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Build Your Own Mac With CoreCrib Kit

Mark Dobie writes "I just put up a quick review of the CoreCrib kit I purchased. It is an inexpensive solution to building your own Mac." See our previous Core coverage.

358 comments

  1. Please explain... by gricholson75 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    the popularity of these systems. I can get a emac 800Mgz/256MB/40GB for $849, and it comes with a monitor and better graphics, and the operating system. If I was going to build a linux system, you get better bang for the buck from x86 hardware. I don't understand. FP?

    1. Re:Please explain... by thadeusPawlickiROX · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The reason this kits are gaining in popularity is that you build the system. You don't go out and buy an eMac, or buy a tower, but you put exactly what you want in it. It's something that PC users have been doing for years, and some Mac users as well. It's not about "better bang for the buck," it's just to say that you custom built your Mac.

      --
      take off every sig for great justice
    2. Re:Please explain... by gricholson75 · · Score: 1

      Well I guess that I understand the desire to build your own system, but not when it seems to cost signifigantly more than buying a comparable sytem pre-built, which seems to be the case here.

    3. Re:Please explain... by eXtro · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Don't compare these to an eMac, compare them to a G4 tower. For $849 you get a tower including PCI slots and and AGP port. If you're looking for a Macintosh that you can throw a couple of PCI cards (maybe a couple of SCSI adapters, whatever) but can't justify the price of a new Apple G4 system then maybe this is for you. For instance a dual 1.25 GHz Apple G4 tower costs $1999 with 256 MB RAM and an 80 GB hard drive. The site just stopped responding so I can't determine the price but presumably a dual 1.2 GHz their would be less than 2 grand.

    4. Re:Please explain... by ilsie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You don't go out and buy an eMac, or buy a tower, but you put exactly what you want in it. It's something that PC users have been doing for years

      Yes, but in contrast, the typical custom PC is built to accomplish three goals as opposed to buying a prebuilt desktop:

      1. Look better
      2. Higher performance
      3. Cheaper

      These mac clone kits accomplish none of these things.

    5. Re:Please explain... by drgroove · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's not about "better bang for the buck," it's just to say that you custom built your Mac.

      I agree completely. FWIW, if you're looking for better bang for the buck, would you really be use Macintosh in the first place? (That is NOT troll or flamebait...keep reading :) )

      Apple's own Mac systems aren't pitched as 'best bang for the buck' - these are highly integrated, highly specialized computers, designed to 'rise above the masses' of wintel machines. The concept behind the 'build your own' PC follows a different set of rules when its applied to a Mac, because the Mac itself follows a different set of rules. Its great that more companies are offering customizable Mac systems - there is a market for this sort of thing!

    6. Re:Please explain... by the_machine · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Please explain the popularity of these systems. I can get a emac 800Mgz/256MB/40GB for $849, and it comes with a monitor and better graphics, and the operating system.


      How upgradeable is your eMac? How important is that to you?

    7. Re:Please explain... by eXtro · · Score: 2, Informative

      The price of the dual 1.2 GHz kit is $1349, you could throw in 256 meg of ram and an 80 gig hard drive in for around 120 bucks, probably less.

    8. Re:Please explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grich,

      Obviously you don't understand some of the reasons why people go out and buy a Mac... I will tell you this though, "typically" it is not because they are out bargain shopping for a cheap price.

      Christ, If you are looking for a inexpensive retail PC go with e-machines, or better yet head over to Wal-Mart and pick up a Lindows Box.

    9. Re:Please explain... by swb · · Score: 1

      I'll buy performance and price, but looks? The best cases for the money are usually pretty homely, and especially once I jam two optical drives, a zip drive, a floppy, and a jaz drive, none of which look alike, it gets even worse.

      I suppose somebody wastes time on making the case look good, but not me.

    10. Re:Please explain... by minus_273 · · Score: 1

      hmm what is this about emacs? isnty it GNU/emacs?

      --
      The war with islam is a war on the beast
      The war on terror is a war for peace
    11. Re:Please explain... by phillyclaude · · Score: 4, Funny

      come on....tell me this isn't cool

      --
      A computer without a Microsoft operating system is like a dog without bricks tied to its head
    12. Re:Please explain... by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Lots of people "waste time" making the case look good, because a good looking case is a well maintained case, that doesnt have a rats nest of wires and a CPU fan that clogs up and dies.

      I dont go putting an automotive finish on it and type R stickers, but a little forethought into getting matching drives and whatnot doesnt kill anyone.

      There are a lot of PC cases that look much better than macs. IMO mac's look like super nintendos on growth hormones.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    13. Re:Please explain... by swb · · Score: 1

      Well engineered and good looking aren't really the same in my book. Yes, I find neatly engineered internals appealing, but it's not really a *case* aesthetic, especially once its been closed up.

    14. Re:Please explain... by Beatbyte · · Score: 1

      $1349 for dual 1.2ghz, FYI

    15. Re:Please explain... by ClaraBow · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I agree look at these specs:

      The 17-inch flat CRT eMac, for a suggested retail price of US$799 includes:

      800 MHz PowerPC G4 processor;

      CD-ROM optical drive;

      ATI Radeon 7500 with 32MB video memory;

      128MB of system memory; and

      40GB ATA hard drive.

      The 17-inch flat CRT eMac, for a suggested retail price of $999 includes:

      1 GHz PowerPC G4 processor;

      32x Combo DVD-ROM/CD-RW optical drive;

      ATI Radeon 7500 with 32MB video memory;

      128MB of system memory; and

      60GB ATA hard drive.

      The 17-inch flat CRT eMac, for a suggested retail price of $1,299 includes:

      1 GHz PowerPC G4 processor;

      4x SuperDrive DVD-R/CD-RW optical drive;

      ATI Radeon 7500 with 32MB video memory;

      256MB of system memory; and

      80GB ATA hard drive.

      You get a lot more for your money -- and support just in case!

    16. Re:Please explain... by vanbeast · · Score: 1

      uhm... alright. I really don't think that's cool. Some of the case modding is pretty cool looking... but that is ridiculous. Now, I can respect the work that went into it and that some people would like it... but I think it's hideous.

    17. Re:Please explain... by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

      Especially given how noisy PCs can be, you can't really put them at eye level these days since that also places them at ear level.

      I have sound proofed my PC, it's not attractiive from the outside but if I can't hear it then I'll forget it's even there :)

    18. Re:Please explain... by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 1

      No doubt, however one can get the same motherboard in a G4 case for the same (if not less) amount of money on ebay. The only benifit I see to these machines are the extra drive bays.

