Ugh, I'm losin' it. The other day I said my new Mac Mini was my 13th Mac. Not so fast, silicon-breath. I left out not only two of the three laptops I've owned, but a short-lived eMac and the 21" iMac I have upstairs right this minute. So the total is 17, not 13. That's a lot of Macs, even over the 40 years of the Mac (1984–2024). It does however include three work and school computers I spent a lot of time on. Also, during the years I used Macs at work, I also had my own at home, so that sort of doubles them up you might say. Other times, like now, I owned two at once.
The first Mac I used was the Apple Macintosh (that was its whole entire name) that I first used at my beloved alma mater the Corcoran School of Art. The Apple Macintosh was later called the Apple 128k Macintosh—the name had not been shortened to "Mac" yet—to distinguish it from the 512k "Fat Mac" that followed it; but that was a back-formation. I'm fond of saying that "My first Macintosh was the first Macintosh," but jumping on board right from the get-go is not actually to my credit. It was because David Adamson, a local gallery owner and computer aficionado, bought six Apple Macintoshes for the computer art class he was scheduled to teach at the Corcoran School of Art, and I was in the class. There were only two(!) programs at first, MacWrite and MacPaint (the latter developed by Bill Atkinson, a photography enthusiast and friend of Ctein's), and it was assumed that all the art students would want to use MacPaint. But I applied for permission to use MacWrite in the class instead, and, after some discussion between David and school officials and faculty, permission was granted. There was a commercial in those early days in which Steve Jobs was quoted as saying something to the effect that the Mac was a computer for people who don't know how to use computers, to allow them to unlock their creative potential. I was that guy. I contacted David Adamson years later to properly express my thanks. The first Mac I owned myself was the Fat Mac, the immediate successor to the original Macintosh. My Mom bought it for me as a graduation present in 1985 (thanks Mom). It cost $2,495 in 1984, equivalent to about $7,500 today.
To put you in context, in case you are younger and started buying computers later, the 128k Macintosh took 3.5" diskettes that held 1.44MB of data (about ten pages of written text, and less than one high-res photo of today) and required the MacWrite program to be on each disk. So each time you finished writing ten pages you had to swap a new floppy in and out, in and out, again and again, so the system could copy the program onto the new diskette. Most trivial things with any kind of chip in them today have more computing power.
In 1996, when Steve Jobs returned to Apple, I bought his first new product, the so-called "Blueberry" iMac. iMac, by the way, stands for "internet Mac," a name suggested by ad agency director Ken Segall. Jobs had wanted the computer to be called the Mac-Man, apparently a play on Pac-Man, a famous early computer arcade game. He hated the name iMac at first, but he came to his senses. I stuck with iMacs through thick and thin, because they carried over the one-box concept of the original Macintosh. But when the screens got to be 27 inches in size it occurred to me that every time I wanted to upgrade I was buying a new display that I didn't actually need. And throwing away an old one that was still perfectly good.
If you allow for the periods of overlap—when I used one Mac at work or owned more than one at once—and subtract the Corcoran's 128k which I didn't own—my average time of ownership for each computer has been three years and three months.
But enough history. Long story short, unless it's too late for that, here are my three favorite Macs of all time, the ones I liked the best and was most pleased with, in chronological order.
The Powerbook 180 of 1992, a slick little "portable" computer that was of course a precursor to the modern laptop. (The picture is the visually identical 190.) I loved that little thing, and probably still have it somewhere around here. I used it basically as a desktop, but the idea of portability appealed to me. Of course, connecting to the internet was a bit of an adventure sometimes; if you were around in those days, you probably listened to something like this a million times. I kept the computer for years after moving on because I had Phil Davis's sensitometric Plotter/Matcher program for films, developers, and papers on it, with all of his own carefully collected data (which he didn't give out or sell; he wanted photographers to buy a densitometer and create their own data!). Newer Macs broke the Plotter/Matcher.
