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Mac Musings
1999 Low End Mac Awards
Dan Knight - 31 December 1999
The best and word of 1999 (and very subjective):
- Best Collaborative Effort Award
- Mac-Centric Site Rebranding
- Mac-Centric Site Loss Award
- Low End Hostile Site Design Award
- Best Derived Design Award
- Visual Downgrade Award
- Paradigm Shift
- Relocation Award
Best Collaborative Effort: SETI@home
Anything that can pull together over one million computer users on Windows, Mac OS, various forms of Unix, and more, is pretty incredible. That's what SETI@home has done, getting over 1.5 million computer users to donate their spare CPU cycles for analyzing sky data. So far, that's added up to over 134,000 years of computer time.
Will we find ET? Got me, but it's fun trying.
For more on SETI@home, see my editorial from October 19. Low End Mac actively supports Team Mac Observer, which currently stands at 20th place in the overall team stats.
Mac-Centric Site Rebranding: The Mac Observer
Just a year ago Webintosh made the announcement: the almost two-year old site, a staple for many of us, was changing its name. It took some getting used to, but The Mac Observer very successfully rebranded itself as a leading Mac news and opinion site. A personal favorite is "The Mac Observer Spin" which helps bring a concluding focus to articles.
On top of that, they pulled together a Top 20 team in SETI@home.
Honorable Mention
Macintosh4ever reinvented itself as MacBC, the Macintosh Broadcasting Company, creating a site with a broader focus.
Mac-Centric Site Loss: MacTimes
A year ago, MacTimes was home to Pure Mac, Low End Mac, Bare Feats, State of the Macintosh, and a few other sites. It also had an excellent news engine.
Then it fell apart. First one site left, then another. Eventually Low End Mac, the last core site, left for its own domain. MacTimes struggled along for several more months, but never recovered.
In the end, the owners tried to sell the domain on eBay, but found no takers. As former editor-in-chief for MacTimes, I've penned additional thoughts and details in The Life and Death of MacTimes.
The good news is that, with one exception, everyone who left seems to have landed on his feet.
Runners Up
Lots of sites are missing in action, updated irregularly if at all. Among those missed are:
- MacGeeks, with a name you have to love, hasn't been updated since Thanksgiving Day (11/25/99).
- The Mac Junkie, no updates since November 19. Got off to a good start, developed some good writers.
- MacinStart, which replaced MacMania. Promised weekly updated Nov. 16, but has only been updated once since then.
- State of the Macintosh, commentary by Somnath Banerjee. Part of MacTimes. Always though provoking.
Beyond that, several iMac subsites have merged back into their parent site, such as deal-iMac disappearing into dealmac as what was once unique about the iMac slowly became the Macintosh norm (USB, lack of a floppy drive, etc.).
Low End Hostile Site Design: Byte.com
I'm a tech weenie from way back. I've been reading Byte since 1979. But in November, they made their site inaccessible to anyone using a browser that doesn't support PNG images. Well, not completely inaccessible, but pretty close. All new graphics are PNGs, so for new articles with graphical links but no text links, there's no way to know what's new or what the article is about.
I've got nothing against PNGs, except that Internet Explorer for the Mac doesn't support them at all, nor do older versions of Netscape, which means using PNGs is low-end-hostile.
Other than that, Byte.com is an excellent site which covers a lot more than the world of Windows.
Best Derived Design: iMac Linux
I pride myself in trying to create a site with a distinct look, one that's easy to navigate and friendly to older Macs as well as those who use text or speech browsers. But sometimes imitation isn't just the sincerest form of flattery - it's a great way to design a site.
Anyone familiar with Slashdot will feel immediately comfortable at iMac Linux. In fact, they'll have a real sense of deja vu.
The iMac Linux site is deliberately designed to emulate Slashdot, which is great for Linux users. The color scheme and icons are different, but if not for that, you'd suspect you were on Slashdot. And that's the point, to make it comfortable.
Visual Downgrade: MacCentral
MacCentral, which is now teamed up with Macworld and MacWeek, has always had an authoritative, news-like look. Well, they did until mid-December, when they replaced this banner:

with this lightweight logo:
Now, which one looks more like a respected news site?
