Back to Pismo and Loving It
From Andrew:
Good evening Charles,
I've been an avid reader of your articles here and your other online
publications. I used to have a Pismo when they first came out
in 2000. I loved it and knew it was a keeper right from the start.
However, due to some financial reasons I had to sell it after having it
only just over a year. I was heartbroken. Some time later I purchased
an iBook G4 933 MHz. It
was a good machine, but it was no Pismo. Unfortunately, the iBooks'
power board gave in over the summer. I couldn't afford a new Mac, so I
opted for a Compaq laptop running Vista. Wow, talk about an
adjustment....
All this to say that I recently became frustrated with the Compaq,
and having read your recent articles about the G4 and RAM upgrades for
your Pismos got me thinking. So I contacted Wegener Media, since you
found them helpful, and am now proudly running a 500 MHz Pismo with the
extended battery and 1 GB RAM. It arrived very well packaged and
also in great shape. Just a few gum marks from some old stickers I
assume. I now know I should never have parted with my original Pismo.
It is truly a great PowerBook, and with the PC Card slot has a lot of
life in it. I'm running Tiger, and it seems to be handling it quite
well.
Just thought I'd share the story with you with your interest in the
Pismo's.
Thanks for the great articles and all the best,
Andrew
Hi Andrew,
A tale with a delightful ending. I'm still greatly
enjoying and appreciating my Pismos. Upgrading to 1 GB of RAM in
one and installing internal AirPort cards in both of them has given the
memory-maxed one especially a new lease on life. A machine I'd much
rather use than a new PC netbook. Running Tiger, there's little to
complain about speedwise for most of the stuff I do, although video
support remains the weakest link with just 8 MB of VRAM. However
the MacBook covers that base nicely.
Thanks for the kind words and happy that you've got a
Pismo again.
Charles
Still Using an Apple IIGS and WallStreet PowerBook
Hi Charles,
I always read and appreciate the articles on Low End Mac.
It was years before I finally gave up on my Apple II Plus and my
Apple IIGS and bought a Mac - it was a
WallStreet PowerBook,
probably the best Macintosh of its time. By now I have a G5 with
maximum memory as well as an Intel-powered 17" MacBook Pro, both
running OS X 10.5.8.
Every month I print my newsletter mailing labels on an HP LaserJet
IIIp from an Apple IIGS using a program
called "Addressed for Success" - the only Apple II program I still
regularly use. And how do I get my updates to the Apple IIGS? From 3.5" high density floppies which are recorded
on the WallStreet. The data get to the WallStreet via Zip disk,
recorded by a Titanium G4
PowerBook, which is ethernet-connected to the Mac G5.
While it would be possible to attach the WallStreet to the ethernet
network, I have found over the years that it is incredibly slow and
tedious to get the WallStreet (running 9.2.2) to talk to the PowerBook
or the G5 or the MacBook Pro, all running OS X, so I no longer
bother to try.
The Addressed for Success program works well, the HP LaserJet works
well, the Apple IIGS works well, and so
far that's my preferred way to print mailing labels.
When one of them finally breaks, then I'll seek a Mac label-printing
solution.
Thanks,
Jim - still happily living in a Microsoft-free computing environment.
Hi Jim,
As a fellow WallStreet owner and enthusiast, I agree
with you that it was the cream of the Mac crop in 1998 - and one of the
best Macs of all time. Mine, in its eleventh year, is still in service
on loan to my daughter.
Thanks for the report on your workarounds keeping that
very ancient Apple IIGS application
useful. I still use some utilities and apps from 68k Mac Classic days,
but the Apple IIs were before my time on computers.
Charles
G4 Power Mac Upgrades: Go for Dual CPUs
From Dan Knight:
Charles,
James asks which will make
his Quicksilver Power
Mac run movies, YouTube, and Hulu better, a faster CPU or a better
video card. I use "vintage" G4 Power Macs daily: a 1.0 GHz dual Mirrored Drive Doors
with 2 GB of RAM, a 7200 rpm hard drive, and Rage 128 Pro graphics with OS X 10.4
and a 1.6 GHz dual
upgraded Digital
Audio with 1.25 GB of RAM, a 7200 rpm hard drive, and the ATI Radeon 9000 Pro with OS X 10.5.
(I swapped the video cards because Leopard needs more GPU power than
Tiger.)
