototype models, and showcase them to Jobs.[22]

Eighteen months after the iMac's release, Ive's team began considering a redesign that swapped the computer's bulkycathode-ray tube screen, around which the computer was designed, with a thin, flatliquid-crystal display (LCD).[23] Ive produced a prototype that attached the computer components behind the screen, similar to his work on theTwentieth Anniversary Macintosh.[24] The design came with drawbacks; the hard drive and optical drive would be less performant in a vertical orientation, and the added heat produced by the G4 processor would necessitate a noisy fan that would be positioned close to the user. There would also be no easy way to tilt and swivel the display without moving the entire machine.[25] Jobs hated the design, which he felt lacked purity. "Why have this flat display if you're going to glom all this stuff on its back?" he asked. "We should let each element be true to itself."[26] When Ive visited Jobs' house to talk over the issue, Jobs suggested basing the computer on sunflowers, which were growing in his garden. The suggestion of a narrative in the design appealed to Ive, who began sketching out designs drawing on the sunflower shape.[27][b]
The machine took two years to develop.[25] Ive and the design team first tried to attach the screen to the base with a series of vertebrae held together by spring-loaded cables. A clamp on the back of the screen applied tension to the cables and allowed the spine to loosen or stiffen. This design required two hands to grab the screen and release the clamp, and proved difficult for some users to adjust.[29] Ive solicited feedback from design consultancy firmIDEO, who recommended abandoning the spine idea in favor of a more practical design with two rigid arms. Designer Doug Satzger suggested that they did not need the amount of flexibility the two-arm design offered, and after Jobs concurred, the second arm was dropped. The final arm was made of stainless steel with an internal spring that balanced the screen while being free enough to be moved by the touch of a finger.[30] The designers added the plastic halo ringing the screen that offered space for adjustment without touching the display, and minimized the look of a thick bezel around the edges. The computer components of the machine were put in the weighted base, which borrowed work done for the ill-fatedPower Mac G4 Cube to cool the machine by using a fan to draw air from the bottom and expelling it out the top.[31]
The iMac's final design suggested a sunflower or a desk lamp, and itsanthropomorphic features made it, like its predecessor, feel more friendly and approachable. Jobs was so taken with the design that, in an uncommon move, he listed himself as the primary inventor on one of the design patents for the machine.[27][29] Whereas the iMac G3 had been made of translucent plastics in a variety of colors, the new iMac was mostly opaque white, following from decisions Jobs had made to make theiPod music player all white. Ive called the color "pure and quiet", and Jobs felt the color made consumer products feel more premium, rather than disposable.[32]

The new iMac was unveiled at theMacworld San Francisco trade show on January 7, 2002.[33] Rumors had predicted a flat-panel iMac since the previous summer, as pundits considered the machine due for a revamp amid declining sales.[12][34] In the aftermath of thedot-com crash, Apple's market share had eroded to just above 4% in the United States, and less worldwide. Analysts had heightened expectations that the new iMac would be able to shore up Apple's market position.[18] On stage, Jobs declared the machine "the best thing I think we've ever done [...] it has a rare beauty and grace that is going to last the next decade." Ive surreptitiously walked the show floor to gauge the public's reaction.[33] The floating monitor and arm'santhropomorphism and sense of personality was highlighted in product videos and ads.[35]
Apple positioned the computer as the center of its "digital hub" strategy, where the Mac connected multimedia peripherals like the iPod and organized and edited audio and video.[36][37] Jobs argued that most consumers wanted a better computer than the ones commonly available, and that meant a Mac; the iMac and hub strategy were part of what he saw as a "third phase" of personal computing, where users used computers to produce creative media.[18][38][c] The price of an iMac with the ability to burn DVDs was under US$2,000 ($3,496 in2024), compared to the $3,500 it had cost two years earlier for the capability on a Power Mac.[38]
