40 Years of Macintosh - A Mini Documentary

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • Article on Cult of Mac: www.cultofmac.com/843238/orig...
    More Apple news: www.cultofmac.com
    Produced by Extra Ordinary for Cult of Mac
    Music composed by Will Davenport, arranged by D. Griffin Jones
    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    1:00 The Original Macintosh
    5:09 New Desktops & Portables
    7:49 ’90s Confusion
    9:55 The Newton
    11:21 The iMac, Apple Reborn
    15:44 Switch to Intel
    17:33 The Post-PC Era
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 48

  • @GRAHAMAUS
    @GRAHAMAUS Před 3 měsíci +1

    Discovered the Mac in 1985 -- they were being used in the offices where I worked to support the sales team. They had a shared, networked 80MB 'Symbiotic' hard disk to share data! The 'network' was the Apple proprietary one that Mac Pluses brought in, but worked back to the 512s as well. Eventually, cheaper storage meant the Symbiotic solution was obsolete, and I was able to use it directly as an external SCSI disk. I never looked back, and eventually writing Mac software went from a hobby to my career. I still think that the high point of the whole journey was the first time I got a Mac+ to display a window with some content of my own devising (writing software for it in the early days was hard - the tools were very crude, and you had to know 68K assembler). It's been a long road. Honestly though, Apple as a company were much "nicer" back then. Struggling for survival tends to work that way, I think.

  • @friscodog
    @friscodog Před 3 měsíci +3

    Very well-done! I love how the background changes to suit each era in the history you're summarizing. Took me a while to notice! Also excellent writing on your script. I've never been that avid reader of Cult of Mac, but I'll have to start.

  • @jeffreybackes4664
    @jeffreybackes4664 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thanks, nice trip down memory lane.

  • @onigvd77
    @onigvd77 Před 3 měsíci +1

    actually the ADB was for input devices so printers would not hook up that way, they used one of the serial ports

  • @canis9178
    @canis9178 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Very enjoyable trip down memory lane. My first computer was a Lisa and I never looked back. Now my M2 mini ROCKS!

  • @d3yuen
    @d3yuen Před 4 měsíci +1

    The LC- and Performa series are almost identical (but sold in different regions -- don't quote me 😅)
    The primary difference between the LC/Performa series vs Quadras (and to some extent, Centris- line) is the LC/Performas was based on a 68LC040 (primarily lacking a math coprocessor a la FPU) vs the full-bore 68040 (with FPU) in Quadras (and some Centris-). Can't remember if there were additional esoteric differences (on-die cache?).
    IIRC there was a running joke that the "LC" in 68LC040 stood for "low cost".
    It was definitely a strange time in the land of 6 colors.

  • @mattalki
    @mattalki Před 4 měsíci +1

    Loving the Tandy machines in the background (Model 4P, 1400LT, and Tandy 1000 EX). I started with the TRS-80 model I and eventually worked with Tandy 1000's. I was a die hard windows guy until 2003 when I tried my first Mac. I've been on the mac since then. Great video!

  • @john_ace
    @john_ace Před 3 měsíci

    The Performa line was the complete package with monitor, mouse and software for the entry market. There were games, software-samplers and productivity software included. Often Performa-packages were combined with printer, modem, scanner or other peripherals as well as part of a promotion. Some dealers did very competitive bundles based on the Performa line.

  • @d3yuen
    @d3yuen Před 4 měsíci +1

    Anyone notice the time-period matching machines in the background as he progressed through the history?

  • @dancrocchi8693
    @dancrocchi8693 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Well done story. Have had a Mac since the Mac 128, which I still have. The 128 had a very unique disk drive sound that is hard to forget. Swapping did get old

    • @dgriffinjones
      @dgriffinjones Před 4 měsíci

      I love the blip-blip-blip noise

    • @jaypeitzer3719
      @jaypeitzer3719 Před 4 měsíci

      We used to call swapping disks "Making Toast". Sometimes you could get into a rhythm but yes it did get old....LOL

  • @xknoewx
    @xknoewx Před 4 měsíci

    Love how you changed the Mac’s in the background seamlessly

  • @fotoralf
    @fotoralf Před 4 měsíci +1

    For a time, I had the most powerful 68k Mac that Apple never built: a Commodore Amiga 3000T with a 68060 processor board at 50 MHz and 96MB of RAM running Mac OS under Shapeshifter. 😀
    My first 'real' Mac was a beige G3 desktop, followed by G4 and G5 Power Macs, various Mac Minis and now a M1 Studio.