I can't answer James' question, only make some suggestions, as I
haven't done a video card upgrade since my Umax SuperMac S900 days (that was a great
computer!). The first thing I'd look at is a dual-processor upgrade.
Macs running OS X run much more smoothly with two or more cores.
You'll probably want to look on eBay and LEM
Swap, as new dual G4 upgrades are expensive - $460 for a
dual 1.6 GHz from OWC, for instance. (At less than half the price,
OWC also lists a 1.6 GHz single CPU upgrade, which roughly doubles
power in the 867 MHz Quicksilver.)
Looking at those prices, it might make more sense to pick up a used
Power Mac G4 with dual processors. A few months back, a dual 1 GHz
Quicksilver went for under $200 on LEM Swap. That's less than either of
the CPU upgrades. Be sure to check Craigslist for local deals on secondhand
Power Macs. You'll probably get a better video card in the process.
I'm sure other readers will weigh in, so you'll hear from those with
experience upgrading video cards as well.
Dan Knight,
LowEndMac.com
Best Upgrade Options for a Power Mac G4
From Ron:
Charles,
One of your correspondents wondered about what to upgrade in his 733
MHz Quicksilver. I had such a machine and went through just about all
the possibilities. The first upgrade I made was the video. It had the
same original card in it. After looking at the choices, I opted to
flash an Nvidia GeForce 6200
from PC to Mac. Your reader might not want to do all that, but such
cards are available on
eBay for around $75. That made a huge difference in video
performance. But the 733 G4 that came in that machine was such a dog,
it's hard to decide which made the most difference, the GPU or the
CPU.
My solution was to buy a Quicksilver 2002 dual 1 GHz
processor card and heatsink on eBay for just $144. Between the two,
I've ended up with a machine that does just about everything quite
well. I've been very happy with it, and my granddaughter is also happy
with it, because Club Penguin
(runs in Flash) is eminently usable, whereas before it didn't work at
all.
The last thing I did, mostly because I could, was to convert to a
SATA disk and controller. These computers can only support SATA 1
because of the speed of the PCI bus, but even that is significantly
faster than PATA. The machine is running Leopard (Mac OS X 10.5.8), and the drive
change made a very noticeable difference in all activities related to
disk use. I don't have the figures handy anymore, but one thing that is
easy to measure is the fact that the machine goes from click (the "do
you really mean it button") to total shutdown in just six seconds.
In terms of overall performance, I have to say my observation is
that OS X, including Leo, is a very much happier system on
multiprocessor hardware. I also own a dual 533 DA machine, and that
computer is a smoother, better performer than the stock G4 733 QS
was.
Hope all this helps,
Ron
Hi Ron,
Thanks for the information and insights. Looks like
installing both upgrades is the way to go.
Charles
Power Mac G4: Upgrade CPU Before Video
From Josh:
Charles,
Three years ago, I bought a secondhand Power Mac G4 Digital Audio
(2001) with a 733 MHz processor - essentially the same machine that
James has. Shortly thereafter, I upgraded both its processor and video,
using a 1.47 GHz Mercury Extreme G4 card and a Radeon 9700 Pro video
card with 128 MB VRAM (PC version "flashed" to be Mac compatible). Now
it's a decent machine for anything online - web videos play fine. Still
chokes over large, high-quality videos playing from the hard drive
(like a 2 GB, 1500-bit QuickTime movie), but for everyday work,
it's all you need.
If you have to choose, I'd go with the processor over the video
card. In 2007, my upgrades cost me $280 (which included an absolute
steal - $190 for the Mercury Extreme card). Today, the same cards can
be had on eBay for $160 and $97, respectively, shipping included.
However, I don't know if my 1.4 GHz G4 really has the horsepower to
keep up with the video card (which was really meant for G5s, or at
least dual-processor G4s). My processor still seems to be the
bottleneck when I run it hard. So you could probably sink $150 or $160
into the processor and find a decent 64 MB video card for around $40 to
$50, putting the cost of your upgrade at about $200.