      --
      "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
    19. Re:Please explain... by Brandon+Sharitt · · Score: 1

      Now days you can often find cheap PCs on the internet for the same price of cheaper than you can build it yourself. I was going to build my own PC, but then I started looking at some online retailers on pricewatch. After adding up the cost for the parts I'd need, the computer online was just slightly cheaper, and after I tallied up shipping on the individual parts verses the shipping of the completed PC, it became even cheaper. Although I guess I was taking abit of a risk going with a non name retailer, but it all worked out fine.

    20. Re:Please explain... by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 1

      "Yes, but in contrast, the typical custom PC is built to accomplish three goals as opposed to buying a prebuilt desktop:

      1. Look better
      2. Higher performance
      3. Cheaper"

      Far as looks, this thing looks much better then a mac, the G4 tower was nice when it came out, but it is very old and tired now. Thats the only thing there is to compare to as well.

      But yeah i don't think there was substantial savings here but it's tempting. 700 bucks for the 800 mhz G4 model isn't bad. you may loose the eMacs monitor but you gain in flexability and not looking goofy.

    21. Re:Please explain... by GlassHeart · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The price of the dual 1.2 GHz kit is $1349, you could throw in 256 meg of ram and an 80 gig hard drive in for around 120 bucks, probably less.

      $120 sounds about right. That makes it $1470. Let's toss in some other essentials:

      • keyboard and mouse - a decent pair might cost $50.
      • MacOS X - $130
      • Combo DVD/CDRW drive - $60
      • Radeon 9000 Pro (64 MB) - $76
      which brings us to $1786. Compared to the $1999 Apple box, the savings are just over 10%, ignoring all the non-downloadable software that the Mac comes with.

      The $1000 model provides more RAM and hard disk space (and of course expandability) than the comparatively-priced eMac, but doesn't have a keyboard, mouse, monitor, or OS, uses a less powerful graphics card and has no combo drive. These will cost at least another $300 or $400 to even out. The prices are not competitive at all for somebody who wants an eMac.

      Essentially, this isn't really a way to build a very cheap Mac. The target market must be those with a very tight budget and require a lot of expansion potential, or those who want a PPC but not MacOS X.

      Another tragic thing is that they didn't seem to learn anything from Apple's superior case design. It's hard to get to the motherboard, and there are cables all over the place. Hell, the handles on the G4 case are worth money to me.

      Still, choice is good.

    22. Re:Please explain... by batobin · · Score: 1

      I disagree with the idea of automatically discounting the consideration of thrift when buying Apple hardware. Just because Macs are expensive does not mean all Apple customers care nothing for comparing prices. The truth is that we don't believe Apple hardware to be comparable to PC hardware, and thus buy the more expensive stuff from Apple. In other words, when we are comparing apples to oranges, we'll pay the Apple tax to have the better system.

      But in this case, we're comparing apples to apples. A customer is no longer willing to pay more for a Macintosh, because they're both Macintoshes. This is why I don't buy your "Apple customers follow a different set of rules" argument. We follow the same rules as everyone else, as long as we feel we're choosing between comparative products. Therefore, I argue that this product will be neglected for cheaper/faster machines from Apple.

    23. Re:Please explain... by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

      Amen! I assembled my PC from components, and it wasn't any cheaper than buying one off the shelf. I like knowing that I have an Asus board with a KT333 chipset, Crucial RAM, WD Drives, Video Card chipset/manuf..... My PC is quality, as opposed to a Dell!

      --


      I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
    24. Re:Please explain... by alienw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      All in one systems are shit. What if the monitor dies in your eMac? What if you want to upgrade the CPU or videocard? After all, not everyone wants to run with a shitty soldered-on radeon 7500 when you can get an 8500 for $20 or $30. The system may very well be fine, but you will have to junk it or perform an expensive repair job.

      I know several people with all-in-one iMacs that have a dead monitor. As a result, the systems are worthless -- unless you want to pay somebody to try to fix the monitor piece. Besides, the monitor that's built in is tiny by modern standards. Today, 17 inches is the absolute minimum, and 19 inches is the only truly acceptable configuration. 15 inch monitors are really passé.

    25. Re:Please explain... by Juanvaldes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But when you already have a Keyboard, mouse, OS, extra RAM/HD/etc lying around the savings become more apparent.

    26. Re:Please explain... by ShadowDrake · · Score: 1

      You can fix that easily.

      A single can of spray paint-- costing between 98 cents and $5 USD, can take care of a whole small tower case, possibly a large one.

      My drives have been black for a long time (just remove the panels, paint, reinstall), and I've enjoyed cases in black, green, and black/silver.

      --
      It's just like a fascist dictatorship, without the punctual rail service!
    27. Re:Please explain... by Staatkunde · · Score: 1

      Try pricing out a comparable Power Mac. $1500 is the base price, w/ no monitor and 1 yr. Apple warranty. Cheaper is the sole reason to build a kit like this. Apple does have cheaper computers. Except they are all-in-one devices with no upgrade ability.

    28. Re:Please explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously you don't understand some of the reasons why people go out and buy a Mac... I will tell you this though, "typically" it is not because they are out bargain shopping for a cheap price.

      That may have been true in the past, but now Apple has produced a decent OS that appeals to real people as well as elitist snobs.

      As it happens, I have a G4 CPU hanging around from a previous upgrade, and plenty of hard drives and RAM. I could build one of these for not much more than his base price of $349.

    29. Re:Please explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, indeed.

      I even have the CPU.

    30. Re:Please explain... by York+the+Mysterious · · Score: 1

      The thing I don't understand about this kit is how people don't understand that they're not buying Apple's newest design. This is the old design that was in the pre-mirror drive PowerMacs. Why would you go spend that cash to get an outdated computer. Just go buy the same thing from Apple (with a legal OS BTW) for about the same cash. Add the cost of OS X to this guys build and it's not a great deal. Pretty ugly and ghetto rigged too. They don't even have a cover for the back of the case. This isn't a kit. It's a package of parts. Anyone could sell that.

      --

      Tim Smith - Ramblings from Nerd Land
    31. Re:Please explain... by oingoboingo · · Score: 1

      I can get a emac 800Mgz/256MB/40GB for $849, and it comes with a monitor and better graphics, and the operating system

      It looks like they're using G4 tower motherboards, which means AGP and PCI slots, and the processor plugged into a ZIF sockets. Plus, the thing comes in a standard looking tower case. All this means that you can upgrade it down the track with faster graphics cards, faster CPUs, easily add extra HDDs and optical drives, and niceties like SCSI and FireWire 800. You can't do that (easily) with an eMac.

      I wouldn't ever buy a cheap eMac or an iMac because for your hard earned $$$'s, they're not very future proof. G4 towers are too far in the other direction...expandable, but too expensive (in Australia at least). The Core systems seem to be somewhere in between, which is very interesting (for me, at least). I can understand why people are getting excited.