Apple launched the iMac G4 in a staggered fashion. Only the most-expensive 15-inch model was available in January 2002, followed by the cheaper configurations in February and March.[39] Preorders of the iMac in its first week after announcement were the highest of any Apple product since the original.[40] Apple said it received more than 150,000 preorders for the iMac in the first month,[41] and produced more than 5,000 iMacs a day to meet the initial demand. Higher prices for RAM and LCDs caused the company to raise the price on iMac configurations by $100, though existing orders were honored at the original price.[42] A high-end model with a larger display was released in August. This 17-inch iMac offered a widescreen 1440×900 pixel display, more hard drive capacity, better graphics, and was slightly heavier. The other iMacs dropped back to their original prices.[43] Low-end versions of the previous G3 model continued to be sold until 2003 until they were replaced by theeMac. The most expensive configuration of the eMac was cheaper than the entry-level iMac G4.[36][44][45]
The next revision to the iMac line came in February 2003; the previous configurations offered were reduced to a single 15- and 17-inch model each. Alongside lower prices, they featured faster processors, optical drives, and fasterAirPort Extreme networking and RAM on the 17-inch model.[46] The 17-inch model also added an audio-in jack, the ability to mirror the display tocomposite video devices via an adapter, and aBluetooth expansion module for short-range wireless communication with peripherals.[47]
In September 2003, the iMac line was revised again, with the 15- and 17-inch models receiving faster processors and graphics at the same prices, and faster USB 2.0 ports replacing the 1.1 versions. The 15-inch model also received the Bluetooth and AirPort Extreme networking support that had previously been exclusive to the larger model.[48] A larger 20-inch monitor option was added in November, featuring the same specs as the 17-inch model. The 20-inch models were heavier and the arm stiffer to support the larger display, which made the monitors harder to manipulate and position.[49]
The iMac G4 was positively received, particularly the flat-screen design that allowed critics to forget the rest of the computer was there.[2][12][39]The Washington Post's Rob Pegoraro called the design "staggeringly useful" and found the screen was never in the wrong place.[13]USA Today's Edward Baig and others liked the desk lamp look,[3] with many comparing it to theLuxo Jr. character that starred in aPixar short animation.[36][d] Pegoraro and James Coates compared the computer's dome to the characterR2-D2.[e] Others found the iMac G4 ungainly, withThe Wall Street Journal'sWalter Mossberg andThe Vancouver Sun's Peter Wilson left with the sense it was always likely to tip over.[39][52]Popular Mechanics's Tobey Grumet found the iMac larger than the promotional shots suggested, and that overall it took up nearly as much space as the CRT model it replaced.[50]
Reviewers cited the iMac's ease of use as a major positive of the machine,[7] as well as the quality of its included software.[13][40][53]The Irish Times's Karlin Lillington said the setup of the computer was so simple a child could do it, while Baig cited the "plug and play" nature of its hardware and software as the best feature of the computer.[7][3] The large port selection was also praised,[2][54] withThe Baltimore Sun's David Zeiler saying they met the needs of home and education consumers who would not care about the computer's limited expansion options.[40]PC Magazine andHWM were among the publications that suggested the machine would entice Windows PC users to switch to Macs,[54][55] with the prices of comparably-specced iMacs and Windows PCs generally close.[f] Joe Wilcox ofbetanews felt that the iMac and similar all-in-one systems were as expensive but less portable than midrange Windows laptop computers.[8]
Critics noted the performance improvements of the G4 processor. Jason Snell ofMacworld wrote that compared to the consumer iMac G3, the new iMac was fast enough for demanding users who did not need the expansion options of a Power Mac.[2] Peter Wilson andThe New York Times'sDavid Pogue felt that the iMac was a better value than the lower-end Power Macs, and might steal sales away from the latter.[12][52] In comparison,The Guardian's Neil McIntosh found the iMac powerful enough, but that the Power Macs were much speedier than the on-paper difference suggested.[51]Macworld speed tests found that the iMac generally performed worse than equivalent G4 processors in the Power Mac line,[56][57] while another comparison found that the iMac lagged behind a similarly pricedPentium 4 system in multitasking performance.[8]