MacCentral remains a good source of news, although they now mix MacWeek and Macworld links in with their own. (MacWeek does the same when linking to MacCentral - it's like they're hardly separate sites in some ways.)
Paradigm Shift: Ezines
Low End Mac was named after a defunct ezine, Low End User. In the age of the web, the old style ezine designed to be downloaded and printed or read in Acrobat or DOCmaker is fighting a losing battle. We want our information on the web.
Some ezines have successfully made the transition, while other remain in the old mode, and still others have vanished. The current roster (apologies if I left anyone out):
- .Mac (dotMac) has merged with 1984 Online, which is a regular web site with DOCmaker and Acrobat back issues.
- ATPM (About This Particular Macintosh) is available for download - or 100% online for reading with your browser.
- Apple Wizards is 100% online.
- MacNow seems to be on hiatus.
- The Menagerie of Macs moved from an email ezine to 100% online (hosted on Low End Mac), but hasn't published an issue recently.
- MyMac Online is 100% online and available for download.
- Web Page Design for Designers isn't Mac specific, but it's always been 100% online (which makes sense, considering their focus).
Overall, the trend has been away from something you have to download before reading to content you can view on the web - although several sites give you both options. I think it's a big step forward putting ezines on the web where the content is readily available, and I applaud the paradigm shift of the past year which has brought this about.
Relocation Award: Low End Mac
I could be wrong, but I think Low End Mac has relocated more
times than any other Mac-centric site. We started out the year as
part of MacTimes (our URL began http://www.mactimes.com/lowend/),
then moved to our own domain (http://lowendmac.com) on a G3 run by
Innovative Technologies. After several months of trying to move the
domain, we finally set up as (http://lowendmac.net) and joined the
infiniMedia Network, which is hosted on Unix gear by Pair Networks.
Three hosts and three URLs in one year. Believe me, it's more than
enough.
Dan Knight has been using Macs since 1986, sold Macs for several years, supported them for many more years, and has been publishing Low End Mac since April 1997. If you find Dan's articles helpful, please consider making a donation to his tip jar.
Recent Mac Musings
- No High Definition iTunes Video for You, 11.19. The October 2008 MacBooks are preventing users from viewing some high-def iTunes content from being viewed on their external displays. Poor form!
- Anticipating Macworld: Nehalem, Snow Leopard, and Updated Desktops, 11.18. Intel's Core i7 CPU has to make it way into the next Mac Pro, nVidia GeForce graphics will drive the iMac and Mac mini, and 'Snow Tiger' will unleash the animal within.
- One Used Mac Can Make a Difference, 11.12. Instead of scrapping out old Macs for raw materials, what if the Mac community worked to restore them and give them away to those with no computers?
- A Brief History of Portable Computing: From Dynabook to Netbooks, 11.06. 40 years ago Alan Kay dreamt of a two pound handheld computer. Portables have made a lot of changes since 1981, but haven't yet matched the Dynabook.
- More in the Mac Musings index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: 14" iBook G3/600 MHz, Jan. 2002 - The first 14" iBook ran at a comfortable 600 MHz.
- Group of the Day: Mac OS 9 List covers Mac OS 9 as both a freestanding OS and as Classic mode in OS X.
- December 1 in LEM history: 99: Monitor dot pitch - 00: Macs for new users - Everybody wants to use iMacs - Career options - 03: Pfinder: Panther-like Finder for legacy Macs - 04: Why I use an eMac, iBook, and Power Mac - ThinkFree Office - MacLink Plus 15 - 05: PowerBook 190 still a great laptop - Eudora, the Mac's most powerful email client - 06: Core 2 'Books cooler and faster
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- The Very Best Macs: Sometimes Apple Just Nails It, Andrew J Fishkin, Best Tools for the Job, 12.01. Apple has produced lots of good Macs, a few dogs, and some 'best of breed' models that stand apart from the pack.
- Apple Could Buy Dell, and Linux Is No Threat to Mac OS X, Charles W. Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 12.01. Apple has the cash to buy Dell outright, and the idea has some merit. Also, why Linux still isn't ready to displace the Mac OS.
- Will Snow Leopard Support Some PowerPC Macs?, Simon Royal, Mac Spectrum, 11.26. It just doesn't make sense that Apple would ship a new OS that won't support Macs sold less than three years ago.