    32. Re:Please explain... by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      "* keyboard and mouse - a decent pair might cost $50."
      I can get an Intellimouse Optical for under $15 at a computer show.
      I can get a USB to PS/2 adapter for about the same price. That's $30 for a mouse that's far better than the single-button POS that Apple would force on me, and the ability to use one of my spare Model Ms.

      "# Combo DVD/CDRW drive - $60"
      Mv DVD-R drive is already in an external 1394 case, and I also have plenty of spare CD-ROM drives lying around.
      If I wanted CD-RW capability in the machine - Combo drives always sacrifice both DVD read performance and CD recording performance. OfficeMax has Lite-On 48x12x48 CD-RW drives on sale for $20 after rebate every other week it seems.

      Radeon - I'd prefer a GeForce. Still about the same price, but I get to choose.

      I've saved more than 10% and eliminated a lot of waste. Also, I would be going for the slowest (i.e. minimal) system available, since I'm primarily a PC user and the Mac would be mainly for iTunes and a few other niche things. i.e. slower than what Apple is willing to sell me.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    33. Re:Please explain... by MrCam · · Score: 1

      I was actually looking for parts to build my own Mac before the kits came out. I don't have much money at anyone time and I tend to build computers piece by piece. I don't want to have a loan to apple for a computer I wouldn't use all the time. With a kit like this I could buy the kit....wait when I get some cash again and buy a processor and many of the other parts are PC based so I could throw in an old 10GB drive in until I can afford a bigger one, same with memory and such.

    34. Re:Please explain... by slim-t · · Score: 1

      My iMac monitor died one day. A friend had found an iMac with a dead motherboard in the garbage and we just put that monitor into my iMac. So my original iMac still runs fine. I don't use it anymore because I have a PBG4, but it still runs fine. And it was perfect when I did use it too. Didn't take up too much room in my college apartments, and was easy enough to grab and throw on my passenger seat whenever I went home on break.

  2. DIY Mac.. by grub · · Score: 5, Insightful


    A Do It Yourself Mac seems tantamount to a Do It Yourself Mercedes..

    These will be popular among the geeks, but the Mac masses will stick to boxes from Cupertino.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:DIY Mac.. by UberLord · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      These will be popular among the geeks, but the Mac masses will stick to boxes from Cupertino.

      You mean there are Mac users who aren't geeks?

    2. Re:DIY Mac.. by grub · · Score: 1


      You mean there are Mac users who aren't geeks?

      I mean in the sense of "Let's build a Mac clone and put [Linux|NetBSD|OpenBSD] on it!" type of users. The people that use Macs and MacOS for their bread and butter will pay the premium and buy from Jobs & Co.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    3. Re:DIY Mac.. by rf0 · · Score: 1

      Its done because it can be and is something to brag about to your mates

      Rus

    4. Re:DIY Mac.. by bytes2bu · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The mac is suppose to be for those people who don't want to (or can't) build their own computer. Everywhere you look you see this distinction being made that macs are for people who get work done with the computer instead of working on their computer. This just seems a bit out in left field for the whole mac "idea". But then, that's just my opinion.

    5. Re:DIY Mac.. by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 1

      Even those of us who don't use a mac for our bread and butter (I'm guessing you are meaning graphics professionals and the like) will keep buying our boxes from Cupertino. The hardware engineering on Macs is quite nice. I'm posting this from a Cube, which has a cultish following due to its elegance even if the masses didn't get it. I'm probably one of the more geeky Mac users you will find, but I'm not going to be building a DIY Mac anytime in the forseeable future. Steve and friends do too nice of a job for me to consider straying from the pack.

    6. Re:DIY Mac.. by L7_ · · Score: 1

      no, all mac users are 'normal people' that don't always know too much about computers.

      The Switch ads said so.

    7. Re:DIY Mac.. by DrXym · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Well that depends. I guess if you have some outdated Mac hardware lying around, you have a choice - ditch it all or upgrade it somehow. If upgrading turns out to be feasible via cards or a new box, why not do it? And if the cheapest way happens to be some clone kit, it sounds a reasonable option assuming it has the proprietary ports such as the monitor connection and works out of the box with OS X.


      Now obviously if it's approaching the cost of a real mac, it isn't worth it, but if it were 2/3 the price, I'd take the hit in terms of looks and styling for the saving. It's not like I parade my G4 around - it sits under the desk for it's life. I couldn't care any less if there were some generic pizza / tower case there instead.

    8. Re:DIY Mac.. by yomegaman · · Score: 1

      Geez, this might be the worst comeback ever. Are you claiming to be quick in bed, i.e. you can't last? Why would you brag about that?

      --
      ...wearing a skin-tight topless leather jumpsuit, with cutaway buttocks and transparent crotch panel.
    9. Re:DIY Mac.. by tnacifingisni · · Score: 1

      There ARE no Mac geeks! :P

  3. Hmmm. by Phroggy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So, it's a G4/800 tower, for $775 plus extra hardware (hard drive, etc.) plus software (Mac OS X, applications). In contrast, the eMac is a G4/800 for $799 and includes a 17" monitor, 40GB hard drive, CD-ROM, Mac OS X, and a handful of software (AppleWorks, Quicken, World Book Encyclopedia, etc.). Oh, and a full 1-yr warranty from Apple.

    Of course, the eMac isn't expandable (you can upgrade the RAM and add an AirPort card; everything else has to be external, and you can't run a split desktop on dual monitors). Still, compare to eBay...

    --
    $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
    $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    1. Re:Hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah well, unlike most Mac users, some of us actually LIKE to build things. Mac users are the ones who buy the Maitso scale cars; everyone else buys Tamiya models AND BUILD THE DAMNED THINGS for the fun of it!

    2. Re:Hmmm. by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > you can't run a split desktop on dual monitors

      What is limiting that? Is it the computer itself, or can it not handle two video cards for some reason? I know you can do that on regular Macs...

    3. Re:Hmmm. by ran-o-matic · · Score: 1

      I think the point is that it isn't exandable, so you can't add the right card...

    4. Re:Hmmm. by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1
      You need a slot to put a second card in...or Apple needs to put a dual-headed card in the eMac.

      Neither is going to happen....unless someone has created a VGA, DVI or ADC to FireWire adapter and the appropriate software.

    5. Re:Hmmm. by valkraider · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have always wondered though, is there really a shortage in things to build? Why not just buy the eMac, and then build a robot that is controlled via 802.11 wireless? Some things were meant to be "built" and some things were meant to be "used".

    6. Re:Hmmm. by noewun · · Score: 1
      For the record, I built handfuls of models as a kid, Tamiya and otherwise, and I use Macs.

      Another beautiful theory killed by an ugly fact.

