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We bought a used iMac G3 (450MHz, 128MB RAM, OS X 10.1) from a friend. It was a good price, and we thought it would be a great way to sink our teeth into a Macintosh (at least in a way beyong what we’ve been exposed to by supporting them). I also thought it might be nice for testing web pages and other stuff. It runs pretty well, albeit a bit slow. I think we might throw some more memory in it. It’s a pretty nifty little machine.
Some may remember that I actually started on Apple’s back in the day. Apple IIe’s in grade school, and my first computer was an Apple IIgs, which offered a finder very similar to earlier versions of Mac OS (but was somewhat useless without a hard drive at the time). I switched over to the IBM-compatibles because BBSs were the big craze and anyone who was anyone with a BBS ran it on a DOS machine. Plus, Mac OS prior to X were simply dreadful, in my opinion. Since then I’ve used Windows, Linux, and OS/2, but have always sheepishly come back to Windows. Perhaps this time will be different. I like the BSD core OS X has, and I’m looking forward to the new Mactel machines.



I too started on Apple computers…I love my windows, but in the past few years I’ve grown to love Apple, their company, and their products, even if they are overpriced! They listen to their customers and provide great products…if I had the money, I’d buy a powerbook, but my first machine to sink my teeth in will probably be a mac-mini…can’t beat the price…
I’ve been impressed with Apple’s progress over recent years, but I still remain cautious of buying one of their better models. I’ve found out there are a lot of quirky, annoying things about the OS X (and some cool things too). I spent 3 hours last night trying to map my laser printer (which the manufacturer has Mac drivers for) without luck :/
The directory structure is odd too – not what I’m used to in Linux, but I’ve never been a BSD guy…