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#17
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| Also, judging from both my personal experience and all the statistics I've ever heard on the matter, most Mac users replace their computers only every 4 or 5 years (PC users average about 2). Look at the systems that are 4-5 years old, and that will also lend a clue as to why many people still use OS 9. I bought my old iMac less than 5 years ago, and like I said, OS X was not fun to use on it. My brother, who has the same model iMac, sticks with OS 9, because the advantages of X (newer applications, better stability) simply don't outweigh the disadvantages (the need for all new apps, learning a new system, and, of course, speeeed). He'll keep using OS 9 until he buys a new computer, which will probably be next month. Even putting hardware aside, $129 is an awful lot for a new OS. Many people never pay for OS upgrades at all. It's too much trouble, and too expensive. They just stick with whatever was pre-installed on their computer. And if you compare OS 9 to 10.0 or even 10.1, it's obvious that OS 9 is the better choice. OS X was utter crap until 10.1, and IMHO, it only became really good with Jaguar. Also, today not many OS X apps even run on 10.1.
__________________ Mac mini — 1.25GHz G4, 1GB RAM — OS 10.5.2 I'm now a four-browser man. How on earth did this happen?! Useful programs: PithHelmet, Butler, ffmpegX, VLC, Perian, Tofu, Wcalc |
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#18
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| Like alot of the others have said, we like our old mac just cuz they keep their value. Practical people won't just chuck something just cuz its old. If it works fine and you have no probs with it... Then there isn't any good reason to chuck it. A friend of mine finally upgraded to a new G5 iMac after his old Generation 1 iMac just couldn't run any of the applications he needed. I personally still have my old G4 450mhz dually. It runs great. Changed out the DVD-ROM for CD burner/DVD player combo drive, added 1GB of RAM to the original 128MB, added a 300GB hdd so I have a total of 330GB of hdd space, tossed the old 16MB ATI Pro for a ATI Radeon 9000(64MB). Soon I will have to upgrade that cuz I work and play on my mac. As games require more power, will soon have to either upgrade to totally new system or upgrade the CPU and Video card. But right now, its holding its own pretty well. I don't do high intense number crunching applications. That is why I haven't done too much to it. I use OS 10.3 without too much problems and I just am too attached to just throwing it away. It is my first mac since I switched and it has a "special" place in my heart. Some of you out there know what I mean. Anyways, at least I know there are others that feel the same way I do about older Macs. |
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#19
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| It's funny you should mention that about your G4 dually, psychicVTEC. My wife's cousing just bought himself a used G4 dually 500 MHz from someone he knows. The thing came loaded with 2 GB of RAM and he's got Tiger running on it. He also owns an AMD rig that he built on his own and has tricked out completely. You'd be surprised to find out which machine he's keeping. Mind you, he has a laptop that has a mobile P4, but personally I think he was better off with the desktop Athlon over the laptop. But alas, he sold that one on eBay and decided to use the Power Mac G4 as his main machine. Personally, I have to say that it's a testament to how much value these older computers have, and I'm glad to say that I will be enjoying the same longevity from my iMac G5. ![]()
__________________ • Apple iMac G5 17" (2 GHz G5) - Mac OS X 10.4.11 • Apple Macintosh Quadra 650 (33 MHz MC68040) - Mac OS 8.1 • Apple PowerBook Duo 230 (33 MHz MC68030) - System 7.1 • "JHVH-1" (2 GHz AMD Athlon XP 2400+) - Slackware 12.1 • "Kidbuntu" (2.8 GHz Celeron D 335) - Ubuntu 8.04 |
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#20
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| i got an old 5500 starmax in storage nix. one of these days i'll dig it out and will have to have you help me install some flavor of unix on it. i did try downloading and installing linuxppc on my 7500 at one point in my life, but failed miserablly. yse, os x is unix based, and i have it on my g4, but it would still be fun and educational to run a pure unix on my older hardware. i'm bad, once i get my hands on a working mac, i never let go. i got -gasp- over 12, most of which are 68k.
__________________ Digital Audio G4/1.467ghz, 1.5gig ram, 16x Superdrive, 256mb DDR3 AGP 6800GS, zip, 2x500gig raid0 for 1tb on sonnet tempo trio, 10.5.4 |
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#21
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| Quote:
![]() Considering that you and I frequent another forum dedicated to 68K Macs, this doesn't surprise me one bit. ![]() If you need any help installing Linux on that puppy, let me know. Linux/ppc has gotten much better through the years, but of course it's nothing like installing it on a PC, especially when it's an Old World Mac (New World Macs install the latest Linux distros very easily). Trust me. If it weren't for my wife, this house would be filled to the brim with various generations of Macs...and yes, even some PCs, Amigas, and some other 80s computers as well.
__________________ • Apple iMac G5 17" (2 GHz G5) - Mac OS X 10.4.11 • Apple Macintosh Quadra 650 (33 MHz MC68040) - Mac OS 8.1 • Apple PowerBook Duo 230 (33 MHz MC68030) - System 7.1 • "JHVH-1" (2 GHz AMD Athlon XP 2400+) - Slackware 12.1 • "Kidbuntu" (2.8 GHz Celeron D 335) - Ubuntu 8.04 |
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#22
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| Quote:
__________________ Jules: I want you to go in that bag, and find my wallet. Pumpkin: Which one is it? Jules: It's the one that says Bad Motherfucker From Pulp Fiction |
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#23
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| erh... which post are you answering now?
__________________ MacBook Air 13" 1.6 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 MacBook 13" 1.83 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 Hackintosh Core2Duo 2.4 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 iPhone 3G 16 GB (v2), AppleTV 1G 40 GB (v2) Mac user since 1987, Apple Product Professional 2007, 2008. |