      --
      I am a believer of momentum and curves.
    7. Re:Hmmm. by anonymous+loser · · Score: 2, Informative
      Apparently you didn't read the company story. If you did, you would realize that the original goal was to get a mac that didn't come bundled with a specific monitor, etc., so you could mix and match the system as you see fit. As stated in the linked page:

      just didn't like that if I wanted a 21" monitor and wanted to purchase Apple Macintosh, I needed to put down $1699.99 regardless if all I wanted to do was surf the web, check e-mail or purchase off ebay with a larger monitor and low cost processor like in the iBook or iMac.
    8. Re:Hmmm. by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Everyone? Have you ever heard of Dell? Or all the other PC manufacturers? What market share do DIY PCs have? And how many of those aren't build by the actual user?

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    9. Re:Hmmm. by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      The card in the eMac is dual-headed - and there is video-out/VGA support. Sure, it only mirrors the build-in screen - but that was the case for the iMac and iBook too, and then the hacks that made them dual-headed apeared.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    10. Re:Hmmm. by blixel · · Score: 1

      Some things were meant to be "built" and some things were meant to be "used".

      Who decides what should be "built" and what should be "used"? It's all personal preference in my opinion. I have no desire to build a car, or build a house, or build a ham radio, or build an antenna, or sew my own clothes, or grow my own food, etc...

      Some people get more enjoyment out of building and tinkering with computers than they do actually using them. I used to be that way myself. Once the computer was up and running and everything was working smoothly, I had no use for it.

      But these days I'm sort of down the middle. I still like building them and tinkering with various Operating Systems, but I also have a need to actually use my machine at some point.

      And at that point I go to Windows. :) Linux is fun to install and tinker with, (and makes for a rock solid server in my experience) but when I want to just sit down and enjoy some WarCraft 3, I prefer Windows. It's easy, it works, and despite all the babble about Windows crashing and BSODs and all that, I find Windows to be more stable (and for more useable) than any Linux Desktop configuration I've messed with. And I've messed with a lot of them. (The screen shots don't even scratch the surface of how many configurations I've played with over the years.)

    11. Re:Hmmm. by dwightk · · Score: 1

      My iBook with a Mobility Radeon could be forced to allow extended desktop through open firmware. I bet the same thing is possible in the eMac

      --
      Like anyone can even know that
    12. Re:Hmmm. by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > You need a slot to put a second card in.

      I was looking at the pictures on the article and it looks like it has 3 PCI slots. Are there not Mac PCI Video cards? Or is it not as simple to upgrade as a PC?

    13. Re:Hmmm. by jgerman · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, same refrain in the late 70's "Why build a computer at home". Thank god people didn't listen then and I hope they don't listen to you now.

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    14. Re:Hmmm. by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      I was looking at the pictures on the article and it looks like it has 3 PCI slots. Are there not Mac PCI Video cards? Or is it not as simple to upgrade as a PC?

      I was referring to limitations of the eMac in that paragraph. The eMac is an all-in-one unit with pretty much everything on-board, so there are no PCI slots. The PowerMac does have PCI slots, as you describe - as does the self-built system in the article.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  4. Ellen Feiss by SHEENmaster · · Score: 4, Funny

    isn't endorsing this one. I don't think it'll do that well.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  5. You just put it up, by The_Sock · · Score: 4, Funny

    And we just put it down.

    --
    For a good time call www.sawkie.com
  6. Mirror by NETHED · · Score: 4, Informative

    Before it went KABAM, I made a quicky mirror

    here

    --
    --sig fault--
    1. Re:Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      1) upload slashdotted .com website with megatonage of images to own homepage account on university webserver
      2) watch own homepage account thence university webserver slashdotted to death by largest geek website in the world in 1 minute flat
      3) see smoke coming out of cheap server PSU and hear teenage girls using IE on campus saying "who turned off the internet I need to google for my term paper"
      4) hope university is more charitable towards having lart student homepage account burn 1000s$ of bandwidth & take down university network than towards P2P file-sharing bandwidth $$$
      5) have 56k modem on hand when dean demands network card confiscated
      6) ????

    2. Re:Mirror by Delphis · · Score: 1

      Despite what the AC says, it's much appreciated.. thanks :)

      --
      Delphis
    3. Re:Mirror by Uber+Banker · · Score: 1, Funny

      ...

      6) ????

      7) Profit!

      lamo!

    4. Re:Mirror by Sethb · · Score: 1

      I'm the admin of the server, thanks, I just restarted Manila, the weblog server that site is using, and it's back in action. It'd already taken at least 65,000 hits, and was still trying to serve before it died. :)

      I'll keep an eye on it, and try to keep it functional, but mirrors are certainly appreciated. :)

      --
      When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
    5. Re:Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>lamo!

      Yes, the profit joke is very lame by now.

    6. Re:Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you site took 65k hits after dying in minutes, I hate to think how many 10s of thousands of dollars bandwidth that student has cost his university

    7. Re:Mirror by Sethb · · Score: 1

      He's not a student, he's staff. :)

      And, we don't pay per megabyte, Iowa has the Iowa Communications Network for which UNI pays a flat fee.

      Our network maxes out at night when we release the throttle on the student network, a slashdotting like this was barely a blip in our traffic graphs, which you can find at:

      http://www.uni.edu/netstats/

      --
      When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
    8. Re:Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      7) Profit.

    9. Re:Mirror by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      7) 5 karma points.

  7. Re:Aw man by Randolpho · · Score: 1, Redundant

    I wonder... could the slashdot effect be a good way to stress test your server? Just finagle someone into posting an article with a link to your server... instant megaload! If you can handle a slashdotting, you're good for anything!

    --
    "Times have not become more violent. They have just become more televised."
    -Marilyn Manson
  8. Waiting for PPC 970 by aSiTiC · · Score: 3, Informative

    Personally I'm waiting to switch for the release of the PPC 970 to switch from my Windows box to a OSX box.

    Can't wait to get away from x86 micro-ops translation to RISC and into the world of straight RISC.

    1. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by ciroknight · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I completely agree. The problem in Mac-land right now is that while they have superior software (in just about every thing I can imagine), the hardware is so far behind.... This has been stated so many times but never hit home as true until Paladium started becoming a worrisome thing for me. Personally, I'de love to move to a Mac, but it's just out of the question to pay that much for hardware that I'm locked into for a long time. They have came a long way with standardization and upgradibility, but it's still relitivly crappy compared to the intel compat. market. I either see Apple drastically reorganizing their business as a software only company and releasing their software and periferals on all hardware, or them finally making the transition to more complete PC compatibility. I'de love to just take my AGP card (Radeon 8500 Pro) and my 3 maxtor harddrives out of my computer and plug them into a Mac when/if I get one, but I know right now this is practically an impossibility. I only hope someone out there is listening..........

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    2. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by discstickers · · Score: 3, Informative

      Steps to take:
      1) Buy old(er) G4 tower
      2) Replace graphics card with said 8500Pro
      3) Install hard drives
      4) Theres no step 4!