The Quadra 605 of 1993–6 that I started using in 1994 at work (Quadra was the family name of high-end Macintoshes of the first half of the '90s). I inherited it from David Alan Jay, a computer whiz and my predecessor as Editor of Darkroom & Creative Camera Techniques magazine. It was the first big monitor I had (mine was B&W only, yeah); it ran WriteNow, which was and still is my all-time favorite word-processing program; and it just worked and worked, reliably. It never took any time away from working. The only thing that ever went wrong with the one we had was that the little battery on the motherboard that jump-started the monitor eventually gasped its last and had to be replaced. That was it. It was a bit of a revelation to me to have a computer that was problem-free.
(Illustration from this site)
3D rendering of Aluminum Unibody iMac showing
position of combo drive and SD card slots
The third was the 27-inch version of the so-called "Aluminum Unibody iMac," that came out in 2009. It had an SD card slot on the side, which was incredibly handy. I could change cards merely by feel, without shifting in my chair much less getting up. That iMac was very powerful compared to what I was used to, the huge screen was beautiful, and the machine seemed very fast. And it still had a CD/DVD slot, so I could play music and movies conveniently from CDs and DVDs that I physically owned. Ah, nostalgia.
After this glorious peak is where things turn dark and Mike starts muttering. The iMac that came after it did away with the flat side on the computer such that the front and the back came together along a sharp edge. This necessitated the shift of the SD card slot to the back, which was nutty. It was a pain in the ass (PITA), and irritated me every single time I used an SD card, which was very often, and it stayed a PITA for the whole time I owned that computer. Sometimes I could find the slot by feel; sometimes I had to swing the computer around to find the SD slot, disturbing the rat's nest of cabling, or, sometimes, get up and walk around to the other side of the desk. It never stopped annoying me*. To add insult to injury, I could never, and still can't, see any reason whatsoever for the change. Did the sharp-edge model look better, or was it more cool, or was it more stylish? No. Who gained? What did they gain? There was no reason it made sense, and I couldn't see how it could have mattered to anyone else either. So why did they do it? I really regretted what it said about the mindset of Apple's designers: it turned the architect Louis Sullivan's iconic phrase "Form follows function" on its ear. Function dawdling petulantly along after meaningless, empty form. Yes, I'm a little bitter.
Well, sorry to end on a rant. Suffice to say, I loved the 2009 27-inch Aluminum "Unibody" iMac, as I had loved the Quadra 605 and the Powerbook 190 before it. All my Macs have been good, except the shoddy '90s PowerPC from the time that Apple was circling the drain and in danger of going bankrupt. The Aluminum Unibody iMac was the peak of the Mac, as the iPhone 6 Plus was the peak of the iPhone. Current iMacs (and iPhones) are almost as good functionally, though, and are of course more up to date in terms of their innards and connectors and so forth.
And now I have to go wrestle with re-rationalizing storage and backup again. I wish this stuff were easier!
Mike
*In general, I hate it—I usually change "hate" to "dislike," but not this time—when companies solve a problem, then abandon the perfect solution just for the sake of change. Apple got it right; they had it; then they lost it.
Original contents copyright 2024 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved. Links in this post may be to our affiliates; sales through affiliate links may benefit this site. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. (To see all the comments, click on the "Comments" link below or on the title of this post.)
Featured Comments from:
Earl Dunbar: "I’m not nearly as much Mac experienced or knowledgeable (and how I came to Apple is quite the story, at least in my opinion) but I disagree about the iPhone 6 Plus being the pinnacle of iPhone. I had the 6S (I always had a 'thing' for the 'S' models) and liked it except it had a really bad battery issue…for which Apple paid not only for replacement batteries but also refunds resulting from a class action suit. I enjoyed my XS with which I made really wonderful photos, including the shot of Peter Turnley’s bistro in Paris, which you have seen. My current 15 Pro is miles ahead of all previous iPhones if only for battery performance. Don’t bother fighting me on this! 😂 "
Mike replies: I shan't.
