September 15 in Low End Mac History
Sept. 14 - Sept.
16
1998
1999
2000
- Picking a PCI Power Mac, Adam
Robert Guha, Apple Archive. There are a lot of models to pick from, so
here's a quick overview.
- The main course, Coz, Cozmo's
Email. Performas, Quadras, modems, file conversion, and a whole lot
more.
2003
2004
2005
- Beef up your Mac's security.
Mac OS X is already a lot more secure than Windows. Here are several
tips that let you further protect yourself and your Mac.
- Speed dial iSync support: A missed
opportunity, Dan Knight, Mac Musings. There's no easy way to import
or reorganize your cell phone's speed dial numbers on your Mac.
- iPod nano news, reviews, tips, and
accessories; iPod backlash, heartbreak, and obsession; and more,
iPod News Review. Also libraries that don't support iPods, 1,000 iPod
accessories, wake up to music from your iPod, colorful earbuds, new
software, and more.
- Apple locks out clones, Intel switch
bodes well for Apple, and transition won't be easy for some, The
Macintel Report. OS X 10.4.2 for Intel stymies OSx86, efficient CPUs
and optimize libraries should help spike Apple sales, Intel switch a
challenge to some developers, and more.
2006
- The story behind the
Sony Walkman, Tom Hormby, Orchard. Sony's chairman was convinced
that a small, portable cassette player would find a receptive market.
Everyone else thought leaving out a record function doomed the
Walkman.
- eWorld: Apple's
overpriced, poorly marketed online service, Cortland. Apple's eWorld was innovative, built communities, and allowed
Internet access in 1994, but hardly anyone even knew it existed. And
those who did thought it overpriced.
- Reliability can't wait: Reflections
of a MacBook guinea pig, Andrew J Fishkin, The Mobile Mac. Lesson
learned from using a PowerBook 145B, PowerBook 5300c, Toshiba
Portegé 4000, and MacBook: "let someone else buy the bleeding
edge."
- iTV will succeed because it lets
you watch video on your TV, Adam Robert Guha, Apple Archive. Apple
realizes that we'd rather watch our TV show and movie downloads on our
television sets, not our computer monitors or iPods.
- Core 2 iMac praise, MS Vista 'a
pile of crap', Cube redux?, high capacity iPod battery, and more,
Mac News Review. Also the Mac Pro's 'pure, unadulterated power',
Parallels now runs on the Mac Pro, iMac Core 2 specs, dual G4 upgrade
for MDD and Xserve G4, and more.
- MacBook shutdown solved, better
batteries after recall, MacBook Pro better for Vista than Vaio, and
more, The 'Book Review. Also MacBook troubleshooting, the value of
a used iBook, Apple to sell 1 million 'Books this quarter, replacing
cells in an old PowerBook G3 battery, bargain 'Books from $299 to
$1,299, and more.
- Quad-core Mac Pro, carbon-free
computing, Lonelygirl15 scam, Microsoft Zune, and more, Ed Eubanks
Jr, Tech Tracker. Also students have option to buy lectures online,
students spurn free and legal music downloads, the frustration of
anonymous surfing, and Apple's FairPlay undergoes antitrust
scrutiny.
2008
- 'I invented the
iPod', Dan Knight, Mac Musings. Before CDs came to market, Kane
Kramer conceived of a portable personal digital music system that
anticipated the iPod and iTunes Store in many ways.
- Does constant
Time Machine activity compromise disk longevity?, Charles W Moore,
Miscellaneous Ramblings. Time Machine is a marquee feature of Mac OS X
10.5, but isn't all of that disk activity likely to wear our your drive
prematurely?
- FileMaker version history,
Mike Weber, Mac Software Guide. A historical overview of FileMaker for
the Mac.
2009
- Apple vs. Microsoft
on open source software, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz. While both
Microsoft and Apple are involved with open source software, each brings
a very different viewpoint to the table.
- Charles Moore
finally gets broadband!, Charles W Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings.
Moore lives in rural Nova Scotia and has been posting to the Mac Web
over slow dialup since 1997. Broadband has finally reached his
area.
- Apple and gaming:
Today's reality and tomorrow's dream, Dan Bashur, Apple, Tech, and
Gaming. By creating a way to play iPhone/iTouch games on Macs and/or
Apple TV, Apple could become a dominant player in portable and
home-based gaming.
2010
- Walking in the
clouds: Google vs. MobileMe, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing.
Apple's $99 per year MobileMe service syncs Macs and iOS devices to the
cloud, but Google offers competitive services for free.
- Tech changes, and so
does life, Dan Bashur, Apple, Tech, and Gaming. Dan Bashur reflects
on the birth of a daughter, the loss of his father, and bumps in the
road of life.
2011
Sept. 14 - Sept. 16
Go to LEM Archive Index