- From Ubuntu to OS X, Picking the Right Mac, an Aluminum Mouse Pad, and More, Mac News Review, 11.26. Also changes in Apple culture, OWC rebates on Hitachi drives, Clone X clones OS X, and LaCie SilverKeeper updated for OS X 10.5.5.
- Apple Retail Will Break Records This Christmas, Tim Nash, Taking Back the Market, 11.26. "Despite all the economic problems, Apple Retail can look forward to another successful quarter with sales maybe breaking through $2 billion...."
- iPhone 2.2 Software Update Released and Jailbroken, Advent Calendars for Your iPhone, and More, iNews Review, 11.26. Also making Street View work on the iPod touch, BlackBerry Storm questions answered, Microsoft's forthcoming phone, eco-friendly cases, and more.
- MacBook Slowdown without Battery, DisplayLink and DRM, 256 GB SSD, MagSafe Solutions, and More, The 'Book Review, 11.26. Also Mac netbook prospects, laptop cooling table with 2 fans, solar notebook bag, hard shell cases for unibody 'Books, bargain 'Books from $500 to $2,299, and more.
- Old Macs in the New Economy, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing, 11.25. "We are the kings of making our computers last, last, and last some more."
- Virtualization Shootout: VirtualBox 2 vs. VMWare Fusion 2, Kev Kitchens, Kitchens Sync, 11.25. VirtualBox is aimed at a different audience than Fusion and Parallels. While it works well, the typical desktop user will probably prefer Fusion.
- Software to Keep Your MacBook Cool, Phil Herlihy, The Usefulness Equation, 11.25. Heat is the enemy of long hardware life. Two programs to keep your MacBook running cooler.
- Another Way to Run WeatherBug, Aspire One Runs OS X, 17" MacBook Pro Hi-res Display, and More, Charles W. Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 11.25. Also finding that 'just right' notebook computer, car, or truck.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best iPod nano Deals, 12.01. Refurb 3G/4 GB, $79; new, $105; refurb 8 GB, $99; new, $115; 3G/8 GB, $134; 16 GB, $174. Prices include ground shipping.
- Best 12" PowerBook G4 Deals, 12.01. Used 1.5 GHz SuperDrive, $481/C$599 plus shipping.
- Best Mac Pro Deals, 12.01. Used 3.0 GHz 4-core, $2,102; new 2.66 GHz 4-core, $1,949 after rebate; 2.8 4-core, $2,099 a/r; 8-core, $2,515 a/r; 3.0 $3,320 a/r; 3.2, $4,099 a/r.
- Best MacBook Deals, 11.26. Used 1.83 GHz, $595; 2.0 SD, $660; refurb 2.1 GHz, $949; 2.4, $999; black, $1,099; new 2.1, $869 after rebate; 2.4, $1,150 a/r; black, $1,194 a/r; more.
- Best iPod touch Deals, 11.26. Used 1G/8 GB, $160; refurb, $179; new, $198; used 16, $200; refurb, $219; refurb 32, $319; new, $340; 2G/8 GB, $219; 16, $289; 32, $379.
- Best Power Mac G5 Deals, 11.26. Used 1.6 GHz single, $450; 1.8, $499; dual, $600, 2.0, $800; 2.3, $816; dual-core, $1,000; 2.5 dual, $1,000; 2.7, $1,050; 2.5 Quad, $1,400.
- Best MacBook Deals, 11.26. Used 1.83 GHz, $595; 2.0 SD, $660; refurb 2.1 GHz, $949; 2.4, $999; black, $1,099; new 2.1, $869 after rebate; 2.4, $1,150 a/r; black, $1,194 a/r; more.
- Best Mac mini Deals, 11.25. Used 1.42 GHz G4 Combo, $429; 1.66 GHz Core Duo, $449; 1.83, SuperDrive $629; new 1.83 Core 2 Combo, $570 shipped; 2.0 SD, $760 shipped.
- Best 15" PowerBook G4 Deals, 11.25. Used 1.67 GHz SuperDrive, $539; hi-res, $800. Shipping additional.
- Best Time Capsule and AirPort Deals, 11.25. Refurb 500 GB Time Capsule, $249; new, $281; refurb 1 TB, $419; new, $462; AirPort Extreme Base Station, $159; Express, $60.
- More deals in our archive.
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