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25th Anniversary of the Apple Mac
Happy 25th Anniversary, Mac! You've come a long way, baby. Formerly a fringe product (In university, I knew only two Mac users, One of whose was stolen after a few months), Apple's market share is flirting with ten percent, which was unthinkable even three years ago.
Twenty-five years ago, Apple Computers introduced the MacIntosh 128k, featuring the Graphical User Interface (GUI). (And let's be honest: both Steve Jobs and Bill Gates pretty much cribbed it from Xerox)
Users would navigate the brave new world with the trusty single-button mouse, which looked more like K-9 than an actual rodent. The case: beige. The screen: monochrome. The case? Integrated with the screen.
A lot has happened between then and now... Is there any direct connection left between Macs of yore and today's Intel-driven machines, all but indistinguishable under the hood from a PC? in the interviews quoted below, both respondents obviously want to say "yes", but cannot do so without some heavy qualifications. The case, in my opinion, does not count: a Mac would still function as a Mac even if the log board and components were mounted inside a microwave oven.
"Recently, I had a chance to go back and use the old Mac," Cohen said. "The essential consistency was still the same. You could take a Mac user who has been on ice for the last quarter century and put them on a modern Mac, and they'd be up and using it within a matter of moments."
Directed by Ridley Scott not long after Blade Runner, "1984" aired on January 22, 1984, and its narrative is now geek canon. Scores of blank-faced people are fixated on a broadcast of a Big Brother figure on a giant television screen, until a woman in bright athletic apparel sprints down a center aisle, wielding a hammer. She hurls it at the screen, which explodes into a bright white light.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (10)
at 09:48 on January 24th, 2009
One whole Generation already. It is amazing.
at 12:15 on January 24th, 2009
One thing that hasn't changed: to eject a disk from Mac OS, you drag it into the trash. Non-intuitive? Absolutely, but that element of the GUI has been totally consistent. At least now the bin changes into that little eject-y arrow thingie, instead of causing the user (i.e. me) to think he just binned his disk.
Oh, and also having separate formatted disks for Mac and PC in those pre-DVD days. Flash drives? Science fiction!
My Mac disk was called MACaque. Yeah, yeah, I know.
at 12:22 on January 24th, 2009
You know I never though of that, nor paid attention to it until now that you mentioned it.
at 12:35 on January 24th, 2009
It's not that hard. What's more interesting is how the value of the Microsoft vs Apple stocks have switched.
at 13:46 on January 24th, 2009
The original motherboard of the the first Macintosh from 1984. (first launched with 128k of RAM, this is a 512k version from later on in 1984). photo by Stephen Wallis.
Type 17 has contributed a photo to this story.
at 14:39 on January 24th, 2009
I love the early Macintosh.
After collecting the product of the time, has become so much a mouse.
But the mouse is not the same one which is slightly different from everyone.
crazyshin has contributed a photo to this story.
at 16:15 on January 24th, 2009
auggie tolosa has contributed a photo to this story.
at 00:29 on January 25th, 2009
128k Mac in a bag!
slomacuser has contributed a photo to this story.
at 10:31 on January 27th, 2009
Happy Birthday Mac! Here's a cool homage a friend of mine made: http://www.flickr.com/photos/patlejch/3221344508/
You should contact him about adding it to the images here.
at 07:13 on January 28th, 2009
I remember seeing a Mac in 1985 for the first time, at Drexel University's School of Information Studies. Then I owned an Apple IIc. I didn't really get into Mac's until 1987 when a friend showed me what he could do with his. Right after that I equipped my office with a Mac II and staff with Mac SE's.