      --
      I have a shitty sig!
    3. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by afidel · · Score: 5, Informative

      The PPC970 is not a pure RISC chip, if it were the decode stage would be unnecessary. There are a number of instructions that break down into two or more internal operations that the execution units have to deal with. From the IBM POWER whitepaper "Cracked instructions flow into groups as any other instructions with one restriction. Both IOPs must be in the same group. If both IOPs cannot fit into the current group, the group is terminated and a new group is initiated. The instruction following the cracked instruction may be in the same group as the cracked instruction, assuming there is room in the group. Millicoded instructions always start a new group. The instruction following the millicoded instruction also initiates a new group." This is much closer to CISC->RISC translation that happens in all modern x86 cpu's then it is to a traditional RISC design.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    4. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Alex+Thorpe · · Score: 2, Troll

      I'd already moderated one post, but I just had to reply..

      I've an off the shelf Maxtor hard drive in my older iMac; naturally, there's no room for three of them, but a PowerMac could hold them. You can also use PC USB mice and even keyboards with a Mac if you wish, though I'd recommend a Mac keyboard since there's a FEW differences in the keys used. The PowerMacs also have AGP for video cards, though you may need a firmware upgrade to use yours with a Mac; ATI's site should have more info on that.

      Apple has only really fallen behind lately in raw CPU performance, and since they've sometimes been ahead in the past, they might pull ahead in the future again. Since my 3+ year old G3/400 CPU meets all of my needs, if not all of my wants, I don't think it's a big issue unless you're in a business where your CPU speed affects the amount of money you make.

      --
      "Common Sense Ain't" -Unknown
    5. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by DreadSpoon · · Score: 2, Informative

      Like this self-built box states, you _can_ drop in your own hard-drives, AGP cards, and everything.

      The only palces Apple breaks compatibility is where their tech is _better_. ADC is awesome, I wish PC manufacturer's would adopt - I have _way_ too many cables behind my computer desk. Some goes for their slick way of hooking the mouse into the keyboard (less cabling, again). You can get away with five cables from your tower (power, adc, keyboard, speakers, network), only one from your display (adc), a cable from mouse to keyboard and keyboard to tower, and the cables hooking speakers together and then from there to tower. Plus you have a spare USB port on your keyboard (tablet, portable drive, whatever) plus two more on the modern displays.

      Compare that to the >10 cables on my machine, and then having to have the cables running back behind the machine versus having even simple things like USB literally at my fingertips...

      The only other big non-compatibility thing is the CPU architecture, but who cares? The prevalence of Java (and soon perhaps .NET) alleviates a large amount of that, and virtual PC helps a lot for business apps.

      I'm waiting for the PPC 970 myself, but I'm switching then; depending on how good Panther is, I might even dump Linux then. ~,^

    6. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Dragonmaster+Lou · · Score: 1

      Actually, assuming your Maxtors are IDE, you should be able to stick them into any PowerMac (the tower ones) just fine, given the limtations of the IDE bus (2 drives per controller), of course.

      Not sure about the card, however.

    7. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      ADC is awesome, I wish PC manufacturer's would adopt - I have _way_ too many cables behind my computer desk. Some goes for their slick way of hooking the mouse into the keyboard

      Plugging a mouse into a keyboard ought to be trivial USB functionality. I don't know what the big PC vendors are shipping because I don't buy branded systems from them, but I would be really surprised to learn that daisy chaining a mouse from a keyboard isn't commonplace by now.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    8. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by ciroknight · · Score: 1

      Looks like you can't trust everything you read. Somewhere I read that Macs AGP port is configured differently, not running on the 1.5v the newer ports are. I also never knew Apple was using IDE, thank goodness for that little bit of info.

      say... would Apple also be following industry standard on ATAPI devices? How about DDR ram? and PCI cards (like my new Audigy 2?) (Things I'de LOVE to know before I upgrade again)

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    9. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Steveftoth · · Score: 1

      ADC does more then that.

      The Apple Display Connector for the flat panels provides signal, power and USB to the monitor. The monitor then has a USB hub in it to plug your usb keyboard and mouse into, or just keyboard then you plug the mouse into the keyboard. So one cable to monitor. instead of 2 for the monitor, and 1 each for mouse and keyboard.

      That said, I do wish that all usb keyboards had hubs in them as many times the keyboards I like for form factor, do not have USB ports in them.

    10. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by RestiffBard · · Score: 3, Insightful

      this is not a flame thing. these are some points about apples that informed my decision to switch.

      1. there are people that are still comfortably using older mac hardware.
      2. (I can't recall the exact numbers but...) a IBM compat laptop goes for half what an apple laptop goes for after 2 years.

      --
      - /* dead coders leave no comments */
    11. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Step 1: Wake Up
      Step 2: Take Over the World
      Step 3: There's no step three! There's no step three!

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    12. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yep, yep, yep. Check it out for yourself: http://www.apple.com/powermac/specs.html

      Of course, if you want to pick up a slightly older model, there will be some differences. But the PowerMacs of the last several years have used pretty standard parts. My QuickSilver 733 (previous generation) has IDE, ATAPI, and PC133 memory (no DDR). I'd definitely check out the AGP thing though too, because I've also heard that it's slightly different. I do believe ATI makes different versions of their cards for Mac vs PC, but maybe it's just a marketing thing to get the Macheads to pay more?? Never tried swapping video cards, but I can assure you from personal experience that everything else is standard and works across PC or Mac.

    13. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by ePhil_One · · Score: 1
      but I can assure you from personal experience that everything else is standard and works across PC or Mac.

      For the record, please ensure that OSX drivers exist for the PC hardware you are trying out. :^)

      I know it sound obvious, but somewhere out there someone is cursing because their FunkMaster 2000 PCI card won't workin their new PowerMac...

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    14. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      Very strange, this Mac hardware situation. You can get a 'regular' Radeon 8500, but you need to burn it's ROM with a Mac ROM.

      I recently got an Adaptec SCSI card for the Mac. Doesn't work under OSX, because the card isn't a PowerDomain (Mac ROMmed) high-priced model, but the card works perfectly under the Linux AIC7xx driver. I have no idea how difficult it would be to port Linux drivers to Darwin.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    15. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh right, yeah good point. I guess I was talking about the memory/ide/atapi stuff in that sentence. But for PCI cards, USB devices, etc, yeah you need a driver. Like any other OS. ;-)

    16. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Mirus+Nex · · Score: 2, Informative
      say... would Apple also be following industry standard on ATAPI devices? How about DDR ram? and PCI cards (like my new Audigy 2?) (Things I'de LOVE to know before I upgrade again)


      Yes. You should be able to install just about any OS supported IDE CD-ROM drive in a newer tower. My 1GHz at work has 3 IDE intefaces ATA/100, ATA/66 and ATA and supports ATAPI (using cable select). As for PCI it supports PCI 2.1 at 33MHz (5, 12 or 3.3v). AGP is 1.5V 4x. The new systems support PC2100 and PC2700 (depending on model) DDR RAM, but doesn't take advantage of it (more of a marketing thing than performance)...


