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This is Low End Mac. We like to
tell you to keep your Macs running until they die, then fix them and
keep them running a bit longer.
Dan's never done a survey, but I suspect our readers are the kind
of folks who buy a car used and run it until it dies, fixing it until
the repair costs exceed the monthly payments on a newer car.
Nevertheless, the presence of smoke, clicking monitors, and the lack
of a startup chime might just inspire you to finally get rid of the
beast and seek a new machine.
We all know the problems with getting rid of old machines - many
landfills won't accept them, and schools are saturated with machines
faster than the one in your closet, so what do you do with the old
beast?
Your local garbage service will advise you about your options, and
when it is finally time to say good-bye, you might have second
thoughts because of sentimental value. If you're in a hurry, perhaps
you might need the Lite Side's
Guide to Stripping Down and Reusing a
Computer
Traditional Solutions for Your Typical Mac Pack
Rat
CD drives and other spindles: Remove and store in stacks. Really
tall stacks.
Cooling fans: If you have 5-10 of them, you could build your own
G5.
Keep the power cord - at last count, I have 137 of them. Takes
three boxes.
If you have machines that can use it, take out the RAM, unless of
course that is the part that has failed. If humanly possible, label
the number of pins and the amount of RAM.
Remove hard drives and either reformat, reuse, or physically
destroy. Don't lose terminators and ID jumpers!
Apple ImageWriter printers make good bookcases when set on their
sides. HP LaserJets, the kind that used to use a cartridge for fonts,
are also really good for this. All you need is some lumber for the
shelving.
Apple inkjet printers are good for testing your Trebuchet.
Apple LaserWriter printers may still be working; if not, put in a
place where people leave things that get stolen. Someone will take
it.
Old ink and toner cartridges may work somewhere else in another
device; check compatibility charts before chucking.
Internal cables for various components: Sort and store in
Tupperware. If you can see dust in the floppy drive, chuck it. If it
looks clean, put it in the stack. If there isn't one, count yourself
blessed and move on.
Keyboards, cables, mice, mouse balls, and monitor cables all go in
the designated boxes in the storeroom. Mouse balls go in a special
jar that used to hold peanut butter. If it still holds a little
peanut butter, it will cut down on theft of mouse balls.
PCI and other cards, in a bag which is labeled with the
manufacturer name and function. If you like wash windows regularly
and dry dishes by hand, you will probably want to pop a disk with the
driver in the bag, too. An old video-in card can give an old Mac new
life as a television monitor.
Odd little adapters such as older Mac-video-to-VGA, VGA-to-Mac,
etc., in a special little box in the top shelf.
SCSI cables and terminators in a hallowed place.
ADB cables go in the video box with S-video cables.
Apple
Extended Keyboard: Attach to a Blue and
White G3 and watch people's heads spin.
Speakers go in the . . . uh, let's see . . .
speaker box.
LocalTalk cabling (useless for modern Macs) gets put wherever you
put the mice that attach to the original Mac
Plus prior to the development of ADB cables.
Computer-to-speaker cables in the audio box next to those adapters
from the Shack that you never find a permanent use for.
PC cables, such as printer cables, serial keyboard extenders,
etc., all jumbled up in a big box in the basement. You never
know.
iPods that never passed beta or focus groups, 09.13.
"What most Apple fans don't realize is that there were a few iPod variants that never made it out of beta testing and the focus group stage."
Mac of the Day: 15" iMac G4/800 MHz, Jan. 2002 - The iMac is redesigned with a flat panel display and G4 CPU.
Group of the Day: G4 List is for those using Power Mac G4s or G4 upgrades.
January 7 in LEM history: 97: Mac OS 7.6 - 99: What color iMac do you want? - 00: S900 chronicles - 02: Who let the iMac out? - Expo keynote - iMac G4 - 14" iBook 600 - iCab fastest low-end browser - Addressing battery problems - 03: 12" PowerBook G4 - 17" PowerBook G4 - Changes in Jaguar - 04: Waiting for the tipping point - 05: Headless Mac an upgrade path for low end users - 08: Could OS X DRM drive users to Linux? - Netscape dead, but its children live on
How Netbooks Impact Microsoft and Apple, Tim Nash, Taking Back the Market, 01.07.
Netbooks are keeping Windows XP alive, which may slow adoption of Windows 7, and perceived value keeps the Mac market share growing at the expense of Windows.
The Ill-Fated Apple III, Jason Walsh, Apple Before the Mac, 01.07.
"...not only was the Apple III mind crunchingly expensive, it was made with none of the passion of the Apple II or Macintosh."
Apple III Chaos: Apple's First Failure, Joshua Coventry, Cortland, 01.07.
Apple had known nothing but success with its Apple II product line, but when it tried to enter the business world with the Apple III, the learned the cost of failure.
2 Apple Failures: Apple III and Lisa, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.07.
Apple's two not-so-great product lines between the Apple II line and the Macintosh.
17" Unibody MacBook Pro, 01.06.
Thinner and lighter than ever, the unibody model tops out with 8 GB of RAM and a 2.93 GHz clock speed.
Apple's Half-Baked Support for DisplayPort, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 01.06.
The DisplayPort specification supports audio, so why does Apple use USB to route sound to the LED Cinema Display?
No, an Overgrown iPod touch Is Not a Netbook, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.06.
BlackBerry pretends its Storm is a netbook, but a netbook needs to be big enough for a typable keyboard.
Apple IIe Nostalgia: A Reunion 15 Years in the Making, Tommy Thomas, Welcome to Macintosh, 01.06.
Sometimes nostalgia is all you remembered, like when you get to recreate your first computing experience from the Apple II era.
VisiCalc and the Rise of the Apple II, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.06.
"VisiCalc was first released for the Apple II, which quickly became an invaluable tool for businesspeople - at least until IBM moved into the 'personal computing' market in 1981."
Apples from Other Orchards: Apple II Clones, Joshua Coventry, Cortland, 01.06.
Before the IBM PC spawned compatibles, companies around the world cloned the Apple II - some with more success than others.
Origin of the Apple I and Apple II Computers, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.05.
From the first behemoth computers to the Apple II+, the computer that drove the personal computer revolution.
Apple Has Always Been a Niche Player, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.05.
"Despite the myths, Apple has never been a dominant player in the personal computer industry."
Best 15" MacBook Pro Deals, 01.06.
Used 1.83 GHz, $900; 2.16, $1,090; 2.33, $1,295; new 2.4 Penryn, $1,350 after rebate; 2.5, $1,485 a/r; 2.6, $1,649; new 2.4 Unibody, $1,824 a/r.
Best Mac OS X 10.5 'Leopard' Deals, 01.06.
Mac OS X 10.5, single user, $104 shipped; 5 users, $148 shipped; 10.5 Server, 10 users, $363 shipped; unlimited users, $752 shipped.
Best Mac OS X 10.4 'Tiger' Deals, 01.02.
DVD upgrade from 10.3, $75; full version, $129; family pack, $200; 10-user Server, $350; unlimited users, $400.