As much as someone is ready to pay for it.This is not an Intel Mac but what would a development machine for Intel be worth?
Why?This laptop looks fake any how!
As much as someone is ready to pay for it.This is not an Intel Mac but what would a development machine for Intel be worth?
Why?This laptop looks fake any how!
Absolutely. But what does this laptop have to do with "the rarest early Intel Mac"? There were protoypes of early Intel Macs too, such as this.I would rather spend my cash on a more recent MAC rather than something that will probably never work again. Another Mac Pro or Power Mac would be far better.
Those who collect prototypes don't care if another machine is better.I suppose if a person is a collector and this is a must for their collection then go ahead and buy the thing.
I was searching the Bay to find any development machines and that was the only one that appeared and I thought what price would the Intel one fetch?Absolutely. But what does this laptop have to do with "the rarest early Intel Mac"? There were protoypes of early Intel Macs too, such as this.
Those who collect prototypes don't care if another machine is better
US $1,990.00
Approximately£1,608.54
This is not an Intel Mac but what would a development machine for Intel be worth?
This laptop looks fake any how!
They are rare, but I think not as rare as the original Air; I think because they were more of a student product, and students held onto them for years and got replacement parts. I found one cheap with a double-replaced battery, and a trackpad so worn down that it no longer worked in places.
A cardboard GPU would be better.
Shall I consider myself lucky that I have two green-dotMy vote would be for the (yup, you guessed it) "green dot" MacBook Pro 3,x and 4,x models.
MacBookPro3,1
s then? It was $200 more than the nearly equivalent white configuration, and all you got was a bigger hard drive... and a different colour. I've seen quite a few whites at university back in the day, but just a single black.I've got quite a few in my stash, and I'd agree that the black MacBook is really more uncommon than rare.
What about... the Core Solo Mac mini?The crappiness of the GPU aside, I've been able to turn even a lowly Core Duo-equipped MacBook 1,1 into a surprisingly good retro gaming machine thanks to Wineskin.
This iMac with a GeForce 7600 GT and 2.33 GHz Core 2 Duo is pretty rare, the best white plastic iMac ever made, and one that I had in operation for a while. Sleek and best of all with a nice matte 1080p display which I honestly preferred to the later glossy aluminum 24" iMac, but crippled by software / planned obsolescence when Apple dropped support in OS X Mountain Lion. MLPostFactor got Mountain Lion working fine but later versions lacked GPU acceleration and were unusable.Also may I add that getting working 2006 24” iMacs is getting incredibly hard. I’ve had 5 nursed along and all crashed and burned terribly. Friend had 3 that have all died, and I knew a former member of this forum who had to resort to running it without A screen to keep the GPU rebaked and alive. You buy one from eBay it dies the next week.
Was there reliable evidence it had a Xeon?I once saw an Intel Xeon MacBook Pro prototype on eBay […]
It was a prototype 2009-era Unibody MacBook Pro (red logic board) and the About This Mac showed Intel Xeon. Seller said the fans always ran full blast. That's all I can remember.Was there reliable evidence it had a Xeon?
That’s not necessarily accurate. It could have been an Engineering Sample CPU OS X didn’t have a clue about.It was a prototype 2009-era Unibody MacBook Pro (red logic board) and the About This Mac showed Intel Xeon.
Apple TV. No, they aren’t physically rare but the number of them in service running OS X is almost guaranteed to be the lowest of any Apple-produced computer.
Yes! You'd be very lucky indeed!Shall I consider myself lucky that I have two green-dotMacBookPro3,1
s then?
It was $200 more than the nearly equivalent white configuration, and all you got was a bigger hard drive... and a different colour. I've seen quite a few whites at university back in the day, but just a single black.
With the right source ports and an older version of Wineskin (plus a good SSD and the RAM maxed out), I bet I could make one into a half-decent retro gaming machine. There's plenty of good stuff to play with Aleph One, eDuke32, fruitz of dojo's Quake ports, and LZDoom.What about... the Core Solo Mac mini?
The OP seems to want to focus on standard configs, which is fair. I mostly threw the Apple TV out (somewhat jokingly) because it was a legitimate product that you could walk into an Apple store, buy, and install OS X on it the same day. As a matter of fact, people were able to reverse this process and install the Apple TV OS on MacBooks and the like, removing the regular OS X install. All of which was figured out within 2 or 3 months of the ATV coming out. Very unique little box.I guess at this point it's important to stipulate what would count in our "competition" for rarest early intel Mac. Do we count only factory produced retail models from Apple? Do we include prototypes, dev kits, or mods like a 1st Gen AppleTV running 10.5?
I had one of them with a 7600 but a 2.16GHz processor and loved it. ML with an SSD was nice on it. Sadly as mentioned the GPU fried itself, and I could not fix this one. I got 4 of them with the standard 7300 config from a school and all 4 died in succession… I have bad experiences with Nvidia dedicated GPUs from that era, but I didn’t realize failure was so widespread on this model.This iMac with a GeForce 7600 GT and 2.33 GHz Core 2 Duo is pretty rare, the best white plastic iMac ever made, and one that I had in operation for a while. Sleek and best of all with a nice matte 1080p display which I honestly preferred to the later glossy aluminum 24" iMac, but crippled by software / planned obsolescence when Apple dropped support in OS X Mountain Lion. MLPostFactor got Mountain Lion working fine but later versions lacked GPU acceleration and were unusable.
I do not know if the statute of limitations has expired on those (or Apple would even attempt to reclaim their property at this point)
I will say that if you can get your hands on a 2005 Intel dev kit, that would be a Grail regardless of the legality of owning it. I do not know if the statute of limitations has expired on those (or Apple would even attempt to reclaim their property at this point)
But... there’s this guy.Apple. Will. Never. Let. Go. Of. The. Past.
I feel like most Core Solo minis probably got upgraded with C2Ds at some point - can't be too many out there still in the original un-upgraded form.
You can upgrade to mobile Core 2 Duos that use the same Socket M as the Core Solo and Core Duo.Couldn't upgrade to Core *2* Duo, only C1D, different CPU sockets.)
The crappy GPU aside, it was still faster than the G4 mini when running native software.Core Solo Mini was absolute garbage from a usability perspective, even when new.
But... there’s this guy.
You can upgrade to mobile Core 2 Duos that use the same Socket M as the Core Solo and Core Duo.
The crappy GPU aside, it was still faster than the G4 mini when running native software.
And it’s just an updated version (faster FSB, SSE3, VT-x) of the 1.5 GHz Pentium M which was released in… 2003.Heck, it benchmarked faster than any Mac with a G4 — yes, even faster than a Power Mac DP 1.42 — and faster than any single-CPU/single-core G5.