whitecat
Lone Range(find)er
I found that anyone who is a photographer really wants to have a Mac. The screen is like the viewfinder in a Zeiss 35.... Brilliant with no comparison.
I found that anyone who is a photographer really wants to have a Mac. The screen is like the viewfinder in a Zeiss 35.... Brilliant with no comparison.
At about the time of the Mac, I bought a Zenith Z241, 6Mhz 80286 with 80287 co-processor. The Motorola coprocessor was late by several years. Upgraded the Z241 to a 16MHz 386 for a "mere" $1000. Added an 80387, then a Cyrix coprocessor. Took all the parts from the upgrade, bought an empty case and power supply, used the old parts to rebuild the Z241. Made a parallel cable to connect the two computers via the parallel port, and programmed the Z241 to be a graphics accelerator with an IBM PGC, 640x480 256 colors circa 1984. Added an Orchid PGA, which used an 80186 for a graphics coprocessor. The Orchid did VGA nd PCG, you hooked two screens to it. I had three screens for my setup, all under my control. Used it for image processing. I used a similar setup for stop-frame animation using a Panasonic TQ-2026 Laser video disk recorder. that thing cost $25K. When I saw co-workers attempting to write code for a MAC II- yeah, right.
I was able to fix a clock radio once ... does that admit me to your club?
😛
Nice. Yes, this was SJ's company while he was ousted from Apple. Intended for the educational market. Turns out, Tim Berners-Lee created the WWW on one... The NeXT OS basically formed Mac OS X. The first versions (the betas and Rhapsody) looked nearly identical to it. Remember, a big part of NeXTstep was the APIs, etc. and the underlying part of the OS was ported to SPARC, Intel, etc. So it was easy to run it on PPC. This was around 1999-2000. In 2001, Mac OS X 10.1 came out, standing all on its own.
Heh, NT 4.0 was the last Windows I actually used (and mostly for 3D Studio Max). SGI... Now we're talking. I picked up an Indigo2 High Impact (the purple Barney box) back in 1997 or thereabouts - still have it. What's amazing is how well it handles OpenGL with the dedicated hardware... Still blows away anything I've seen today - and this was nearly 15 years ago! Ahh, Irix... Have to say, the Magic Desktop (4WM) was... Unique. SGIs were similar to Macs in a lot of ways (or vice versa). Real shame what became of SGI in the workstation market. Luckily I never bought into the O2, Fire or Tezra workstations - as nice as they were.
Check out the movie, "Peacemaker" (1997) with George Clooney sometime - chock FULL of Indigo2 and Indy boxes. They even had one in Jurassic Park ("Hey, this is Unix. I know this.").
My preference would have been a BeBox.
I still have a copy of BeOS R4 lying around.