The other question is, as Charles pointed out, would you be better
off taking that $200 and putting it into a newer computer with better
baseline specs? If pure performance is what you're looking for, then
it's hard to argue with a 1.66
GHz or 1.83 GHz dual-core Mac mini, which are going on eBay for
around $325 to $400. Those Mac minis would run circles around even my
upgraded G4, and their stock video, while nothing exciting, is still
twice as good as what you've got right now. But of course they're far
less upgradeable and might not be compatible with your older
peripherals (not to mention OS 9, if you're still using those
apps). But something to give some serious thought.
Good luck!
Josh
Hi Josh,
Thanks for the report on your experiences. Personally,
I would spend the money on a Mac mini, but I appreciate that there may
be reasons why sticking with the more expandable and versatile tower
machine would be the preference of some.
Charles
Faster YouTube on Older Macs: Downgrade to Flash
8
From Joshua:
Hi Charles,
The best YouTube performance increase I've seen was from simply
downgrading the flash player installed in OS X.
Neither Flash Player 10 or 9 want to play nice with older Macs, and
many people unknowingly update to the latest and greatest player.
To downgrade just go to: http://kb2.adobe.com/cps/141/tn_14157.html
and pick the appropriate version of Flash uninstaller, then go to
http://kb2.adobe.com/cps/142/tn_14266.html
and download Flash Player 8. You will find the OS X installer in
the latest version folder R42.
After the downgrade, video and audio sync well on my iBook. My
iMac G3 400 is actually
bearable (but a little choppy) if you wait for the video to fully
buffer.
Joshua D.
Hi Joshua,
Potentially very useful and helpful information.
Thanks for the advice and links.
Charles
Delete vs. Backspace: Ancient History
From Scott in response to Delete
Key vs. Backspace Key:
Dear Mr. Moore,
I'm not sure if anyone has pointed this out, but the original Mac
keyboards actually had Backspace keys. This changed when the ADB
keyboards came out, because the key was labeled Delete on the
Apple II series machines. Since the ADB keyboards were designed to be
interchangeable between the II series (although only the IIGS wound up using them) and the Mac, the
Backspace key was renamed delete, much in the same way the "open
Apple" symbol came to the command key. Apple II and III series machines
that had Delete keys were all labeled Delete , although
the Lisa had a Backspace key.
2012/charles-moore-picks-up-a-new-low-end-truck/ src=
"../../keyboards/original-backspace.jpg" alt=
"Backspace key on original Macintosh keyboard" align="bottom" height=
"256" width="272" />
Although marked Backspace on early Mac keyboards (left), it was
Delete on the Apple II series (right).
On a similar note, all Apples have labeled the Return key as
Return. The Enter key has never been the same thing as
Return , even on the original Mac.
Scott
Hi Scott,
Thanks for the history tutorial!
Charles
Multiple Input Device Bug in Leopard
From John:
Hello Mr. Moore,
I read your helpful article, OS X 10.5.8 Update Provides
Incentive to Get 10.6, that mentioned the multiple input device
mouse dragging bug that was introduced in the 10.5.7 Mac OS X
update and remained in Snow
Leopard 10.6.
I also use multiple input devices and find that this bug very
negatively effects my computer work. Have you found a solution to this
bug? I could find no other information about it after doing extensive
searches.
Thank you very much for and info.
Hi John,
Unfortunately, I haven't found a solution, although I
haven't been looking very assiduously lately, since I've been
procrastinating about upgrading to Snow Leopard, and I figure it's a
lost cause with Leopard.
I would be very happy to hear from anyone who has
found a solution, as the bug negatively affects my computer work as
well.
Charles
Interesting Stuff on Old 'Book AC Power
Consumption
Hey Dan, Charles,
Have you seen this story [Apple Laptop Power
Consumption Tests] about testing the power consumption of older
Apple laptops? I found it interesting:
Scott Cook
Hi Scott,
I hadn't seen it, and it is indeed an interesting
article. Thanks for the link.
Charles
iBook Docking Stations on eBay
From Phil:
For the iBook, they are on eBay right now. $10 plus shipping.
Search for "bookendz"
Thanks for the tip, Phil.
Charles
More Thoughts on the iSlate
From Alvin:
Hey thanks. I can't wait to buy the iMac; pray things work well this
month, which is my deadline to get it.