John Krumm: "While it definitely wasn't my best Mac, the Mac that gave me the most pleasure, perhaps in the same way that a first real camera does, was one of the original little Mac SE's, my first computer. By the early 'nineties you could find an affordable one used. I had used one at work before. It had two slots for floppy disks. I managed to get onto a very early version of the internet with it, and also dialed in to a BBS to argue politics with people all over the country (some things haven't changed)."
Scott: "My first Mac was the first Mac. At the time it was released, I was working in the IT department of one of Apple’s main investment banks and they gave us one as a commemorative gift. So it was a first-day ship of the first MacIntosh computer. The head of the IT department gave it to me to figure out how we could use it productively. It had a single 1.44MB drive as others have mentioned, but only 64KB of main memory. Hence the need to swap floppies in and out continuously as you worked on a project. Yet, it seemed amazingly advanced compared to the IBM PC and clones of the era, with its graphical user interface. I used that machine and its successors for many years at work, until the need for PC-compatible software overwhelmed me and I reluctantly switched.
"As for the knife-edge iMac, the design was intended to make the body of the iMac appear slim. It met that objective, in my humble opinion. However, I agree with you that moving the SD slot to the back was stupid. I quickly bought an external SD reader and glued it to the side of the printer on my desk, where it was easy to reach. And a DVD reader, which I kept in a drawer except on the rare occasions when I needed to use it. Apple’s obsession with slim and sleek designed required us all to buy dongles, external devices and deal with piles of wiring on and below our desks. And still does."
The first iMac was 'Bondi Blue'. Cheers.
[You're right. My "Blueberry" was one of the colors that came out a year later when there was a choice of colors. --Mike]
Posted by: Ian Goss | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 12:56 AM
One 1.44MB diskette can typically manage about 600 pages of text. However if you first fill your disk with the entire Word prosessor and use the same disk for your text, 10 pages might be correct. Seems like a pretty useless way to do it however. I can imagine 128k of RAM being a limiting factor here as well.
Posted by: Thomas Tveit Rosenlund | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 02:19 AM
Favourite Mac... - I think you're going to get a lot of replies on this one!
I think my favourite - that it, the one I enjoyed *having* the most - would be a Power Mac G4. It was just over 20 years ago, and I can't remember too much about what I used it for, but I certainly loved it. Before that I had a G3 Powerbook, the one known as Pismo, and I enjoyed that. I've had a whole range of Macs since then, including Mac Minis, and they've all been good.
As regards your issue about throwing away a perfectly good display when your iMac dies or just no longer cuts the cake, YouTuber Luke Miani did a fascinating video on how to re-use an old 27" iMac just as an external display. Here's the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bW3nKIyeZps&t=663s
Posted by: Tom Burke | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 02:49 AM
My first Mac, technically my then-young kids’ Mac, was the Blue Dalmatian circa 1999. It ran System 9 which felt ancient and clunky even then. It was followed in 2001 by the G4 titanium PowerBook which ran OS X in its first incarnation. Wonderful, fast (“supercomputer on a chip”) despite the shortcomings of OS X. Peak Mac was an iMac with Snow Leopard; after that things went downhill with unnecessary complexity and design over function. Especially in software. The icons still remind me of ‘My first computer’ for little kids! More importantly, Apple’s software stil has annoying bugs that have been around for years or even decades. Thumbnails in Safari that don’t match the title and don’t match what is show if you click them. Mail that aggregates messages so that the address list of a reply becomes a random address generator. And so on… Still I cannot imagine switching to Windows with its advertising riddled ‘interface’!
Posted by: Jan-Peter Onstwedder | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 03:35 AM
A small pedantic point (the best kind): "back-formation" is, strictly speaking, a linguistic term which means something rather more specific than a "retrospective renaming to place an item in a subsequent series". To adapt P.G. Wodehouse, if not actually disgruntled by its misapplication, I am far from being gruntled. "Gruntled" being a back-formation, of course.
