Mac
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- Ninja Pirate
- Posts: 1568
- Joined: November 15th, 2004, 13:13
- Location: Detroit, MI, United States
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Mac
So, I bought a Mac yesterday. Now, before anyone who is anti-mac decides to jump my shit with the "OMFG Mac Suxors!" type things, I think they need to see the whole details.
I bought a POWERHOUSE, 400mhz G3 (blue and white) with 384mb RAM and a 9gb SCSI drive. This monster has a Rage 128 so you know i'm getting the coolest, high performance graphics. All for the affordable price of $10.
I have the latest version of OSX Tiger on it, and it seems to run smooth enough. I'm still trying to work out a practical application for it. I was thinking of getting a larger hard drive and putting my music collection on it. Anyone with Mac experience have any other ideas of what I can do with it?
I bought a POWERHOUSE, 400mhz G3 (blue and white) with 384mb RAM and a 9gb SCSI drive. This monster has a Rage 128 so you know i'm getting the coolest, high performance graphics. All for the affordable price of $10.
I have the latest version of OSX Tiger on it, and it seems to run smooth enough. I'm still trying to work out a practical application for it. I was thinking of getting a larger hard drive and putting my music collection on it. Anyone with Mac experience have any other ideas of what I can do with it?
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- Mr Flibbles
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- Ninja Pirate
- Posts: 1568
- Joined: November 15th, 2004, 13:13
- Location: Detroit, MI, United States
- Contact:
Yeah, I most definitely won't be running Final Cut or After Effects on this lil' guy. I don't even thing it'd be wise for me to run Photoshop on it, as my PC runs it just fine and it's got quite a bit more under the hood.Joose wrote:Ive used macs quite a bit, but only for video work, which I suspect would make that machine vomit all over you.
heh, I have a two button mouse hooked up to it.tandino wrote:Give to your mum and ask her to right click on something. Minutes of entertainment guaranteed!
Re: Mac
That's quite impressive in itself.Nickface wrote:I have the latest version of OSX Tiger on it, and it seems to run smooth enough.
How noisy / power hungry is it? Home media centres are all teh ragexors.
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- Ninja Pirate
- Posts: 1568
- Joined: November 15th, 2004, 13:13
- Location: Detroit, MI, United States
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Re: Mac
it's actually pretty quiet. The loudest thing about it is the SCSI drive. You can hear it when it spins up. it's still nowhere near as loud as my PC with the billion* fans all going and blowing things around.Stoat wrote: That's quite impressive in itself.
How noisy / power hungry is it? Home media centres are all teh ragexors.
*approximate
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- Morbo
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- Robotic Bumlord
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- Site Owner
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iTunes is the ideal application if you own a Mac, as it gives you the benefits of iPod connectivity and one of the largest library of downloads and podcasts, while not compromising your PC with software that er...wasn't optimised for it.
You can share files if your music collection is elsewhere, with Samba on the Mac, or NFS on the PC to connect to the other's native filestore.
You can share files if your music collection is elsewhere, with Samba on the Mac, or NFS on the PC to connect to the other's native filestore.