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Mac360 Poll: How Long Have You Been A Mac User?
Was it a Performa, an iMac, a PowerBook (early 90s), or a PowerMac? Or a Mac before there was power? That original Macintosh was something else. I saw a Lisa in 1983 but thought $10,000 was a steep price to pay for a computer of any kind, let alone one with an apple icon embedded in the body. The next year, Apple launched the original Mac. It’s been history ever since. I had an original Mac SE, a few Mac IIs, a couple of Performas (575), a handful of early PowerMacs with the first PPC chips, more iMacs than I can remember, eMacs, a few iBooks, a PowerBook, and an office of PowerMacs-- including a few G5s. Even a sunflower iMac (which continues life though doesn’t do much).
When did you get your first Mac? Take our reader poll and share a little of your history with other Mac readers. It’s probably a good thing that we can’t (and don’t-- it’s our choice) keep more information from our reader polls. Each year Apple sells between three and four million Macs and it’s been about that number for each of the past 10 years or so. Surprisingly, many older Macs (even those running Mac OS 9, Mac OS 8 etc.) are still running. Even early iMacs will run Mac OS X provided there’s enough RAM. So, let’s take this reader poll in two steps. Step One will be simple. Click on the “Click Here” below to take the Mac360 reader poll. There’s a list of years from 2005 back to the Mac’s launch in 1984. Over 21 years. Included in most years are a couple of “hints” to jog your memory. Step Two will be Comments. Don’t hesitate to click Comments below and share your first Mac experience with other readers. Tera’s was an original 128k RAM Mac. I also forked over nearly half as much money as that for an original iMac-- 128 megs of RAM. It was a screamer at 233 mhz. When did you get your first Mac? Take the poll. Alll you have to do is Click Here>. To see the results on when other readers got their first Macs, just Click Here.
Jack D. Miller
Carol Mary Miller
Alexis Kayhill
Tera Patricks
Better yet is the advancement in operating systems. That first System 1.0 crashed all the time. OS X, the latest version, hasn’t crashed yet. The folks at Mac360 have a few domains for sale. If you've ever dreamed of setting up and running your own site about Apple, the Mac, iPods or the iPhone, this is a great way to get started. Click here for the basic details, and click AppleScene, iPhoneKillerTips, or ChatterMac for a more complete list. • Article by Bambi Brannan • Published on Thursday, May 1, 2008
• Category: Polls • 96 Reader comment(s) • Email This • Digg This • Shop Now
« Previously Check The Files On Your Mac From Any Browser.
Nextly » Use Time Machine? Move Your Mac's Files To Las Vegas.
Talk Back to the folks at Mac360 Jan Colbert says:
I remember reading somewhere that Apple said the MacBook Air is their top selling model. So much for all those media pundits who said it was too slow, too few features. People love it. — Posted on Fri May 09 at 2:27 pm by Jan Colbert
Jack Jebedee says:
You make an excellent point, Mr. McElfresh. MBP = LED backlight. In fact, I considered that very carefully, along with the MBP discrete graphics, before deciding to buy the MB. My thinking went something like this: 1. I already have a desktop computer and it does reasonably well (albeit slowly) everything that I ask of it. The only thing it doesn’t provide in any measure is mobility. Therefore, I should acquire what I don’t have now rather than purchase something that will only improve what I already have. I will buy a notebook computer, not a desktop computer. 2. The degree of a notebook computer’s mobility is inversely proportional to its size. That usually means that a small-screen notebook is more mobile and a large one is less so. The MacBook Pros are compromises in that regard. They have mobility that an iMac doesn’t, but they are not as capable. That is, their screens and storage and keyboards are smaller than those of an iMac. On the other hand, the Pros are more capable than MacBooks, but they lack the latter’s mobility. 3. My original plan was to buy the 17” Pro desktop replacement, but I figured that I would be sacrificing too much screen real estate for something that I’d want to use mostly at home and occasionally in the field. So for mobility, I got the most mobile thing that Apple makes. (I love elements of the Air, but there was just too much wrong with it for me to consider the Air seriously. Damn! Air II is going to be amazing.) So here I am with a vanilla MacBook and 4 x 2 GB in RAM on order to share with Mrs. Jebedee. I’ve got my mobility. 4. I plan to do big-screen graphic projects using my Ubuntu desktop. When the time comes—and that isn’t too far away—I’ll buy the other half of my Mac system. I figure my 24” iMac will have LED backlighting and it will probably be running a quad-core processor, 8 GB RAM, 1 GB video RAM and a BluRay drive. I’m leaning toward the solid state drive since a BluRay library should be good for as many terabytes as I’ll need. If my figuring is right, the total cost for the MB and iMac won’t be much more than a 17” MBP. JJ PS: I found the missing <Home> and <End> keys today. — Posted on Fri May 09 at 3:38 am by Jack Jebedee
