In The Beginning - The Dawn of the PowerBook
Another interesting PowerBook Mystique article by Charles W. Moore at PowerBookCentral.com.
It Begins:
"I came to the Mac orbit in 1992, missing the advent of the PowerBook by just one year. At the time, PowerBooks seemed like exotic machines, astronomically expensive and more likely to be used by stars and celebrities than me ordinary mortals -- or so it seemed to this owner of a used Mac Plus."
In The Beginning - The Dawn of the PowerBook
Jory's Apple Icon Garden Adventure
Apple's legendary icon garden as seen through the camera lens of Jory!
From the site:
"At Apple Computer's Research & Development Campus in Cupertino, California grows a garden unlike any other in the world.
No, these photographs were not altered to include the icons; they grow in the garden naturally! These pictures were merely taken, processed, scanned, and lightly touched up to correct for color and distracting lampposts!"
Jory's Apple Icon Garden Adventure
PowerBook Mystique Review - "Buying Used Macs"
A review by Charles W. Moore at PowerBookCentral.com of Neale Monks' ebook "Buying Used Macs". Includes alot of information - an interesting read!
The PowerBook Mystique
The Smalltalk Environment
A 1981 Blast From the Past from the Byte.com archives, as Larry Tesler of Apple asks, "Are languages being used according to their original design?"
The Smalltalk Environment
Clarus Museum
Believe it or not, there really is an online museum dedicated to our favorite mascot, Clarus The DogCow! Definitely worth the price of admission. Check it out!
Clarus Museum
Clock Chipping Home Page
Hardware speedup tips for many classic Macintosh models. Worth a look!
Clock Chipping Home Page
Info-Mac HyperArchive Root
Explore the MIT software archive! Downloads for 68k Macs and even some Newton stuff.
Info-Mac HyperArchive Root
Vintage Mac Internet Setup Page
"Yes, you CAN get your Classic Mac, Mac SE, SE/30, Mac II, or other 68k Mac online!" Includes a walkthrough.
Vintage Mac Internet Setup Page
The Macintosh at 10
A blast from the past from the Byte Magazine archives. This article by Tom Thompson is from February, 1994.
The intro:
"Regarded initially as a "toy," it's obvious today that the Mac changed the direction of computing for the better."
The Macintosh at 10
The Mac SE Support Pages
Some handy information for SE owners, and others.
"This is the page for people who like to squeeze the last bit of toothpaste out of the tube, and the last ounce of performance from their ancient Macintosh SE, a late-80s machine with Motorola's 68000 CPU and a 9 inch black and white screen."
The Mac SE Support Pages