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My First Mac
It All Started with an Apple IIc
- 2007.12.19
My first Apple computer was an Apple IIc.
I really don't recall very much about the IIc. I know that my wife was using Apple computers at work, since she was a special education teacher at the time. We had no children (children absorb any free money, trust me) at that time, and went to the local Apple dealer and bought the IIc and a dot matrix printer. I know that I was interested the "small" size of the IIc (I thought that I could perch the CPU on my lap and see the monochrome screen from a more relaxed position).
I know my wife used it for school, and I wrote a program in BASIC for her. But I can't say that the computer really changed my life.
Then we started using computers at my job. The firm I worked for had received some feedback from its customers. The customers felt that the firm wouldn't be able compete in the future unless it added computer equipment to provide magnetic tapes to update their databases.
The firm made three mistakes. One, it bought an IBM mini-mainframe computer and a bunch of terminals. Two, it hired an unfortunate person with the personality of a pit viper to be the IT manager. Third, instead of changing it's production methodology to match the new computer system, it retained many aspects of its manual system.
It was a mess.
The Power of MS-DOS
My firm did buy a couple of "small" PCs. I don't know if anyone remembers the old (MS-DOS) Compaq "portable" computers (they were shaped like large sewing machines), but luckily I got one with Lotus 1-2-3 on it. The portability of the unit was very intriguing to me, and I saw for the first time how having one's own computer allowed you to manage information. It was very helpful to have data at your fingertips when the big cheeses were trying to stump you with questions that must have occurred to them when they ate lunch at a fashionable restaurant.
The other nice thing I took away was an experience I had with one of my manager's Toshiba laptop. It was not a "true" laptop, in that there where no batteries in it. However, my boss rationalized that you were never very far from an AC outlet - even at an airport. How things have changed in the laptop marketplace!
Enter the Macintosh
I started working for my wife's school about the same time Apple introduced the Macintosh. Talk about an impact on your life. The visual interface was so much better to work with than the text based approach I used with the Apple IIc and the IBM, Compaq, and Toshiba computers. It was easy to use and understand, and there was that fascinating program called HyperCard. I could see that HyperCard could be used to build what we would now call a relational database. Neato.
We had sold
off the Apple IIc and started a family. When it came time to buy a
family computer, we naturally picked a Mac due to it's ease of use and
compatibility with the computers that the entire family used at school.
We bought a sage iMac DV
450 in 1999, I think it ran OS 9. Over the years it has been
upgraded to OS X and has had some more memory thrown at it. It
uses the latest version of Tiger now, and I do get the dreaded "beach
ball of death" from time to time.
It went from being the only computer in our house to being a sage octopus that has an external hard drive, eternal disc burner, and three printers attached to it. It is sort of a hub for the wireless network that I built using a free Netgear wireless router. I feel that it can function for another several years in this capacity, although running Leopard is not a possibility. Running Tiger seems to be straining it now, even though I did a clean reinstall.
It's not my first computer or my first Apple, but the PowerBook G3 Pismo that I "found" at work (we even have a couple of PowerBook 170s hanging around) is the computer that has really stolen my affection. I suppose you could say it is my first PowerBook.
It all started with an Apple IIc, but where it ends, nobody knows.
Share the story of your first Mac experience by emailing with "My First Mac" as your subject.
Recent My First Mac articles
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- More in the My First Mac index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: 17" iMac G4/800 MHz, July 2002 - The iMac 'grows up' with a 17" 1440 x 900 display.
- Group of the Day: LisaList supports Lisa users.
- November 8 in LEM history: 99: OS 9: I think I like it - 01: The simplified Mac life - Soured on Windows - Flea market Mac - 02: Little room for improvement in new 'Books - Combo drive upgrade for iceBooks - 04: Re-Porter - 05: Fix the old iMac or buy a Mac mini? - Apple's Copland project - 06: MacBook Core 2 - MacBook value equation - Cheap is as cheap does - 07: Problems with Classic mode in Tiger - The G4 Power Mac that won't run Leopard
- Support Low End Mac
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Quad-Core CPU Makes Sense in MacBook Pro, OS X 10.6 Causing Overheating, Overseas Power, and More, The 'Book Review, 11.06. Also Late 2009 MacBook reviewed, how to add RAM to new MacBook, 18.4in Acer notebook used Intel i7, and SanDisk SSD chosen for Sony VAIO X.
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- QuickTime X in Snow Leopard Imports, Trims, and Publishes Video Quickly and Easily, Alan Zisman, Zis Mac, 11.04. The long, slow process of importing video into iMovie to edit it, then render it to another format, is history as QuickTime X does that much more quickly.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best Mac Pro Deals, 11.03. Used 2.66 GHz 4-core, $1,300; 3.0 8-core. $2,299; refurb 2.66 4-core Nehalem, $2,149; 2.93, $2,549; 2.26 8-core, $2,799; 2.93, $4,999.
- Best iPhone Deals, 11.03. New 8 GB iPhone 3G, $$99; refurb 16 GB 3GS, $149; new, $199; 32 GB, $299.
- Best 12" PowerBook G4 Deals, 11.03. Used 867 MHz SperDrive, $348; 1 GHz, $499; 1.33 Combo, $298; SD, $559; 1.5 Combo, $448; SuperDrive, $589.
- Best Power Mac G3 and PCI Video Card Deals, 11.02. Used beige 300 MHz, $25; G4/366, $49; blue & white 350, $80; 400, $90; 450, $105; PCI video cards from $15; shipping additional.
- Best Power Mac G4 and AGP Video Card Deals, 11.02. Used 400 MHz, $50; 733 MHz, $69; 933 MHz, $209; 1.25 GHz dual, $299.
- Best 15" MacBook Pro Deals, 11.02. Used 2.0 GHz, $800; 2.2, $900; 2.4, $1,000; refurb 2.53, $1,449; 2.66, $1,699; 2.8, $1,949; 3.06, $2,169; new 2.53, $1,579; 2.66, $1,799; more.
- Best Mac mini Deals, 10.30. Used 1.33 GHz G4 mini, $379; 1.42, $389; 1.5, $419; 1.83 GHz Core Duo, $350; Core 2, $439; new 2.26 GHz nVidia, $580; 2.53 GHz, $770; Server, $990.
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- Best Classic Mac OS Deals, 10.30. System 6.0.8 floppies, $10; 7.1, $12; 7.5, $20; 7.5 CD, $4; 7.6 $13; 8.1, $11; 8.5, $20; 8.6, $90; 9.0, $20; 9.2.2, $30.
- More deals in our archive.
Go to the My First Mac index.
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