Ron McElfresh says:
Hey, Jack. Good choice. Except a little more money would have given you a MacBook Pro with an LED screen. It’s only money. Surely your wife would understand. Mac360 ‘Magic Word’ = h_e_l_l_1_1 Go figure. — Posted on Thu May 08 at 3:05 am by Ron McElfresh
Jack Jebedee says:
Belay checking the weather in hell, Mr. McElfresh. Nothing has frozen over (yet). I was all set to wait until the MacBook came equipped with LED backlighting but Mrs. Jebedee scolded me for having an endless supply of reasons to wait for the next Mac improvement. I figured that we might see LED-backlit screens in June. “Yes,” said Mrs. J, “And in June you’ll find a reason to wait until December.” I asked why she thought I’d wait until December and she answered, “I don’t know, but I’m sure you’d find a reason.” I told her that such a thought struck me as ridiculous. However, I acknowledged that DDR3 memory will be in widespread use when the next-generation Intel processor appears. When that happens, computers can be equipped with BluRay R/W drives. “Oh?” queried Mrs. J. “And when, pray tell, is the next-generation Intel processor expected to arrive?” I didn’t have to think about it. “Around December,” I replied. Mrs. J’s response to that was a raised eyebrow. “We’re going shopping on Sunday, Mister.” JJ — Posted on Thu May 08 at 2:26 am by Jack Jebedee
Ron McElfresh says:
Jack Jebedee finally bought a Mac? Truly, we live in a new age of wonderment and miracles.
Make sure to let us know how it goes! Black is faster. — Posted on Wed May 07 at 9:54 am by Ron McElfresh
Jack Jebedee says:
Ah, yes. I bought my first Mac – a white MacBook – on Sunday. Mrs. Jebedee and I bought a pair of them. I fully intended to buy the black MacBook, paying the nearly $200 color penalty, just so that Mrs. Jebedee and I could tell our MacBooks apart from a distance. We arrived not quite an hour after the store opened and I noticed that the matte black MacBook was starting to look like Captain Jack Sparrow covered in Kraken barf. Oops! I immediately changed the order: “Make that a pair of white ones, please.”
JJ — Posted on Wed May 07 at 2:22 am by Jack Jebedee
Michael Tomlin says:
My first Mac was a Mac SE which I’ve had for 20 years now. And, believe it or not, it still runs! Since then, I’ve owned,
LC!!!
I’ve sold all of them except my current system (iMac, Intel Core Duo) and I can’t bring myself to part with the Mac SE. — Posted on Tue May 06 at 3:19 pm by Michael Tomlin
Wahiawa786 says:
Y2K: Saw a classic Mac for sale at a hospital thrift shop for $40. I looked at it, but thought the price was high. After a week, the price dropped to $25, and a Mac SE 4/40 joined a previously IBM/Wintel-only home. I contacted a college friend who’d been using Macs since the IIe days and he walked me through the basics. Bit by bit, the unit was upgraded from Mac OS 6.x to 7.5.3, along with a 32MB motherboard and 540MB HDD. It left for someone afflicted with a Packard Bell computer. 2001: Bought a PowerBook 1400 from eBay and considered a Kanga to surf the Internet. Late 2001: Bought a Rev. 2 Wallstreet (266) from a Canadian eBay seller. Software and hardware arrived from time to time, from FileMaker Pro 3.x and OS 8.1-9.x. The PB 1400 left for a computerless family then next year, along with a Canon inkjet printer. A Sonnet G3 500MHz upgrade for the Wallstreet was added to use a 16X CD burner. The Wallstreet went to a across-the-street neighbor a couple of years later. A “400MHz Pismo” turned out to be a Lombard, but it was OK, nevertheless. HDD and RAM upgrades from 40-60GB and 512MB made the units OSX 10.2 capable. A 500MHz Pismo joined the Lombard, as DVD burning dropped into the sorta-afforadable range. The Lombard left for a computerless former co-worker. A 667MHz TiBook didn’t quiet make the cut for DVD burning, but was interesting. In late 2003, a 1.25GHz G4 AlBook arrived which could “do DVDs.” The TiBook left for the Lombard owner, and the “PowerPC vs. Intel” question popped up. Ye Olde Pismo continues with OSX 10.4.11, along with a 1.5GHz G4 unit that “doesn’t do DVD+R DLs or home made DVDs.” The 3GHz P4 tower (Windows XP and Nero) has been fitted with TWO DVD+R DL-capable burners and burns DVDs, unlike the AlBook under Toast 8! — Posted on Mon May 05 at 3:07 am by Wahiawa786
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