Mike
Posted by: Mike Chisholm | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 03:47 AM
Another thoroughly-researched and comprehensive post having nothing to do with photography. You're definitely the guy for that modified Sigma modular thing. Sorry to be uncharitable. You'll feel free to delete this comment.
[Computers have nothing to do with photography? --Mike]
Posted by: Gary | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 03:50 AM
Ps. I might be cranky since Kirk Tuck is gone. You have a wealth of historical industry knowledge and I enjoy those posts. Where else to turn?
Posted by: Gary | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 03:55 AM
Your SD card slot frustration is most likely the result of Apple’s sometimes crazy policy of putting form over function. The current example I find terribly stupid is to put the cable connection to charge the Bluetooth mouse on the bottom of the mouse, so you can’t use it while it’s charging. Absolutely inane.
Posted by: John | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 05:29 AM
My 2009 27” iMac with one SSD drive upgrade is still going strong in my office. The mission critical Windows computer is just for work. Unfortunately the SD card slot never worked and the thing was too big at the time to lug to the store for an exchange. By the time I upgraded the hard drive I’d lost interest in an SD card reader in that computer.
New server going in tomorrow. My new advisers will likely tell me this old Mac is a security risk. One of the Californian OS’s is running on it, amazingly enough.
My first Mac was an LC II in 1992. Bought it never having used one. Was writing up my thesis and was sick of my two part database in dbase IIII plus on an IBM PC. I imported these into FileMaker Pro in one file and gave it a colorful multi layout easy to use interface. The next was a PowerBook 150 for my wife. The eMac is still on the floor in the kitchen at work. The original Mac Mini server died, but its dual disc replacement, 14 years old, still works fine. I kept my 2001 Black curvaceous PowerBook, the designation I’ve forgotten. Very beautiful design. And I’ve kept all the PowerBooks and one MacBook. For security reasons I’ve never let one computer go out. I have to collect them and get a cold chisel and bust ‘em up I guess.
Posted by: Richard G | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 06:10 AM
My first Mac was also the “Fat Mac” which my parents bought me. I wrote my PhD thesis on this computer. I also digitized figures by copying my diagram onto overhead projection sheets, cutting it to size and sticking it on the monitor, drawing with a beta version of MacDraw (if I remember correctly). Fortunately By the time I finished my PhD I was able to print in on someone’s early Apple laser printer. I still have my floppy disks from that Mac. I’ve also gone through many Macs over the years (including a clone). I now have a mac 2 mini pro with the cheaper Apple 27” monitor, and m1 MacBook Pro.
Posted by: Steven Ralser | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 09:13 AM
"the 128k Macintosh took 3.5" diskettes that held 1.44MB of data (about ten pages of written text..."
I seem to recall saving my entire 300 page thesis on a single 3.5" floppy on my Mac in 1987.
Posted by: T. Edwards | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 11:02 AM
Apple still goes for form over function. On my free-standing M1 Studio box, which I've had for a couple-three years, the power switch is on the back, and is absolutely flush to the backside of the box. You can barely feel it, with a lot of groping. (And the Studio definitely has a front-back orientation.) I eventually bought one of those small round sticky buttons that people put on the bottom of vases, so they won't scratch table tops, and stuck it on the switch. That works, but it's a funky solution to bad design.
I have a very nice Lenovo Windows machine which I'm slowly getting used to. The OS is not nearly as slick as the Mac's, but once you get into it, it's not bad (Windows 11.) Windows machines also have a wider and more easily accessible selection of keyboards. I'm think Mac for photography, and I may go to Windows for writing.
I'm a little surprised that you didn't wind up with a 13" Mac Air. $1,300 for the higher-end version, and it will support two external monitors. You'd use it just like a Mac Mini, except you could travel with it. If you travel.
Posted by: John Camp | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 11:55 AM
My favourite Mac? That'll be our 2007 Intel Mac Pro running Snow Leopard. I'd still be using it if it hadn't given up the ghost after seven years of serious use.