I'd like to share more thoughts on the iSlate. I feel that it's not
only not going to be a Mac of sort but it'll simplify 7 categories,
which mean huge sales for the iSlate. It's actually an everything
tablet because of the App store, which has apps for everything, from
medicine to entertainment. It's a chameleon, thanks to multitouch. But
the 7 categories are:
- game console more powerful than the PSP but will work okay with
current Apps in the App store
- image viewer: movie, video conferencing, and photo
player/frame
- music player
- download disabled net browser and excel, pdf, doc, rtf and other
text standard reader
- ebook reader
- graphics tablet with pressure sensitivity
- controller for Macs and soon other products using virtual keyboard
and mouse - actually virtual controller for everything, since the
interface can change
It'll be wireless tech heavy with WiFi, RFID reader, Bluetooth, but
will not have any drive for media, not even USB because you'll need to
download ebooks, video, music, and apps from iTunes. Other companies
will have infrared for it for their products (central control for your
TV and lighting system for your house, for example), and of course
companies who make sensors will make attachments for it (temperature,
for example, and GPS). It's gonna be revolutionary, because it'll
dominate almost every gadget that needs to be touched and not touched
(voice, sound controlled, RFID). In short it's made a 10" square tablet
become almost everything. It's gonna be big. It's gonna be the biggest
thing that ever happened, thanks to multitouch primarily. Multitouch,
software changeability and portability is the greatest combo.
Gbu.
Hi Alvin,
I hope you're right about it turning out to be a Mac
"of a sort," but the latest scuttlebutt is that it will have an ARM CPU
and run the iPhone OS, which is not encouraging.
See this
article from Gizmodo, which notes that the tablet will be basically
an "iPhone on steroids." If this rumor is accurate, along with
prognostications of a c. $1,000 price tag, I would say good luck with
that, Apple.
Charles
Charles,
Hi.
Yah. More secrets and philosophies on how the design will be. More
to share, LOL. I hope it's okay with you. It's a little jumbled.
If it's just a big iPhone or a big iPod touch and it's priced at 1k,
that's not gonna sell, because people would prefer the MacBook with the keyboard, but I
think it'll be less than $500. I have a philosophy and a design
foundation that anything that mimics or virtualizes the real thing will
never replace the real thing because technology is just really an
extension of the real thing and our senses (that's why we will always
have things like paper, books and keyboard). The only one that will go
extinct is the mouse, because this technology is an extension of your
finger (touch), but if you're already using your actual finger, then
there's no need. But as long as you can touch, it could replace it, so
I think yeah, a virtual keyboard would replace the real keyboard
because it's not like a virtual keyboard that a cursor touches.
Apple is on to something. I think they are trying to replace things
that have physical input. I think their laptops will become tablets,
since they know third-party people could create keyboard with casing
for it anyway (the irony). Tablets will also be cheaper. I think the
iSlate will have a normal keyboard layout like the wireless keyboard,
but once held on the air it'll switch to something. I think it'll have
the capacitive thing in it's body too, like the upcoming iPhone. I
think it'll double as a small screen as well like the new iMac, but
will only work with Macs by default including the Mini (again
third-party people will make a case with keyboard for it - the irony).
It'll be another transition.
The CPU would be another transition from Intel to ARM by next year.
The iSlate will have a pen also, because I feel strongly that it'll be
a Wacom Cintiq with the
hardware already on the screen, but I'm sure they licensed that
wireless pen tech from Wacom anyway so Wacom will still live. It's 3
main clients are (since again the interface is changeable it's for all
kinds of clients): digital artist (there's a bigger version for CAD
people) coz' the size is just right at 10" which is the sweet spot size
based on the netbooks and game people because it'll have more valuable
than a PSP and a DS but will be more powerful and of course browser
which is in itself as versatile as the tablet (it's got an OS, word
processor, docs, etc.). Apple will be making asking publishers to make
extreme games exclusively for it. It's thinner than the thinnest laptop
in the world (VAIO).
The price would be $434 USD, it's between the price of a Intuos4
medium and an Intuos4 large and fulfills the promise that "netbook"
type portables will be lesser than $500. It'll have a more 3D interface
that'll use the tilt sensors for speed scrolling done right (which is
the hassle when it comes to the 50+ icons with iPhone and Touch, which
are the testing ground for the tablet and it's interface) but not much
more 3D, since even if you turn a cube using the tilt sensor as if
you're turning a crystal ball or kaleidoscope filled with icons it'll
stop at 2D (like now, we're steady looking at the screen, it's in some
way 2D). I think it'll have temperature sensors as well that'll help
with the pressure sensitivity of the tablet (more pressure more
temperature) and of course you'll have a temperature thing in there for
moms, weather, and hospitals (they just buy a third-party attachment
for the probe).
