Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced a back-up device called Time Capsule at Macworld in San Francisco on Tuesday, which automates the Time Machine backup application in Mac OS X Leopard.
Apple's Time Capsule isn't as round or cylindrical as you might expect.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced a back-up device called Time Capsule at Macworld 2008 in San Francisco on Tuesday, which automates the Time Machine backup application in Mac OS X Leopard.
Time Capsule, which was one of four major announcements from Jobs's keynote speech, is basically an 802.11n wireless router with a 500GB or 1TB hard disk drive, which follows the design of Apple's Airport Extreme.
"We want people backing up their content," Jobs said.
Once set up, Leopard's built-in Time Machine software can automate the backup of data from all Macs on a single network to the Time Capsule.
Wired connectivity options include three Gigabit LAN ports, one Gigabit Ethernet WAN port and a USB 2.0 port. Security-wise the Time Capsule supports WPA, WPA2 and 128-bit WEP encryption.
The Time Capsule costs AU$429 for the 500GB model and AU$699 for the 1TB version.
The rear end of the Apple Time Capsule.
At Macworld 2008, Apple also announced its "="" rel="nofollow" class="c-regularLink" target="_blank">MacBook Air, iTunes Movie Rentals (in the US), and updated software for its "="" rel="nofollow" class="c-regularLink" target="_blank">iPhone, Apple TV.
CNET.com.au's Jeremy Roche travelled to San Francisco as a guest of Apple.