I'm running a 2015 5K iMac at the moment but that may be replaced soon. I love the screen but completely agree about the F - ing idiocy of having all the ports & card slot on the back of the computer.
We took the Apple trackpad option rather than one of Apples bloody awful mice. I stuck with that for about a week before ordering a Microsoft mouse.
Snow Leopard was the last Apple operating system that I liked.
Reading this, I realise that I'm starting to sound like my father in law who complains about everything.
Posted by: Graeme Scott | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 12:31 PM
"Favorite Macs of All Time"?
I loved my old Mac Pro tower. It was sublimely engineered.
But my "favorite" Macs are, unquestionably, the ones I'm using NOW: a Mac Book Pro 16" M3 and a Mac Book Air 13" M3. I cannot imagine ever needing or wanting more. Plus they're gorgeous.
Posted by: Ken Tanaka | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 12:33 PM
12” MacBook Pro, circa 2005 if I remember correctly without googling. I loved how tiny that machine was compared to everything else. I can’t believe what I used to do on that laptop…
But of course the best Macs are the ones I have now, M1 studio and 14” MacBook Pro of the latest generation. They don’t really crash, which was something I started to get used to once I had to ditch my old Mac Pro with error correcting RAM for an iMac and whatever else the twenty-teens shoved down my throat.
Of course I remember my friend’s Mac in the mid 80s, how much fun we had with it, though I did have fun at home with my father’s x86 clones, and even early on (I had to be what, seven?) note cards with what to type to launch the games.
So as soon as I went to college I got one of those Quadras. Haven’t looked back since. Roughly 14 in total since 1995?
Posted by: Ben | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 12:56 PM
Well, that was a surprise to see a mention of ol' Pelham Grenville W. in the comments. :>)
My brother used an early Macintosh to do his college project involving graphic design around 1984 or '85. He did it at the computer store where he worked and finished it in four hours, compared to the 2-3 week wait for the campus service.
The other students were shocked that there was a computer that could do the project, not to mention avoiding the lengthy wait.
Posted by: Dave | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 02:39 PM
I guess someone has to be interested in this stuff. I had a Powerbook when they first came out and used the original Macintosh computers from 1988-97. I also was a fan of the Newton. I think personal computers are essentially white goods and have been for decades. So I'm never sure why some people show much interest in them anymore. I suppose people continue to talk about cars and cameras too. But there again, in depth discussions of dishwashers or washing machines and their history are not all that common.
Posted by: Chris | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 02:47 PM
I have had many Macs over the years--both work and personal.
My favorite is the 2010 MacPro5,1. Everything is upgradeable and/or removable and I've done plenty of that. Upgraded CPU, video card, and memory. Replaced small hard drives with large hard drives and then SSDs. Installed PCie cards to support USB3.
And it all still works and it is my daily work machine. Every time Apple releases a new Mac I check the specs but here I am still running the MacPro.
Posted by: DavidB | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 04:38 PM
My first Mac was a Macintosh 512k back in 1985, then a Mac Plus, etc. Today, I'm still working on an iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, Late 2015) running Monterey, but Lightroom will not upgrade to version 14 on this system, so I've just ordered a new iMac. I'll miss the larger screen, but keeping Lightroom up to date is essential.
Posted by: darlene | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 05:09 PM
Apple never existed to solve your problems. Apple existed and still exists solely for the purpose of making money from selling a product.
Their shtick (or spin) was and is to convince you that you are unique and special and have an eye for great design. You have such premium taste sir!
But nah. They're just a corporation like all the others. It's all about the money.
Posted by: Kye Wood | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 05:34 PM
I got started early with an abacus.
and ended up with a PC and Windows 10 via IBM main frames and a slew of military and other real time systems.
Posted by: Herman Krieger | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 06:02 PM
The first Macintosh had a 400Kb floppy drive; a second drive wasn't available for about half a year, therefore you had the infamous 'disk shuffle', with your startup disk with the system and finder needing to be re-inserting every few seconds while you tried to transfer things onto or between other disks.