      The only problem is OS support, if you can't find drivers for your card you're kind of SOL... Audigy isn't support (AFAIK) though SoundBlaster Live! is.

    17. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by physicsnerd · · Score: 3, Informative
      say... would Apple also be following industry standard on ATAPI devices? How about DDR ram? and PCI cards (like my new Audigy 2?) (Things I'de LOVE to know before I upgrade again)

      Yes apple does follow the standard on ATAPI Devices. Apple just sticks standard CD/DVD drives in their systems.

      Yes they do use Standard DDR ram, in the higher end machines, PC133 in the lower machines like the eMac. Also, the laptop ram is standard SO-DIMM 133 or DDR in the case of the 17".

      Yes, PCI cards can be put in the powermac line. I'm not sure if the Audigy 2 has OSX drivers. This tends to be the largest problem I've had with mac hardware. Macs use the exact same standards as PCs, however not all companies will write OSX drivers for them. However, often the *nix/bsd hardware hacks work. Epson never has gotten around to writting drivers for my SS2500, however I use CUPS and it works perfect.

      In conclusion, Apple runs the same basic hardware as everyone else. The difference is in the PPC chip, and of course the bios. Everything else is industry standard.

      physicsnerd

    18. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Funny

      so what you're saying is that you are just another clueless Slashdotter writing off an Apple PC based on ZERO knowledge of the platform? Well done indeed!

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    19. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by GlassHeart · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I'de love to move to a Mac, but it's just out of the question to pay that much for hardware that I'm locked into for a long time.

      First of all, Macs tend to be usable for longer than PCs, so a slower upgrade cycle mitigates the higher upfront cost somewhat. Two, resale values of Macs are much better than PCs (check eBay, for example). Now, what you don't get is a new toy as often as you used to, but upgrade cycles can be terribly time consuming and tedious, and occasionally risky. It's also better for the environment to use your computer longer.

      Another question to ask yourself is, honestly, what do you use your computer for that you need all the power you can afford? What do you do that "last year's computer" (and Macs are not as far behind as many people think) really really won't do? Is the speed difference so crucial that it overrides all the other benefits you notice with Macs?

      Now, I'm not trying to conceal the raw speed problem with Macs. I'm just trying to promote a task-oriented view of computers. To give a fictitious example, if your PC is 10% faster, but crashes often and costs you about 50 minutes of productivity a day, then it's no faster than another computer that is more stable. The numbers are obviously made up, but try to think in that direction rather than just put specs up side by side.

    20. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      PS/2-keyboards are 20 cents cheaper than USB-keyboards. Well, maybe not 20 cents, but cheaper. And you don't have problems with your old BIOS - that is cheap. You see, it all adds up.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    21. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by b_pretender · · Score: 1
      Compare that to the >10 cables on my machine, and then having to have the cables running back behind the machine versus having even simple things like USB literally at my fingertips...
      I have exactly 2 cables running to my PC. One is the powercord which I occasionally remove if I carry my laptop around the apartment. The other is to my USB hub. This hub is connected to bluetooth, printing, wireless mouse, digital camera, etc. (everything connects to the USB hub).

      I don't have a network cord (802.11b), no monitor or keyboard cord (it's a laptop).

    22. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Malcontent · · Score: 1

      Apple is already branching out. They now sell music and gadgets like the ipod. Maybe if those and other similar ventures take off then they can let go of the hardware market for good.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    23. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Grahf666 · · Score: 1

      There is a mac version of the soundblaster live, however last i heard it had pretty shoddy drivers...

    24. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by thunderbird46 · · Score: 1

      What about "Profit!!!" :)

    25. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by squiggleslash · · Score: 2, Informative
      They've been following most of these standards for a while. I got a Beige G3 from eBay a few months ago. The keyboard/mouse bus was non-standard (ie not PS/2 or USB, it used Apple's ADB system), and the serial and video ports were non-standard (usable with convertors)

      Everything else was standard. I plugged in PCI USB2 card - labelled as compatable with God-knows how many versions of Windows - and was able to attach a standard keyboard. An adapter was what was needed to attach a VGA monitor. I went got a Maxtor 40Gb HD, and that worked out of the box. No mention of Macs on the box either.

      All of that was what I needed to install OS X.

      Of course it also has SCSI built in, but you can't really complain that's non-standard even if it's relatively unusual.

      Since then I've installed cheap CDRW/DVD drives and such without any problems (beyond initially having to hack the odd OS X driver.)

      I think the notion of the "non-standard" Apple has been out of date for many years. It's just not Windows compatable hardware.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    26. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      "ADC does more then that."

      Yeah, I gathered. I asked about what sort of contemporary USB hardware appears in the channel.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    27. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Jester99 · · Score: 1

      Please explain this to me.

      A CISC instruction is broken down in hardware into a series of RISC instructions.

      Wouldn't it just be faster to do this at compile time? Then you wouldn't need the extra stage and could have faster chips with fewer transistors, no?

    28. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      Wouldn't it just be faster to do this at compile time? Then you would EPIC (i.e., IA-64). In short, it would not be backward compatible.

      have faster chips with fewer transistors

      Who wants fewer transistors???? :-) The more transistors the canonical CPU "has to have" the fewer players than can be in the market. Somewhat cynical, but most companies would like fewer competitors rather than more. Yes the original RISC principles were to do more with a small transistor budget. The thought was that would allow you to get onto bleeding edge process technologies sooner. Unfortunately, that is an advantage that can be negated by the application of lots of money.

      Intel doesn't want to sell $1.50 CPUs. :-)

      Plus more transitors typically mean more speed (given a decent design)

      However, the "break down to RISC" instructions is a bit misnomer. Breaking opcodes into micro-codes wasn't what RISC was trying to avoid. It was putting microcode ("programs") into the silicon that RISC was trying to avoid. However, as programs (e.g., branch caching algorithms) become extremely well understood the risk of etching them into silicon goes way down. Factor some of the modern design aid and design automation tools and it goes down even further.

      According to Patternson the canonical CISC chip was the Intel 432.

      The x86 is baroque more so that it is "bad" CISC.

    29. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by mindstrm · · Score: 1

      Because it's a lot harder to run an external hardware bus at 2Ghz. It's easeir to feed the bus complex instructions then have the chip break them down into a series of simploer instructions for execution at higher speeds.

    30. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by DreadSpoon · · Score: 1

      notebooks are cheating. ;-)

    31. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Doc+Hopper · · Score: 1

      I've been using a USB mouse hooked into the back of my Microsoft Natural Keyboard Pro for several years now. Works just fine. I even have a second USB port on the back of the keyboard for my digital camera, MP3 player, and whatnot.

