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Later in life, when bought my first PPC Mac desktop system, it was a choice between that or a second-hand car.

Back in 1996 (?) I got a $10,000 grant to buy a Power Mac 8100 system with the help of a friend who was very gifted at fundraising. Used it for 3d modelling and video related to a big project, which was never realized but that Mac served me well for a number of years. It had 48mb of RAM and friends visited my office just to see a computer with that much memory! But even with $10,000 I couldn't afford a disk array fast enough to edit full-resolution SD video and was limited to either reduced resolution or lower frame rates.

Not sure, but I think $10,000 would have bought a pretty nice new car back then!
 
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I got a Po


Back in 1996 (?) I got a $10,000 grant to buy a Power Mac 8100 system with the help of a friend who was very gifted at fundraising. Used it for 3d modelling and video related to a big project, which was never realized but that Mac served me well for a number of years. It had 24mb of RAM and friends visited my office just to see a computer with that much memory! But even with $10,000 I couldn't afford a disk array fast enough to edit full-resolution SD video and was limited to either reduced resolution or lower frame rates.

Not sure, but I think $10,000 would have bought a pretty nice new car back then!
I hear that.

The first piece of “professional” software I became competent with and used professionally was Quark Xpress. I’d almost forgotten how it was to work on DTP and graphics then - anything onscreen was at best a very very rough estimate of what would be outputted by an industrial printer. Choosing a colour was done with printed colour samples (Pantone or otherwise) , not what was on the monitor. A lot of crossed fingers before a sample print run.

I don’t think that many people under a certain age would believe me if I said that “what you see is what you get” was essentially impossible on a screen, and a machine that able to give a workable rough estimate was NOT a “home computer”, it was a massive investment.
 
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I hear that.

The first piece of “professional” software I became competent with and used professionally was Quark Xpress. I’d almost forgotten how it was to work on DTP and graphics then - anything onscreen was at best a very very rough estimate of what would be outputted by an industrial printer. Choosing a colour was done with printed colour samples (Pantone or otherwise) , not what was on the monitor. A lot of crossed fingers before a sample print run.

I don’t think that many people under a certain age would believe me if I said that “what you see is what you get” was essentially impossible on a screen, and a machine that able to give a workable rough estimate was NOT a “home computer”, it was a massive investment.

Haha yep that's how it was back then. I remember QuarkXpress being all over the place when it came to DTP back in the day.
 
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Mine was a 24” 2008 iMac.

Top spec, at the time.

Such a lovely, lovely machine. It was actually this Mac that got me into photography.

What about you?

Same here, lovely machine, still working, SSD upgrade and perfectly fine as a dedicated not often used TV for watching the odd mp4 even if the screen is not as good as it was, and works with the original iRemote (but don't have more than one mac in the room!) 😂

Personally I think nothing has come close to the implementation and experience of using Frontrow for the first time and thereafter.

This was how it was suppose to be implemented, all the atmosphere of cinema theatre, then it was dropped. :(

It also struck that I finally had a computer that felt like the Amiga days, Snow Leopard hit it out of the park at that moment in time compared to what else was on the market, where software and hardware were highly harmonious.
 
I remember speaking to a member of staff in the Regent’s Street Apple Store, and he told me that the black unibody was the highest specced one.

We laughed about how we loathed when people put fingerprints on your screen 😀.

That’s what I love about Apple Stores: You can literally just pop in there, play around with the products, and have an intriguing conversation with the staff.
I share the same sentiment. I won’t be visiting the Apple Store until the iPhone 17 is released. I’ve paused my weekly or biweekly trips there because I’ve been going to the gym a lot lately and don’t have as much things to browse as I used to.

These black OG MacBooks were quite rare. Their color is the precursor to the space black aluminum we see on the MBPs recently.

Here’s an interesting article about one of these black MacBooks: https://www.cnet.com/tech/computing...-for-eight-years-and-it-just-booted-right-up/

The article mentions that the MacBook in black had 1GB of RAM. How much RAM can you actually max out on these models?

If I were to visit London, I would check out the Regent Street Apple Store. It was remodeled later on, by the way.
 
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Macintosh SE (dual drive), bought April 1987.

Don't have it any more, although I still have the SE30 I bought in 1989 -- although it won't boot up any more, could be a frozen drive or perhaps bad capacitors.

I also still have my Mac IIci and AppleColor 13" display from around 1992. I'd like to try hooking up the IIci to a modern display (with VGA, Dell 1905fp) -- have to find a video adapter...
 
In late 2010 I had got the final generation of the 2010 white Macbook with Core 2 Duo, 2GB RAM (I upgraded it to 3GB as it always freaked out on 4GB for some reason), 256GB HDD. I LOVED that machine! Came with Snow Leopard and lasted all the way until High Sierra. Was highly surprised each year after Yosemite that it kept getting OS updates 😂 That trackpad was the coolest thing, and my windows loyal siblings always tripped out when they realized the whole trackpad was a button along with all the multi-touch gestures it had. Also, that skinny MagSafe charger was perfect! Then I got an iMac in 2017 that's lasted me until this year, so I got to skip out on the butterfly keyboards and lack of MagSafe! Just last month we got the M4 MBA in blue and I love it
 
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Oh man, I remember my first Mac very, very well. It was my college days so I was practically living in MS Office on Windows at the time. I tend to think of those days as "old Apple" (vs. new Apple today), the culture was a little different--Macs were more the outsider machines, everyone else was on WinTel (e.g., Dell, HP, Thinkpad, Toshiba, etc.) machine.