  • @DomainObject
    @DomainObject Před 4 měsíci

    Fantastic documentary. Well done. Thank you.

  • @johnyusupoff5815
    @johnyusupoff5815 Před 4 měsíci

    thank you for the video, i loved your story bor!

  • @realmac3k
    @realmac3k Před 4 měsíci

    Great video. The Mac has come such a long way since the Performa 550 I grew up with at home.

  • @gdutfulkbhh7537
    @gdutfulkbhh7537 Před 4 měsíci

    I used Macs at work, but the first one I bought new was a Classic II, which I used for six years, all through my time at University - eventually with a hard disk and RAM upgrade. I finally retired my last Mac two weeks ago, when my Framework laptop arrived. Feels good to be modular and repairable again.

  • @brentsmithline3423
    @brentsmithline3423 Před 4 měsíci

    Great job...

  • @johnhurlbut
    @johnhurlbut Před 4 měsíci

    Great job Griffin! I'd love to know where you store all your old computing stuff! You're amassing quite the collection! Keep up the good work!

    • @dgriffinjones
      @dgriffinjones Před 4 měsíci

      I live alone in a three-bedroom house, that’s almost enough space

  • @askingforafriend6540
    @askingforafriend6540 Před 4 měsíci

    Good summary.

  • @casao17
    @casao17 Před 4 měsíci

    Great video! Loved the changes of the computers on the background. I still have my G4 Cube and a 2012 MacBook Pro. When I have the room here, someday I want to get an original Mac and the Sunflower Mac. 😊

  • @mikequinlan9585
    @mikequinlan9585 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I became an Apple Fanboy in 1987 when I used a McIntosh for the first time.

  • @TheDanEdwards
    @TheDanEdwards Před 4 měsíci +1

    I'll challenge you on the idea that the micro-computer market was consolidating in 1984. New models and companies were springing up everywhere. The 1980's saw an explosion in small computers aimed at consumers and businesses. What _was_ consolidating around 1984 was the large computer market, where companies from the 1960s were clearly doomed, if they had not yet gone out of business.

  • @NealCMH
    @NealCMH Před 4 měsíci +1

    This was a great explanation of the history of the Mac. My first computer was a Mac Classic that I purchased in 1991. I have always said that I am glad that my introduction to computers was through the Mac. I could not imagine trying to learn DOS. Windows is a poor imitation of the Mac Operating System.

  • @teleroel
    @teleroel Před 4 měsíci

    Switching floppy discs: there was a little fun extension that would make a throwing up sound when you ejected a floppy disc. Sounded silly then, and I guess it still sounds silly (but was great fun with people who never heard it)

  • @stevedougherty3720
    @stevedougherty3720 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Really enjoyed that. Ive had Mac since Mac Classic. Over the years we has Mac servers, mini's power's iMac.etc. Everything is a lap top now. Next big jump is touch only and voice recognition. I think "real" computer use will morph back to a smaller segment .

  • @DerekDavis213
    @DerekDavis213 Před 3 měsíci

    The Mac is an amazing success story! Last year in 2023, about 22 million Macs were sold.
    In 2023, about 220 million Windows PCs were sold.

  • @bujin5455
    @bujin5455 Před 4 měsíci +1

    That was a decent overview. Nothing glaringly inaccurate, great job. (Though I'm not sure I agree that Swift is the first time you can run the same code base on the Mac and iOS devices, before Switch, everything was running Objective-C. What really lets everything run everywhere, without a recompile, is the fact they're all now running the same CPU architecture.) Not only that, but you brought up the Mac Portable. Definitely didn't expect that cameo!

    • @dgriffinjones
      @dgriffinjones Před 4 měsíci +1

      My understanding is that yes, an Objective-C app could share a lot of code between an iOS and macOS target, but it wasn’t until SwiftUI that the *exact same* code could build for both. The architecture actually doesn’t have as much to do with it - SwiftUI predates the Mac on Apple silicon. I developed Mac + iPhone-targeted apps on my former Intel MacBook Pro.