    32. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's all about history. Memory was expense so if you have few instructions that did more it would require less memory (CISC). RISC designs had more instructions that did less and also gave the programmer more control, however RISC systems required more memory as the executables were larger. Intel is now trying to do exactly what you said and move the logic into the compilers with it's EPIC designs (or should I have said HP designs?).

    33. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um... How do you figure that RISC processors don't have a decode stage. Unless the instruction is very wide (256 bits minimum for a reasonalably complex chip) there will always be a decode stage to break the four to sixteen bit opcode up to hundreds of control signals. While in CISC processors there is a more complex finite state machine that controls the CPU control signals (mux's, adders, shift registers, etc..) a PURE RISC processor dosn't need this finite state machine... all it needs is a decoder to set the control lines...

    34. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by 0rbit4l · · Score: 3, Informative
      As I'm sure has been pointed out, you'd still need a decode stage in almost any but the most useless risc architecture - got to convert those opcodes to control lines (regwrite, memwrite/read) and register fields. This doesn't come "for free", even with simple risc architectures like MIPS. Ergo, you need a decode stage. More complexity simply means more stages dedicated to decode (a la x86, power series.)

      Another point: POWER is not the same thing as the PowerPC ISA. POWER (which is cisc) supports some wacky instruction types such as vector load/store - these get cracked into IOPs. The vast majority of PPC instructions do not need to be cracked, though cracking can be useful depending on the microarchitecture that implements the ISA (for instance, fused multiply-add which is common in multimedia apps may get cracked into 2 separate instructions.)

    35. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by catscan2000 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The hard drives should work in a Mac, but the video card probably won't due to differences in the card's firmware. PC video cards typically have a PC x86 video BIOS built in while Mac video cards have something else, perhaps an OpenFirmware thingie that lets the system's firmware start up the video card and video display.

      I've actually tried to put a ATI Xclaim TV PCI Mac card into a PC only to get no video at all in the PC, though Linux booted anyway. I tried to see if XFree86 could somehow handle it, but alas I couldn't get it to work properly. I even tried compiling and running Linux with various ATI framebuffer console settings (man, I must have had a lot more free time than I do now! Though, such toil seems quite boring to me now. Speaking of now-seemingly boring toil, I need to figure out what to do with my basement full of I-Openers, but that's another story). It comes right up on the Mac (a G4 450MHz system).

    36. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      There is a mac version of the soundblaster live, however last i heard it had pretty shoddy drivers...

      Unlike the windows version, which has perfect drivers which have never caused 2k to blue screen on me...

      Please not, the above comment was sarcastic.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    37. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Have+Blue · · Score: 1
      Yes, PCI cards can be put in the powermac line. I'm not sure if the Audigy 2 has OSX drivers.
      It doesn't. OS X's consumer audio stuff is nearly as far behind as the processors.
    38. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by jgerman · · Score: 1
      Sheesh Mac users: Some goes for their slick way of hooking the mouse into the keyboard (less cabling, again).


      Not less cabling, just plugged in somewhere else ;) jk.

      --
      I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
    39. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by mah! · · Score: 1
      The problem in Mac-land right now is that while they have superior software (in just about every thing I can imagine) the hardware is so far behind....

      Yes... and no. There are very useful things that can be done on Mac HW that are either impossible or very uncommon to do on x86 HW. For example, All I'd really want is to be able to replace the graphics card on my tiBook...
    40. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by mhbtr · · Score: 1
      My Powermac G4, bought in 1999, was the first one with an AGP port. I waited for it precisely because I KNEW I would not be locked into what it came with... It was a 400 MhZ system that came with 64 MB of RAM. It is now configured as such:
      1.1 GhZ G4 (GigaSystems 1 GhZ overclocked to 1.1, 2 MB L3 cache)
      Sony DVD+-R/RW
      ATI8500 dual headed AGP card attached to 2 monitors
      1GB RAM
      Sonnet Trio FireWire/USB2.0/ATA 133 card - to add USB 2.0, and 2 more FireWire ports, and 4 IDE 133 connectors (the G4 Motherboard I have has an internal FireWire port, so you can add a 3rd drive without an additional controller inside using this dohicky...
      http://www.wiebetech.com/products.html#firewiredd
      You can even get one that allows daisychaining...)
      But I just Don't have room, not that this case would have that additional room - remember, I can have 6 Internal drives with the space inside the G4 case - and that is excluding the DVD and Zip I already have...
      AudioWerks 8 Digital Audio board (yes - the mac unfortunately ONLY supports "higher" end audio cards - but that is because they all come with reasonable audio built in...)
      5 (yes, 5!!) INTERNAL Hard drives, with room for a 6th...
      4 of my 5 drives are off the shelf Maxtor drives...
      My Sony DVD recordable drive said "For Windows" all over the box - nice that I could use it beautifully with iTunes, iPhoto, and most importantly, iDVD...
      external Firewire OWC case 120 MB drive (another Maxtor, my 6th drive)
      2 2.5 inch drives in Mercury to Go cases (the 30 GB drive I replaced the 12 GB drive in my PB G3 with, and then the 40 GB drive that came in my replacement 15" TiBook that I replaced with the 60 GB I pulled out of the PB G3 after I put the 12" back in the PB G3 when I returned it to Apple, after 3 years, under AppleCare, when they replaced it with the brand new 15"!!!!)
      So yes, they have a long life span, and are very upgradeable. I don't see the value of this box over going out and buying a used G4 tower - It can be had for the same amount of money, and you can stuff the same stuff in it - the ONLY benefit I see is a second 5.25 removable bay - but I have a Plextor off the shelf burner in an external FireWire case, and it has the added benefit of being able to connect it to the aforementioned laptop.
      I am not saying this is not interesting, but for my money I would MUCH rather buy a used G4 tower, with case, and get the benefit of a VERY elegant and easy to use case...
      And oh - the specs for this unit do not include the modem, that came in mine.
      I really see NO price saving, and it is ugly to boot...
      Again, Really please explain to me the true benefit of this machine over a used G4?
      Eytan
      P.S. Of course, I also have a MSFT Internet USB Keyboard that when I bought it had NO Apple Drivers, and NEVER said Apple on the box (I had started writing my own custom driver for the cool media keys when MSFT came out with a really nice driver for it,) USB hub, media reader, Keyspan Digital Media Remote, MSFT joystick, MSFT steering wheel, Smartmedia Reader, Cannon $50 USB bus powered scanner, Wacom tablet, etc., etc....

      Still have't found a .sig I like

    41. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Ponty · · Score: 1

      Very difficult. They use two entirely different diver models. The Mac has the object oriented IOKit, while Linux is Linux.

    42. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Not really, if you can be inspired by the open-source driver. IOKit is actually pretty easy to use.

