Skip to main content

New Mac Mini pr0n – Mini Colo takes a new Mini apart

Mac Mini Colo has somehow gotten their hands on a new Mini and already unboxed and undressed one for the world to see.  By now we’re almost out of things to say about these little guys.  Gaze upon the guts (which look kinda like the guts did 4 years ago). Pasted below for the Bottom Pheeders.

 

 

 

 

The New Packaging
The packaging for the new Mac mini is quite a bit smaller. Apple says it is 31% smaller. Below you’ll see it compared to the size of the software box that Leopard comes in. They have this Mac mini box wrapped in cellophane. I’ve seen that done with Mac minis bought from Best Buy, but never from the Apple Store.

Also missing from the box is the handle that used to be on top. Surprisingly, without the handle the box seems a little heavier. I suppose it’s because it’s not as easy to hold in the hand.

Another strange thing is that the Mac mini has 10 vents on the back, but the box only shows 9 vents on the back. (Arn at Macrumors pointed this out to me.) Opening the box used to be from the top, but now it slides out from the side. You are immediately greeted with the familiar "Designed by Apple in California."

You lift this small box up with a side tab. As you’d guess, the small box contains the the Applications Install DVD , the Mac OS X Install DVD, and your documentation. The Application Install DVD let’s you install Safari, Mail, Spaces, iChat and Time Machine without having to boot from the full Mac OS X DVD. This Application Install DVD wasn’t given with the last Mac mini. The Mac OS X Install DVD has version 10.5.6 on it.

The Mac mini itself has very little padding on the sides. In the last package, it was surrounded by styrofoam.

Under the Mac mini is one more cardboard box to pull up. Below that is the familiar power adapter, the extension cord, and a mini-DVI to DVI adapter. This will make it much easier for people to use their existing displays since the adapter is included. I was happy to see that the power brick no longer has the sticky wrapping on it. I can’t tell you how many Mac minis we’ve received with the wrapper halfway on still because they got tired of picking it off.


 

External Views
The outside of the Mac mini looks nearly identical. It has the same aluminum siding and the white plastic top. I guess I can’t prove it, but having handled several hundred of the last generation Mac minis, the aluminum feels different. Perhaps it was manufactured differently. (Though I doubt it comes from a single block of aluminum.) Below is a little Mac love with the previous generation on top, and the new version on bottom.


 

Taking A Look Inside

I don’t know hardware components as well as the guys at

ifixit.com

, so I’ll leave the in depth disection to them. However, I’ve opened up so many of these Mac minis I have a good feel for what has changed.

 

Luckily, they can still easily be opened with a putty knife.

However, one used to have to disconnect a cable on the front right corner. That is no longer there.

The screws are on all four corners still. There are now three antennas. From what I can tell, the back right is still Airport and the front left is Bluetooth. There is an extra antenna on the back left which I’m sure

ifixit.com

will identify.

On the last version, you just had to remove the front right power cable to remove the top section or it would disconnect as you pulled. Now, there are three cables that will disconnect if you pull straight up. Take careful note of where they detach from. Here are where all three antennas connect to the motherboard.

A full shot with the optical, the fan, and the hard drive removed. The RAM has changed orientation. (It used to be perpindicular to the front, but now it is parallel.

Three months ago, we published an article called

The State of the Mac mini

. In this article, we were the first the mention that the new mini would have a SATA optical drive, making it easier to have a second hard drive in it. It turns out that the optical drive is indeed SATA. (We also thought there would be a BTO option of replacing the optical drive with another hard drive, but we were wrong on that account.) Here is the info from the optical drive.

And the back of the optical drive and hard drive.

Well, those are the main parts of the new Mac mini. We’re going to get right to work on benchmarking this Mac mini in server performance. The last version was solid and performed well. With the extra RAM (at a faster speed), and the larger hard drives, these Mac minis should make even better servers.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel

Manage push notifications

notification icon
We would like to show you notifications for the latest news and updates.
notification icon
Please wait...processing
notification icon
We would like to show you notifications for the latest news and updates.
notification icon
Please wait...processing