Since it's around 10" (but more likely it's around 9.7"), it'll have
a good big decent pen. In the long term around a year, it'll cater more
to gaming people, because it'll be a better value Nintendo DS, Nintendo
Wii, and PSP (and as a game controller too for say your 27" iMac, which third-party people
will make work with a TV, since current TVs will only need a receiver,
because the iSlate is already a game console. In some games though like
tennis, baseball, the Wii will still rule as you would be doing that
motions with your thumb in the iSlate. Again the real thing can't be
beat by a semi virtual design like multitouch and tilt sensors). Come
to think of it, I feel it'll have a capacitive body because you'll need
that as extra "buttons" to compete with say a PS3 controller or a Wii
controller.
What Apple has uncovered - the secret that other's have not - is
that the power of sensors (multitouch is a sensor, same with the mic)
is the best technology and the best extension of our own senses because
it's the closest to mimic it and it's also changeable through software.
Apple knows once you've established the soul/mind of these gadgets,
which is the software (the one that does the thinking for the hardware)
and establish the brain, which is the distribution (it tells the
software where to go which is to Apple products) which is iTunes, then
it becomes intelligent because it can adapt, since it's changeable
(intelligent but not in itself, more of extension of our intelligence).
And Apple knows what it lacks for some user, other parties will fill so
it is not afraid to innovate mostly thanks to that sensor the
multitouch. Not only is it not afraid to innovate, but it'll have bad
sales because it offers preorders before they decide on the the volume
to make. People will only preorder of course if it's a great innovative
product. They can't lose with this system. It's gonna be big.
Another secret they know is that the "cloud" will never be; the
cloud is really just a back-up of what you have. Software in themselves
are not really virtual, because they never became real for the most
part (an icon is an icon, drop down menus are drop down menus, there's
no equivalent in the physical world). You really have to have that same
thing in their cloud (iTunes, App Store and Me.com) on your gadget (you
have your email there still, your Apps, etc.). If you have control of
everything, then it's cool (control of software, distribution, and
hardware).
With this I'm changing my mind that it'll be another Mac. I think
it's not gonna be an iPhone OS though, which is very sluggish which is
based more on the Desktop OS. Since this is gonna be multicore ARM with
multicore ARM GPUs in one die and it's tested multi GPU on Nvidia on
MBP, which isn't that efficient (it can afford to do that with bigger
batteries, since it's big), it'll need more parallel computing, since
it has to be network friendly in the light of the hacks today, it
should use OS X Server, since the 4th and 5th users of these would
be the military and the medical people, including med reps who need
signature (6th would be the business people, coz' they test first after
the rest) who need these cool iSlate to be networked to one another and
maybe even doing parallel computing wirelessly or wired if need be. It
also has to parallel compute with your Macs as well through wireless or
wired.
It's gonna be a great year for Apple and beyond :) iSlate
will introduce new Apple stuff like independence to Intel, Nvidia, PDF,
and ATI with ARM, graphics tablet, game console, eReader, which is
really just a word since we read stuff on the net anyway, it should
come with the multitouch iWorks as well, and since it's designing
things with multitouch as the center and something like iWorks is
important, it'll introduce a format that is not PDF coz' that one's not
designed for multitouch (it's for a one touch cursor thing). I can't
wait for this product :) I'd say iWorks and its interface
would be redesigned to use all 10 fingers and beyond (tilt, pressure,
and/or temperature). I don't think the interface would be like that of
Microsoft's table,
because those don't have tilt. Things won't just be scattered on the
screen; it'll be more like an 8-ball toy or a Kaleidoscope (another
secret Apple knows I think is that big multitouch will not work unless
you can tilt it, you will still need a vertical monitor for large
stuff) and that's tiring anyway (look at CNN, can't multi touch on a
vertical screen for hours for sure). Thanks for listening.
Alvin
Hi Alvin,
Hope you're right about the price and specs, but I'll
be astonished (pleasantly) if it's priced at under $500. I'm still
thinking it will have the iPhone OS.
We'll probably see next Wednesday.
Charles
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