April 16 in Low End Mac History
April 15 - April 17
Highlights
- 1977: Apple II
introduced, the first non-kit computer from Apple.
1999
- C2, the next iMac, Dan Knight, The
iMac Channel. Will the next iMac have DVD, 100 MHz bus, FireWire,
64 MB RAM, a larger screen?
2001
- Steve Jobs was right, Stephen
Ashton, My Turn. Flower power, CD-RW, and iTunes makes the new iMac
an easy sell.
- BeOS or NeXT: Did Apple make
the wrong choice?, Jonathan Ploudre, Back & Forth. Did Be
really have the better operating system for the PowerPC?
- Next gen Power Macs,
Dan Knight & Anne Onymus, RumorLog. Thoughts on the demise of
the G4/667, faster Motorola CPUs, and future Power Macs.
2002
- The Mac is back, Steve
Watkins, The Practical Mac. Mac OS X and Java could make the Mac a
leading choice for programmers.
2003
2004
- Low-end Macs: Why Apple needs a
headless model for education and home users, Jeff Adkins, Mac
Lab Report. "We know Apple resists marketing to the low end because
the profit margins are higher for the stuff they do now."
- Kissing Internet Explorer for
OS X good-bye, Dan Knight, Mac Musings. Microsoft's browser
just kept hanging itself, so it was time to search for new
solutions.
- Macs, the virus scare, and safe
computing, Adam Robert Guha, Apple Archive. "...full time
antivirus software really isn't necessary on any platform, as long
as you take the proper precautions."
- Warnings on iBook logic board
replacement, pink iBook, wireless cantenna, Pod Shield, and
more, The 'Book Review. iBatt battery monitor,
FlyLight USB, Keyspan USB Server, bargain 'Books from $150 to
$2,499, and more.
2007
- Logitech TrackMan Wheel intuitive,
easy to use, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings. Trackballs
are well suited for some tasks, less well suited for others.
Logitech's thumb-controlled TrackMan Wheel is quickly mastered, and
its software provides lots of options.
- Different branches: NeXT, Newton,
and BeOS, Seb Payne, Different Branches. The main trunk of the
Apple tree gave us the Mac and iPhone, but other branches of the
Apple tree include NeXT, BeOS, and the Newton.
- Apple TV or iPhone a better Mac?,
benefits and drawbacks of Leopard delay, a DMG tip, and more,
Dan Knight, Low End Mac Mailbag. Also using a 'Book with WiFi
instead of paying for broadband, FireWire/USB 2.0 card for 20th
Anniversary May, upgrade in a Mac 128K, and more.
2008
- Open Computer:
The first Macintosh clone in a decade, Alan Zisman, Zis Mac.
Whether Psystar survives Apple Legal remains to be seen, but the Open
Computer does point to the market for a lower cost, expandable
Mac.
- The secret of Mac
security revealed, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz. Whether Macs are
secure because of obscurity, scarcity, or design, growing popularity is
making security more of an issue for Mac users.
- 18 bits can't display millions of
colors, today's magic is different from yesterday's, and more,
Charles Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings. Also more feedback on Mac
browsers, slow dialup Internet, and a SCSI-to-USB 2.0 solution.
2009
- Introduction to
hard drives, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz. A look at the factors that
influence hard drive performance: seek time, latency, throughput, and
caches.
- How about an
802.11g card for the original AirPort Card slot?, Dan Knight, Mac
Musings. There are a lot of old Macs with 802.11b AirPort Cards still
in use and with poor security. Someone should make a plug-and-play
802.11g replacement card to provide better security, higher throughput,
and improved range.
2010
- New MacBook Pros benchmarked,
ultrahigh performance MPG Pro Laptop, new OCZ SSDs, and more, The
'Book Review. Also Dell discontinues Hackintosh-friendly Mini 10v, iPad
as a notebook replacement, upgrades for newest MacBook Pro models, and
more.
- Mac OS X not on backburner, use
iPad as a second display, firmware updates for 27" iMac, and more,
Mac News Review. Also Apple patents combo USB 3.0/DisplayPort
connector, Snow Leopard security update, new performance enhancement
tool, and more.
2012
- Unicorns of Pismo
Lore: 1 GHz G3 and 900 MHz G4 Upgrades, Dan Bashur, Apple, Tech,
and Gaming. Although 550 MHz G4 Pismo upgrades are still available and
900 MHz G3 were rare, the holy grails of Pismo upgrades are PowerLogix
1 GHz G3 and 900 MHz G4 upgrades.
- Flashback Malware a
Wakeup Call for Mac Users, Alan Zisman, Zis Mac. The Flashback
malware targets Mac users and has given Apple a black eye. What to do
about it.
- How Much Longer
Will Apple Support the iPhone 3GS?, Simon Royal, Tech Spectrum.
Although Apple is still selling the iPhone 3GS, its days may be
numbered with a new iPhone and version of iOS approaching.
April 15 - April 17
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