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New addition: iMac G4 (the cutest Mac ever made). Arrived VERY dirty, and VERY dead (£20 eBay purchase). When opened up realised the ATA ribbon connector had been totally removed, and the drive caddy was missing its entire HDD (must have died at some point, was removed but not replaced). Entire thing full of dust. A good clean, a new IDE HDD and an install of 10.4 later and it is now happily on my desk (in place of my Macintosh Classic which is now displayed on a shelf).
So happy with the little beauty!
Yeah, there is something specifically pleasing about the little 15" display... I always thought the 17" and 20" ones looked a bit weird, a bit 'top heavy', whereas the dome of the computer always looked like it was specifically designed with the dimensions of the 15" display in mind.When I'm looking at this picture I rather dig out and don't sell my 15" one I have in my basement. It's looking really cute because of its 3:4 format. I have also the 17" and 20" one and those are looking more modern because of their screen ratio.
I wouldn't say so - I've had four and see plenty for sale, although they are largely in poor shape now - or at least need a good clean.I think they were relatively rare in the UK
thats incredible, do you think the 1400x1050 screen and 2ghz cpu could work in a 12" ibook? i have the 1.07ghz model that i want to max out with those upgrades if it is possibleI've been trying out my new DD after cloning the SSD from the previous (now backup) 12" powerbook:
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It's upgraded about as far as it can go, but one last thing I'd like to do is change out the LCD backlight with an LED conversion.
There is also the idea of increasing the onboard RAM, but I don't know if this can be done by simply changing out the 4 RAM chips. I have a feeling it would be more complicated.
4:3 is the ultimate resolution. Apple may even know this today, since most of their iPads use a 4:3 display.I feel unclean. Even more so than when I got that Intel MacBook.
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I prefer CRTs when I can use them, but my dual TV and monitor setup was causing this table to bend, so I had to switch out to this hand me down flat panel I got from my sister. At the very least it isn't PWM, but I still hate 16:9.
Actually, 5:4 is the better aspect ratio at the same horizontal resolution: at a width of 2560 pixels, 4:3 gives you 2560×1920; 5:4 gives you 2560×2048.4:3 is the ultimate resolution. [...]
5:4 is nice, I’ve tried and liked it. But Apple never used it, I wonder why… and I’m attached to keeping the 4:3 consistent between all Mac desktops and laptops, so that the windows are all sized the same.Actually, 5:4 is the better aspect ratio at the same horizontal resolution: at a width of 2560 pixels, 4:3 gives you 2560×1920; 5:4 gives you 2560×2048.
1:1 is best though.
Presumably because the vast majority of CRTs use a 4:3 aspect ratio, and running a 5:4 resolution on them makes things look weird unless you adjust their settings. 5:4 only really took off when 1280×1024 LCDs became a thing in the late 1990s.5:4 is nice, I’ve tried and liked it. But Apple never used it, I wonder why…
Yes, but the tube’s native aspect ratio is 4:3, so 5:4 modes will probably be stretched horizontally, making circles look like ovals unless you adjust the picture to compensate.I'm pretty sure the CRT Studio Displays could do 1280x1024, which is 5:4. […]
What about these 20” (or so) 1280×1024 fixed-frequency CRTs used with old Unix (SGI?) workstations: do these have a native 5:4 aspect ratio, since they don’t support any other resolution?True, I was responding to "But Apple never used it".
I’m not particularly handy with a soldering iron! But let me know how you get on! Would love to hear the results!True, I was responding to "But Apple never used it". The stretching doesn't bother me on my E773s (the 60Hz does, however, so I usually go back down to 1152), but with a geometry adjustment it looks normal.
@fooyork If you ever want to experiment with battery repacking, it doesn't seem that difficult and is potentially a lot cheaper and more reliable than seeking a new or lightly used battery for one. Obviously do your research, but you can maybe shove in higher capacity cells from what I've read. I have a second battery for my Lombard to experiment with repacking, and I'll post my results when I do, but a quick and dirty bit of math tells me you might be able to squeeze about 10 and a half hours out of a single battery with an SSD, assuming the original cells were 1800mAh and you use 3300mAh cells.
I recovered last year in UK a powerbook G4 12", with this serial 4H53821KRJ7, but in apple serial number info site it is not recognized, this is normal?
I had not considered this site, thank youLookup Mac Specs By Serial Number, Order, Model & EMC Number, Model ID @ EveryMac.com
EveryMac.com's Ultimate Mac Lookup - lookup Apple Mac, iPod, iPhone and iPad specs by serial number, order number, model number, model ID, EMC number and more.everymac.com
That were great time too!I had to do a little rearranging to get these shots, but here's my setup:
Image 1:
Top Shelf- iBook G3 500MHz 12" (Dual USB) and iBook G3 900MHz 14"
Middle- Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh and Macintosh Plus
Bottom- Mac Pro (1,1) and PowerMac G5 Quad
Image 2: (left to right)
PowerBook G3 Pismo (G4 Upgraded), iBook G3 466MHz (Firewire), PowerBook G4 1.5GHz 12", PowerBook G4 1.67GHz 17"
Image 3:
PowerMac G4 MDD Dual 1.42GHz (Overclocked to 1.5GHz)
Image 4:
iMac G3 (Summer 2001) 600MHz