I had a middle of the road HP Pavilion that had a DVD drive, PIII 700Mhz, with (a whopping!) 256MB of RAM that I bought from CompUSA (yes, that old). I remember it had Windows ME so this really takes me back. Anyway, the HDD died on it ca. '03 so I took it back (under ext warranty) to CompUSA for them to repair the drive. I had the modem replaced on that machine 2x (yes, dialup was life back then) and this was my 2nd HDD replacement. The techs at store ultimately broke the machine...not a little...but literally snapped the bottom case across, big crack across the bottom. Not sure if it was dropped or what but when I came to pick it up, I decided to open it right there on the counter and I saw the crack. To their credit, I didn't get the "Oh, it was like that!" treatment but an "OMG, we're so sorry!" and I got a full store credit dollar-for-dollar towards any computer in the store + my ext warranty. Anecdotally, the computer didn't even boot up when I was told it was "ready for pickup." All it did was make the loud-as-in-a-fire-alarm-BIOS-error-sound. Yeah....yeah.

So, I walked over to the then-new Apple Mac section in CompUSA because I was thinking of switching to the 12" Powerbook (the 17" was just too big) that just came out. I decided to get the 12" PB, paid the difference (it was about $100 or so, I think) and when I got home, it had a dead pixel right in the center of the screen. I left it in the box, brought it back to CompUSA the next day and they swapped it out for another one. On the return visit, I also bought AppleCare, MS Office v.X, and a small saddle bag to go with it. I remember it was the 867Mhz G4 (1st gen), it was all metal (aluminum) and I had or used anything like that before--felt like the future, really. The only issues I had with the machine (which was under a repair extension, I was told) was with the display hinges (1st month or so--screen couldn't sit up), followed by the HDD going out somewhere around the 3rd year I had it. The 12" was a lot of fun to take with me on trips, I miss it sometimes.

On that note, something I thought that the Powerbook never got enough love for at the time was the battery life. I loved the battery life on that little machine, I could watch a whole DVD on it without worrying about the battery. On the HP, I had to lug an extra battery with me (plus charger) but the 12" PB only needed a full charge and I got easily 3-4 hours of full time use on it (at the time that was insane). For me, the big flex was taking that PB to classes and it fit on those little lecture hall desks that are about the size of a shoebox lid, quietly working away. My PC would easily hang over the sides, fan running, and I had to swap batteries after about 2 hours.
 
Apple IIc. Got me through college with a version of Apple Works. Mostly used Windows machines after that because I always matched what work had. Last year I went back to an iMac because I’m retired (no longer care what work uses) and because I like how everything is synced between my iPhone, iPad and my desktop.
 
My first Mac was the first Macintosh. When I came home from college for summer break, there it was, the Mchintosh in the family room. My eldest brother bought it. I had never heard of Apple or Macintosh. I found the power switch, and the rest was history. Its UI was so intuitive that I never had to look for a manual or ask anyone for help. It was something that was, “just is.”

This was something that even Microsoft Windows with all of its wealth and army of programmers could not match. Windows may look like it has the same UI as the Macintosh, but its users seem to need something like a MS Certification to use and to maintain it, or to provide support. Far from intuitive.
 
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I was very lucky. My Dad was IT co-ordinator at the local secondary school. They upgraded computers fairly often. So, some time in the early 90’s I got a spare LC. Was replaced a few years later with an LC 475, IIRC.
 
Mine was an iBookG4. And then Upgraded to the PowerbookG4 for no reason because I liked the metal..and it didn’t do anything special for me. lol. Esepcially because Apple Switched to Intel shortly after I got it. Haha.
 
The first one I bought was a Motorola clone back in the dark days of Apple in the 1990s. Before then I'd used many different ones -- from the original to the IIx to the Centris 650 and some others.

The first Apple computer I used was the Apple II.
 
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My first experience was an iMac, I think it was the color iMac, the translucent in Taco Bell here in Costa Rica when they put some to play games, I remember that the game was a little bug running in the yard of the house I don’t remember well.

After that, in my first job there was an old MacBook Pro 2012 (my first job was in 2017) and man I just felt in love with the MacBooks.

Then I bought my first official Mac that was a little beautiful MacBook 12” retina 2017. It was just so small, with an awesome screen, awesome speakers, good keyboard (IMO) and yeah, bad performance but well.

Now I just bought like a month ago a M1 Air with 16Gb of Ram and 512gb SSD for $420. Beautiful machine with a excellent performance.

I want it to last me at least 5 more years but let’s see. Maybe in the future I’ll just buy a Mac Mini because I really like the new design
 
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Mine was a 24” 2008 iMac.

Top spec, at the time.

Such a lovely, lovely machine. It was actually this Mac that got me into photography.

What about yo

Mine was a 24” 2008 iMac.

Top spec, at the time.

Such a lovely, lovely machine. It was actually this Mac that got me into photography.

What about you?
Showing my age, but 1998 indigo blue iBook!
 
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1984 Mac 128k plus external floppy drive, ImageWriter printer. $3,500. Then the fat Mac, and later the Mac Plus $1799, plus $1k for 1 meg RAM, and about $2k for 20 MB Hyperdrive internal HD. And so on and so forth.

Addictions are expensive.
 
12” Powerbook G4 purchased second hand in late 2004 from a friend. My second Apple product to go along with my first, the iPod mini in green. The iPod was the “halo” effect in operation, that the iPhone has now supplanted. A week on OS X Panther after several years of Windows, and I would never look back. Good times in a better world.
 
2009 13" MacBook Pro! Base spec! (MB990LL/A) This was the 2.26 GHz Core 2 Duo chip.

I resold it a couple years later and upgraded to the base Early 2011 13" i5 model. But both the 2009 and 2011 were great due to the upgradeability.
 
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