Other complaints about the iMac included the placement of the computer's ports and power button on the back of the base, since this made it harder to plug and unplug peripherals.[g] Neil McIntosh called it the machine's "Achilles heel".[51] Baig andPC Magazine's Troy Dreier found that the external speakers sounded tinny.[3][54] Other deficiencies noted were the limited options for expansion,[39][52] color-shifting of the screens when viewed at extreme angles,[58] and the small amount of RAM offered on the entry-level models.[40] Some reviews complained of hardware glitches and malfunctions.[3][13] Dreier felt the keyboard and mouse were unappealing and likely to be immediately replaced by users,[54] while Mossberg andZDNet regretted the lack of a wireless option for the mouse and keyboard,[39][53] which Apple would not offer until 2003.[59]

Apple sold 1.3 million iMacs in 2002, making it their top-selling product for the year.[60] iMac and eMac models sales during the iMac G4's lifespan totaled roughly 3.1 million units.[h] The iMac G4 helped rehabilitate Apple's public image after the failure of the G4 Cube,[33] and proved that Apple's success with the iMac G3 was not a fluke.[10][62] Apple enthusiasts have called it one of the best computers Apple has made.[35][62][63] The design won a goldInternational Design Excellence Award in 2002, and Apple won more awards that year than any other company.[64] Ive won the Designer of the Year award from theDesign Museum in 2003 for his work on the iMac and other products.[65] iMac G4 models are held in the permanent collections of museums such as theMuseum of Modern Art,HomeComputerMuseum,Museums Victoria, andScience Museum Group.[66]
While Jobs had declared the iMac G4 would reshape the look of computers for the next decade, the iMac's ergonomic design language would not last three years. The balance of the machine was challenged by larger displays, and the G4 processor's successor, the G5, ran much hotter and needed more cooling.Macworld called the successoriMac G5 "conservative" compared to the G3 and G4 models, as it gave up the exuberant colors and sunflower design of previous iMacs in favor of placing the computer internals behind the display[67]—the same approach Jobs had previously eschewed as inelegant. This design proved to be the template future iMac models would use.[63][1] The iMac G4 has been adapted by hobbyists to use newer components, such as Apple's latestcustom chips.[68][69]
| Model | Flat Panel[70] | 15-inch 800 MHz[71] | 17-inch 1 GHz[71] | USB 2.0[72] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Release date | January 7, 2002[73] | August 13, 2002[73] | February 4, 2003[73] | September 8, 2003[73] | November 18, 2003[73] | ||||
| Display | 15"Thin-film-transistor (TFT) LCD | 17" TFT widescreen LCD | 15" TFT LCD | 17" TFT widescreen LCD | 15" TFT LCD | 17" TFT widescreen LCD | 20" TFT widescreen LCD | ||
| Processor | 700 MHz | 800 MHz | 1.0 GHz | 1.25 GHz | |||||
| Cache | 256 KB level 2 cache | ||||||||
| Front Side Bus | 100 MHz | 133 MHz | 167 MHz | ||||||
| Memory[i] | 128 MB of PC133SDRAM | 256 MB of PC133 SDRAM | 128 or 256 MB of PC133 SDRAM | 256 MB of PC133 SDRAM | 256 MB of PC2100 (266 MHz) DDR SDRAM | 256 MB of PC2700 (333 MHz) DDR SDRAM | |||
| Graphics | Nvidia GeForce 2 MX 32 MB of DDR SDRAM | Nvidia GeForce 4 MX 32 MB of DDR SDRAM | Nvidia GeForce 2 MX 32 MB of DDR SDRAM | Nvidia GeForce 4 MX 64 MB of DDR SDRAM | Nvidia GeForce 4 MX 32 MB of DDR SDRAM | Nvidia GeForce FX 5200 Ultra 64 MB of DDR SDRAM | |||
| Hard drive | 40 GB, 60 GB, 80 GB | 60 GB, 80 GB | 80 GB, 160 GB | ||||||
| Optical drive | 32× CD-R and 10× CD-RW write CD-RW Drive | 8× DVD and 32× CD readCombo drive | 6× DVD and 24× CD read; 2× DVD-R, 8× CD-R, and 4× CD-RW writeSuperDrive | 32× Combo drive | 4× SuperDrive | 32× Combo drive | 4× SuperDrive | ||
| Network | 10BASE-T/100BASE-TXEthernet 56k V.90 modem Optional 11 Mbit/sAirPort 802.11b | 10BASE-T/100BASE-TX Ethernet 56k V.92 modem Optional 11 Mbit/sAirPort 802.11b | 10BASE-T/100BASE-TX Ethernet 56k V.92 modem OptionalBluetooth 1.1 Optional 54 Mbit/s AirPort Extreme 802.11b/g | ||||||
| Peripherals | 3×USB 1.1 2×FireWire 400 Built-in microphone Audio out Apple Pro Speakers mini-jack | 3× USB 2.0 2×FireWire 400 Built-in microphone Audio out Apple Pro Speakers mini-jack | |||||||
| Video out | Mini-VGA | ||||||||
| Original operating system | Mac OS 9 andMac OS X 10.1 | Mac OS X Jaguar 10.2 | Mac OS X Panther 10.3 | ||||||
| Maximum operating system | Mac OS X Tiger 10.4 if 256 MB RAM installed, otherwiseMac OS X Panther 10.3 | Mac OS X Leopard 10.5 if 512 MB RAM installed, otherwiseMac OS X Tiger 10.4 | |||||||
| Weight | 21.2 lb. / 9.7 kg | 22.8 lb. / 10.4 kg | 21.2 lbs. / 9.7 kg | 22.8 lbs. / 10.4 kg | 21.2 lb. / 9.7 kg | 22.8 lb. / 10.4 kg | 40.1 lb. / 18.2 kg | ||