The 3-1/2" disk started out specified as a 360Kb disk, but with various formatting in different computer brands could hold anywhere from about 120Kb to 400Kb.
Later, when the MacPlus (with expandable RAM, starting out as 1Mb) came out, it had a double sided 800Kb disk drive. Then during the time the SE and Mac II came out, the high density 1.44Mb disk drive came out. By then hard drives were more readily available and the floppies weren't as limiting as they once were.
My first hard drive was 80Mb in 1986 - $2000. The next one a couple of years later was 400Mb - $2000. The third was another year later, 1Gb - $2000. Proof of Moore's Law financed by myself.
I started with a 128k Macintosh in April 1984 after having passed on the Lisa the year before because of the price, and I was delighted after having started with computers on an IBM 360 in 1963 at University.
Now I have a MacBook Pro Max and I still get to watch the rainbow wheel at times.
Posted by: Henning | Monday, 21 October 2024 at 09:41 PM
i was hired by Eastman Kodak at around the time the Mac was introduced. By 1987 or so, they were appearing in our department offices- even my little photo group got one. 5x7" screen and all. I think an Apple exec (Sculley?) had convinced the EK executives that the Mac was the computer for photographers, or something like that. After a year or so, there was a shakeup in one or both companies... probably someone at EK realized that Kodak was a big business, really a chemical company, and that the Apple's so-called superiority for graphics and photography was expensive and unnecessary for the legions of engineers and accountants who worked there. Which led to an immediate switchover to the IBM PC platforms... I'm glad the Mac/PC wars are a thing of the past. I got competent on the PCs, of course, but my personal computers have always been Macs. Time for a new one, too... your recent posts will help inform my decision, so thanks for that!
Posted by: Mark Sampson | Tuesday, 22 October 2024 at 12:43 AM
My first Mac was the G4 iMac with the Dome base and screen on an adjustable mount, the second a G5 iMac, and the last an Intel iMac which broke down recently.
My next Mac? Thinking of cutting the costs by going for Mac Mini with a third-party screen. But there are new Mac Minis on the way and I don't trust Apple not to tweak them so they only work with Apple monitors.
Though I am kind of bored with Apple as they don't really innovate these days, just iterate.
Maybe it's time to pull out of the Apple ecosystem and go full Linux!
Posted by: Antony Shepherd | Tuesday, 22 October 2024 at 03:34 AM
How's this for a "back-formation" (or at what oughta be a back-formation)? My favorite Mac was the Next Computer. Yes, they weren't called Macs then, or ever, and they weren't even Apple products, but they were Steve Jobs products (from right after he was ousted from Apple), shared the CPU architecture of the original Macs, and their innovative Unix-based operating system was the basis for today's Mac OS. Apple had tried and failed for years to modernize the original OS, and finally solved the problem by merging with Next Inc. and re-hiring its CEO, Jobs. That, IMO, makes Next computers as much a progenitor of current Macs as any official Mac of the time, and arguably more so. (Fun fact: the world wide web, and the landmark PC games Doom and Quake, were developed on Next computers.) In fact I barely got to see one, in a lab during a visit to my old campus, but I thought it was the coolest computer I'd ever encountered.
Besides that, I'd had infrequent contact with Macs and other Apple machines (including a Lisa!) until I got a MacBook Pro in 2011 to work on video and audio. Turned out to be a lemon--a design flaw caused chronic overheating and eventual physical board failure. While I was dealing with that, I rescued a Macintosh SE, just to mess around, play a couple of classic games and see what I'd missed. But I found it not as fun to tinker with as PCs, and the screen too small for middle-aged eyes, and eventually I gave it to a collector, happy nonetheless to have belatedly made the acquaintance.
I'm quite content with my current Mac Mini. It's no Next Cube, but it has much of its DNA, probably many times the computing power, and does everything I need it to, from editing video to running an old DOS notepad program.
Posted by: robert e | Tuesday, 22 October 2024 at 10:12 AM