Yes, building a website to showcase your macs sounds like great funJohn, that IIfx is gorgeous! No doubt that needs a place to be proudly displayed.
I've also added to my collection. In July, I was gifted a 20th Anniversary Mac by a former employer. It came with boxes and almost all of the accessories and parts. I think he knows that it's going to be well taken care of and will have to pried out of my cold, dead hands. I works really nicely, but the display starts an occasional jiggle after it's been on for a while. Gotta find someone who can find the bad caps, which is likely the issue. I hope.
A month later, a local Mac repair store announced that they were going to be downsizing. Part of the downsizing was closing up their storefront to move to a smaller office. Their store was adorned with slews of vintage and slightly vintage Apples. They ran a liquidation sale where just about every machine on display in the store was $25 each. I picked up a black MacBook C2D, a PowerMac 9600/350, and a PowerBook 180. Not included in that part of the sale was a Mac Cube with a power supply and speakers that I picked up for $150. I have yet to see if everything works. The black MacBook runs well, albeit with a dead battery. The 180 has a failed hard drive. I have yet to fire up the 9600 or the Cube.
I have a couple of other purchases, including an indigo clamshell, a Pismo, and a Quadra 700. At this point, I'm seriously considering building a website to showcase all of them.
Always wanted a tibook. I remember when those came out. Such a beautiful portable but complete unobtanium at the time financially speaking.Previous IIgs system has landed. Also entering the fold is a 1GHz TiBook.
-J
Check to see if you can add one to your collection... Should be feasible now.Always wanted a tibook. I remember when those came out. Such a beautiful portable but complete unobtanium at the time financially speaking.
@Certificate of Excellence No worries about the threadjack.I see the Titanium design language in pretty much all of the new Macs (and other brands as well). The Titanium is like the great great grand dad of portable design from iPhone 4 to 14-15 to the new MBP. I see the Titanium in so much of what we consider forward thinking, functional design today. That's the biggest reason I have for wanting one for my collection. In 2001, I was 23/24 and using a fat win laptop built for a grandpa, so the powerbook was pure unaffordable technological sex to me. Nowadays, I reflect on its design and what it brought to the table and how impactful it was even on well established design languages of the era like Sony for example. Everyone ultimately emulated that design language moving forward in multiple ways and still do - definitely worth hunting a clean specimen down for the collection. The Jobs/Ives era was just insanely good design. I feel blessed to have lived in a time when I could go to a BestBuy or CompUSA (and later on an Applestore) and see the technological art/innovation that duo created hit the market in real time. Insanely good.
And with this @Volvo242GT sorry for hijacking your thread for selfish nostalgic purposes.
Earlier beige Mac stuff, while I played around with 7-8 and MacPaint at computer stores in the 90s, my parents would not pay the Apple tax, so I grew up with my trusty and beloved DOS 2.6 C64, then into a win95 486 around 94, so had little perceived need thus desire for beige Macs. My first immersive Mac experience was literally sitting down next to my buddy for late night coffee who plopped his new laptop down on the table and seeing a Titanium powerbook g4 running OSX for the first time. That really caught my attention. Of course it would be years later until I could actually afford and would buy my first 2nd hand Mac; a first gen 24" Intel white iMac running Tiger. But yeah man, technological lust the second I laid eyes on that powerbook and have wanted one since.@Certificate of Excellence No worries about the threadjack.
BTW: in 2001, I was 25/26, using my original PowerMac 7100/80... Had just gone back to the Apple II world. Built myself my dream //e machine. The one I desired back in 1988. Early //e with enhanced ROMs, AE RAMWorks II with 1MB RAM, SuperSerial II card, two disk ][ drives with their controller card, two Apple 3.5 drives being run off a Laser UDC, AppleMouse IIe with card, AE Timemaster H.O. clock card, Color Monitor IIe, Kensington System Saver, and a CH Products FlightStick. Everything was reasonably priced in that time period.
-J