    • @bujin5455
      @bujin5455 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@dgriffinjones I'm not sure what you mean by "exact same" code. Yes, you can run the exact same code in both places, as it's the exact same language. Now there may be differences in the available frameworks, but that has nothing to do with the language, and Swift would do nothing to address that. The architecture actually has everything to do with it (in terms of the actual code getting executed), as the gcc (Objective-C) compiled binaries are not cross architecture compatible. Apple's magic "universal binaries" are really just two binaries (an Intel and an ARM) that are packaged together in an executable directory, where the system picks the executable that suits it. Swift is still a compiled language, so it doesn't have a virtual machine to abstract out the differences in ISA, and so unless you are running the same architecture, you'll have to have compatible binaries, or a real time translator (Rosetta), just like you would with Objective-C.

    • @dgriffinjones
      @dgriffinjones Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@bujin5455 I understand all that, but explaining that degree of nuance in one of the last lines of a video that isn’t even about programming wouldn’t really fit in. From a stratospherically higher-level perspective, AppKit for macOS and UIKit for iOS are two different things; SwiftUI is one thing that does both. As both a computer scientist and writer, picking how much to simplify is always a balancing act between confusing people and upsetting other programmers.

    • @bujin5455
      @bujin5455 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@dgriffinjones if you understand all of that, then you understand Swift did not enable a write once run everywhere experience. Sure you have SwiftUI, but before SwiftUI, there was interface builder that goes all the way back to NextStep. BTW, glad to hear you also have a CS background, as a computer scientist myself and a professional software engineer, I guess when people say XYZ technology did a thing that is completely unrelated to anything, I'm left scratching my head.

  • @wrdinc
    @wrdinc Před 4 měsíci

    But where'd you get the font used in the thumbnail?

  • @mikewottle8893
    @mikewottle8893 Před 4 měsíci

    The Performas were simply re-branded versions of their non-Performa counterparts, just sold direct to consumers. Typically the LC series were sold to schools and institutions.

  • @runforit420
    @runforit420 Před 4 měsíci

    This video was better than anything Apple presented on January 24.
    Well, Apple also did nothing on January 24 to acknowledge it...

  • @MePeterNicholls
    @MePeterNicholls Před 4 měsíci

    *C major breathy chime*

  • @mikequinlan9585
    @mikequinlan9585 Před 4 měsíci

    The 1990’s was just a sad period in the companies history 😢

  • @spinnetti
    @spinnetti Před 4 měsíci

    I loved the Newton. Pretty much had them all, but it was a novelty and mostly useless. The handwriting recognition worked surprisingly good for me - much better than Siri understand my voice today. My first Mac was an 8500Av. I was pretty happy with it. I also got the first iMac, and have been using them ever since. Apple still neglects the pro market, and the Top end iMac has been missing for years now. I feel like my 2020 27" imac might be my last mac after all these years.

    • @dgriffinjones
      @dgriffinjones Před 4 měsíci

      Give the M3 iMac a try! It’s not Apple’s “pro” chip, but it’s still plenty powerful for most workflows. And if that’s not enough, I can endorse the Mac mini - my M2 Pro mini been a video production powerhouse for me.

  • @AdilAli-ur8mz
    @AdilAli-ur8mz Před 4 měsíci +1

    nice hair

  • @ctcards2636
    @ctcards2636 Před 9 dny

    What drugs were they taking when they put out all the Quadra and Performa and LC computers that were all the same thing ? I remember all of that, thanks to this video it brought that confusion back into my life haha! Kidding. But i do remember the head scratching going on.

  • @RobloxianX
    @RobloxianX Před 4 měsíci +1

    The Mac is an incredible product. I am a bit disappointed that the iMac M3 was such a lame launch. If it had M3 Pro I would have upgraded from my 2020 i9 5700 XT iMac

  • @RichBriere
    @RichBriere Před 4 měsíci

    This was Fabulous........ I'm THRILLED that I didn't get into computers during the disaster daze. 🥳 BTW......If Apple ever dumps the iMac I'll walk to the Window and toss my Body to the street below.... in front of a Bus ! Just sayin'. :)

  • @matthews4159
    @matthews4159 Před 4 měsíci

    .......... you paint a pretty picture,, the MAC cost $2000 !! it originally just had MAC write & MAC draw
    .
    ................ the PC or commodore etc were INEXPENSIVE & had lots of applications

  • @jesusdaniel8707
    @jesusdaniel8707 Před 4 měsíci

    Macs was a success because of Jobs