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R.I.P. Original iMac: 1998-2003

Joey Patterson writes "CNET News.com reports that, after five years, Apple has stopped selling the gumdrop-shaped iMac to the general public."

11 of 422 comments (clear)

  1. iFruit by petronivs · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wonder if this means the newspaper comic Fox Trot will retire its iFruit computer.

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  2. Re:No biggie by goon+america · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Have you not heard of nostalgia?!

    The original iMac may have saved Apple. That is why it garners so much deserving affection. Steve Jobs supposedly started the project 10 days after he returned to the company's staff.

  3. IT? No, ID! by Zanthany · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As far as computing is concerned, the iMac was just a blip on the screen of desktop computing. But realize the impact the iMac had on industrial design for absolutely everything.

    You couldn't swing a deat cat and not hit a differently colored George Foreman grill, a phone, a printer, a kitchen gizmo, some transparently housed electronic gizmo, another technologically-all-in-one-packaged device, or any combination of the two.

    Lest we forget the bold step Apple gave us in dropping the floppy, and changing the way peripheral removeable storage designers view the desktop.

  4. Educational availability by BWJones · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hey, they are still available through educational channels. I just ordered another one given the success I have had with an iMac running Webvision. This site is a new iMac G3 running OS X and is getting on average 30 thousand hits/day and the machine is absolutely quiet with no fans so one can actually have their server up and running right next to your desk.

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  5. *sniff* (a eulogy) by shayborg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't think it's too much hyperbole to claim that the iMac was one of the most revolutionary computers -- ever. The all-in-one factor was important, certainly, though not unique by itself. Neither was USB, the lack of a floppy drive, or a round and colored case. But the combination of these (and others) in one radically different computer probably changed the history of personal computers. When was the last time you saw a large manufacturer sell a beige case? When was the last time you saw a computer that didn't come with USB? Even now, manufacturers are still slowly phasing out the floppy drive, something that Apple basically did with that one bombshell back in 1998. Love it or hate it, the iMac changed the face of computing forever, and will be remembered as such a pioneer in the annals of the history of personal computing.

    ::bows and gets off his soapbox::

    -- shayborg

  6. Education likes CRTs. by Trillan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The new iMac is better in nearly every way, but one nice thing about the old CRT-based iMac is that it is difficult to damage.

    CRTs are not bullet-proof, but they are much more "bored kid with a pen"-proof than LCDs.

  7. A tear for the computer that saved Apple by ihatewinXP · · Score: 4, Interesting

    1997, I was a die hard PC user just begging for a reason to 'switch' (back then you called it getting rid of Win95). On the software side the Mac OS was already showing its age badly and Rhapsody was a pariah. Enter the iMac. When it was going to be a time consuming clusterfuck to finally get everyone onto the OSX-UNIX-NeXT-Carbon-Blue Box(anyone remember that?)-Cocoa new Mac OS they innovated int he only space left..Well enter 2003 and OSX is just growing up and users are still clinging to classic boxes. But the imac - a hardware revolution that brought Apple just enough limelight and revenue to keep it afloat- 5 years later and a recent slashdot poll pegged apple as going out of business: Never...
    It was an eye opening computer to own and i love my daily use of its decendent, the flat panel.

    At the least they will live on for YEARS as macquariums.

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  8. Re:education takes a backseat as usual by physicsnerd · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's not a matter of old equipment, it's a matter of the right tool for the job. The old imac is a perfect computer for some of the applications that schools have. For instance, in a school library what are the computers used for? 1) Searching for books, and 2) doing research online. You don't need a G4 or a P4 to use Google, or to search for a book in the stacks. Apple isn't pawning off old crap on schools, they're giving sys admins more choices.

  9. Re:It will be missed by few, loved by many by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Interesting

    All Macs use only one power outlet, unless you attach some third-party gear. On my machine right now, the mouse is plugged into the keyboard via USB, which is plugged into the monitor via USB, which is plugged into the computer via ADC, which is plugged into the wall. That's it. No other plugs.

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  10. Re:*sniff* (a eulogy) by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't think it's too much hyperbole to claim that the iMac was one of the most revolutionary computers -- ever.

    I'm gonna nit-pick now. I know that's out of character for me, but y'all just bear with me.

    I don't think "revolutionary" is really the right word to use here. I think a better word would be "influential."

    The Apple II was revolutionary; it created the personal computer market from scratch. The Macintosh was revolutionary; it changed the way people interact with computers. The iMac was more evolutionary than revolutionary, but the combination of its design (rounded, transluscent, tinted, happy-looking) and its design philosophy (easy and fun to use) touch everything.

    So I think I would say that the iMac was the second-most influential computer ever. The most influential? The IBM PC, of course.

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  11. Re:It will be missed by few, loved by many by pherris · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Tastes change over time though, the NeXT cube used to be the sexiest back in the mid-1990's

    NeXT invented "sexy" computers. I still remember the first time I saw that black magnesium cube and thought this is the coolest thing I've ever seen in computers. Then I saw NeXTStep, an OS to match it's case. I miss both.

    Have you ever heard someone talk about an x86 box this way? To many NeXT users even the beloved iMac will not be missed as much.

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