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Digital Fossils
The Old Mac Blues
- 2008.07.23 - Tip Jar
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If you look towards the top of this page, you'll note that the title of this column is "Digital Fossils". As those words would seem to indicate, I have a strong affinity for older Mac hardware and software.
I think my vintage Mac geek cred is strong. I mean, I spent my afternoon playing Lords of the Realm II, a 12-year-old game, on a Power Macintosh 7100, a 14-year-old computer. This column itself has been written on hardware ranging from a WallStreet PowerBook and a PowerBook 2400 to a Color Classic and a PowerBook Duo 280c.
But sometimes it gets hard to stay strong in my faith....
Take now, for example. I just didn't feel up to stringing AppleTalk cables or transferring files via sneakernet, the PCMCIA WiFi card was in the wrong old Mac, and swapping it out would have meant hooking up the AC charger to eject it and, well, it was just so much easier to fire up the iBook with its built-in AirPort and let the zeros and ones flow through the ether with no muss or fuss.
I look at
the new Macs, and part of me sneers. How am I supposed to make the
requisite snide comments about "Wintel" machines if I'm working on a
Core Duo Mac? OS X, for all its good points, doesn't give me the
same warm fuzzies I get from seeing the old Happy Mac at startup. And
the styling has even slipped a little: Compared to the jellybean G3 iMacs or their
iLamp successors, the new aluminum ones remind me a bit too much of a
more slickly executed rendition of the old Monorail
PCs from
the late 1990s.
But then I look at what they can do....
Boy, those are some neat tricks. It would be awfully convenient to have a dedicated media server in the house. And I may scoff at new games as being mostly eye candy, but eye candy sure does have a certain appeal at times. An iPhone is tempting, and MobileMe looks really neat.
I can do a certain amount with what I have on hand, but no matter how I amp up my most "modern" Mac, the fact remains that the old G4 tower is just a bit too long in the . . . er, "Sawtooth" (get it?) to get the full use out of the Web. Furthermore, it looks to be a near certainty that the next iteration of OS X is going to leave it behind for good.
As for properly interfacing with new hardware, well, I'm already trying to synch an iPod nano through a USB 1.1 cable; I can only sacrifice so much for my loyalty to my old Macs.
So where do I go from here?
As a starving artist, the sensible thing to do would be to hope that the current and coming changes will drop the prices on used units. With a bit of scrimping and saving - and some good luck on eBay - I could probably upgrade my working laptop to a G4 TiBook and pick up a Mirror Drive Door Power Mac or G4 iMac for not too much more than it would cost to keep the Clamshell and the Sawtooth in the game. It would definitely be cheaper than trying to get out ahead of the power curve.
The danger for me there is that the changes in the coming all-Intel Snow Leopard era could be more revolutionary than I'm anticipating. I'd feel more than a little bit silly if I was left with a newer G4 tower that was, for all intents and purposes, as outmoded as the Sawtooth it replaced, other than being able to run Leopard.
I could hock a kidney and just buy a new Mac. That would solve everything - except for the part about me feeling like a traitor to my Digital Fossils ethos. Being able to play new games and zip about the Net without getting bogged by the almost-daily spinning beach ball of death would dull the pain somewhat, I imagine, but only somewhat.
One other alternative would be to cheat a little and pick up a used Mac mini to use as a 'net appliance. This would combine the virtues of low cost with it being small enough to hide someplace on my desktop so that I won't be constantly reminded that I bought an Intel Mac.
The fact remains, however, that with the coming changes in the Web, my existing hardware just isn't going to cut the mustard, at least not without a lot of work. In a year or two it would not surprise me to see my single G4 tower become as awkward a 'net interface as my early Power Macs are now, and that pains me.
Oh well, that is then, and this is now. I still have that saved game
of Lords of Magic to get back to in the morning, and you know
what? My Power Mac 7100 will be not one more iota obsolete tomorrow
than it is today.
If you find Tamara's articles helpful, please consider making a donation to her tip jar.
Recent Digital Fossils Columns
- Slot Loading iMacs: The SE/30 for a New Generation, 02.02. They're relatively small, pretty quiet, reliable, can run Tiger, and are very affordable nowadays.
- Macs: Better by design, 07.11. From the beginning, Macs have stood apart from other computers with their attractive and intelligent design.
- Master of Orion on the Mac, 07.01. The DOS version of this vintage game broke with Pentium or Windows 95, but the Mac version still runs very nicely in the Classic Mac OS.
- Run Linux on my Mac? No thanks, 06.24. Macs have a zen-like synergy of hardware, software, and operating system. Why would anyone want to give that up?
- More in the Digital Fossils index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: Mac IIfx, Mar. 1990 - This 'wicked fast' 40 MHz Mac trumped the 33 MHz DOS world.
- Group of the Day: StarMax List is for anyone using Motorola StarMax Mac clones.
- March 19 in LEM history: 90: Mac IIfx - 99: Fool me twice? - 01: Add FireWire, USB to older Macs - Time to replace your iMac? - 02: The Mac Challenge - Installing Linux on a low-end Mac - 03: Value of the Lombard PowerBook - Your portable should have WiFi - PowerBook 1400 upgrades - 04: The video iPod - 07: Troubleshooting an iMac - 08: Intel Mac mini value
- Support Low End Mac
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- CardBus WiFi, the Shiira Browser, Ridding the Web of Flash, and Macs vs. PCs, Charles W. Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 03.18. Mac longevity, Shiira speed, ambidextrous Mac and Windows use, and how Flash benefits Apple.
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- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best Intel iMac Deals, 03.17. Used 17" from $600; 20" from $750; 24" from $825; refurb 21.5" nVidia, $999; new, $1,099; refurb Radeon, $1,299; new, $1,399; refurb 27" 3.06, $1,499; more.
- Best G5 iMac Deals, 03.17. 17" 2.0 GHz, $380; 1.9 GHz iSight, $479 shipped; 20" 1.8 GHz, $509 shipped; 2.1 GHz iSight, $549 shipped.
- Best Time Capsule Deals, 03.17. Close-out 500 GB, $140; new 1 TB, $279; used 2 TB simultaneous dual-band, $400; new, $455. Shipping included.
- Best iPad Deals, 03.16. 16 GB iPad, $499; 32 GB, $599; 64 GB, $699; 16 GB with 3G, $629; 32 GB 3G, $729; 64 GB 3G, $829. Free ground shipping.
- Best iPod classic Deals, 03.12. Used 20 GB, $119; 40 GB, $139; 60 GB, $159; 30 GB video, $129; 60 GB, $159; 80 GB, $169; refurb 120 GB, $189; new, $214; 160 GB, $228 shipped.
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- Best Xserve Deals, 03.12. Used 1 GHz dual G4, $499; 2.0 dual G5, $599; 2.3, $749; refurb 2.26 4-core Nehalem, $2,499; new, $2,699; 8-core, $3,449; refurb 2.66, $4,299; new, $4,799; more.
- More deals in our archive.
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