    43. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by andrewski · · Score: 1

      Huh? Under OS X you plug a fucking microphone and your speakers (or stereo) in and that's it! No AC97 Codec shit, or anything of the like.

      If you are into pro audio vs. consumer, you are probably using a Mac right now anyway. There's a reason for that. The new drivers (AudioKit) make programming easy, and are very low latentcy (claims of 2ms) make it easy for innovative cool stuff to occur ON THE MAC as well as on the PC.

      The only place where Macs are lacking is in the 'Prosumer' category. If you ask me, this category is pretty much a joke anyway.

    44. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by andrewski · · Score: 0

      And, they own emagic now too! They own a good third of pro sequencer packages as well!

    45. Re:Waiting for PPC 970 by Ponty · · Score: 1

      Easy to use, but not very similar to a Linux driver.

  9. Missing the point... by Duncan3 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The whole point of buying from Apple is that it's NOT cheap crap like a PC, or worse my mom's Dell.

    My mac has never had a problem, and even if you figure $1/hour for my time, it's still been a total steal compared to the PCs.

    --
    - Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
    1. Re:Missing the point... by Zebra_X · · Score: 0

      d00d yur g3ttin' a d3ll!

  10. In other news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    You can build your own Ford by ordering all the parts from Ford and assembling them yourself.

    1. Re:In other news.... by UnassumingLocalGuy · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Yeah, and last time I checked, I think the price of an Explorer rockets to $80,000USD.

      My point? I'm not sure I really have one--seems like almost the same concept.

      --
      "Hu, ho, ho-ah-oh-oh-oh. Hu, ho ho-ah-oh-oh-oh. Mario Paint! Whoaaa!"
    2. Re:In other news.... by switcha · · Score: 1
      Johnny Cash already tried that.

      Then again, maybe you can convince the people laughing at your Franken-Ford that it is "custom" and you are "leet".

      --
      You know what? ... A little club soda *did* get that out!
    3. Re:In other news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in other news, i have a pile of car parts in my yard(because cars are my hobby), and i just ordered the engine and tranny from ford.

    4. Re:In other news.... by joe_bruin · · Score: 1

      You can build your own Ford by ordering all the parts from Ford and assembling them yourself.

      people build shelby cobra "do it yourself" kits all the time using ford parts. i bet you could build some supermac using apple parts

    5. Re:In other news.... by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      Retail spare parts from the dealer is by far the most expensive way to buy car parts. Less so in the computer world. I think the Corecrib kit uses Apple motherboards sold as spare parts to repair centers, and they probably cost over $200 each.

    6. Re:In other news.... by AKnightCowboy · · Score: 1
      Johnny Cash already tried that. [lyricsondemand.com]

      It seems highly unlikely a car built piecemeal over 20 different years of stolen parts would ever work correctly. I think this guy is full of shit.

    7. Re:In other news.... by switcha · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...and it seems higly unlikely as well that Christina Aguilera is really a genie in a bottle. (and more to the point, wants to rub you the right way.)

      --
      You know what? ... A little club soda *did* get that out!
    8. Re:In other news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No you can't.

    9. Re:In other news.... by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1

      In the song, it didn't. But how about 15 years?

      1977 Cadillac
      1992 Cadillac
      Probably 98% of the parts are interchangable.

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    10. Re:In other news.... by j-beda · · Score: 1

      They may look similar on the outside, but I doubt very much that the '77 engine bits fit the '92 bits. If naught else, all of the emmissions stuff is probably radically different.

  11. But the big question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...does it run Linux?

  12. Cardboard mac? by NivenHuH · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hey.. maybe you could convince the people out of the earlier story to build you a cardboard case for your mac? =)

    --
    Just when you make it idiotproof, some idiot builds a better idiot.
  13. SLASHDOTTED by rkz · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here is a mirror: Click here I couldnt get all of the images though.

    1. Re:SLASHDOTTED by NeMon'ess · · Score: 1

      You posted a very mean comment and got modded down for it. What do you want, a cookie? Change the hyperlink to your comment instead of the AC so people can see what a jerk you are.

  14. good product for me... by clmensch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have an aging B&W G3 and a bunch of old PC parts. I don't need a monitor. I already own Jaguar, and I'll still utilize the single user license by not running it on my G3 anymore. This looks like a good solution for me until the second generation Powermacs with the IBM 970's are available. (I doubt I'll be able to afford the first gen ones.)

    --
    There is no gravity...the earth just sucks.
    1. Re:good product for me... by w3weasel · · Score: 1

      negative... negative... At best you'd be getting a Sawtooth board (most likely the same yosemite board as in your B&W). Unless you just GOTTA have the AGP, there is no reason to expect a nocticeable performance boost from the Sawtooth board as compared to the Yosemite.
      If you just need more juice, try this, its way cheaper and should suit your needs.

      --

      Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  15. Of Subject, I know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    But I'm very impressed by the website designer(desginer?) getting the spelling to 'Designed' wrong.

    1. Re:Of Subject, I know by jonfelder · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Much like a spell checker, you seem to be good at correcting spelling but you cannot handle correctly spelled words used incorrectly.

      I believe the subject of your post should say 'Off' not 'Of'.

    2. Re:Of Subject, I know by fobbman · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Shouldn't nitpick. "Of Subject"?

    3. Re:Of Subject, I know by boomgopher · · Score: 1

      As well as the lovely page titles:

      <title>Untitled Document</title>

      Top-notch work.

      --
      Your hybrid is not saving the environment. Its purpose is to make you feel good about buying something.
    4. Re:Of Subject, I know by briareus · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'd be more concerned about the quality of the Core Crib itself as I'm not looking to hire the guy to develop a web site.

      By the way, don't throw stones when you live in a glass house ("Of subject"???)...

  16. I still have one complaint... by johny_qst · · Score: 1

    I love the PowerPC architecture and would gladly pay the apple tax to get my hands on a TiBook, but whats up with a DIY barebones kit that sticks you with only PCI options for video? If I'm putting the thing together I want more bandwidth to my video card.

    --
    Fnord.sig
    1. Re:I still have one complaint... by MerlynDavis · · Score: 1

      It supports AGP...you can see the AGP slot in the pictures...

      The poster didn't have an AGP card to use...most of the parts were salvaged from an old PCI-based PowerPC Mac.

      Apple's been using AGP cards for a good 4 years now on their motherboards.

      --
      -merlyn
    2. Re:I still have one complaint... by johny_qst · · Score: 1

      I understand that.... I did RTFA but my point being what's the point of OSX if not for the Quartz Graphics. I don't necessarily like that you can't do much to customize the looks but they are still damned pretty! Just manipulating the OS can get some basic windoze users to ooh and ahh. If someone who lives near this guy has a spare AGP card please help him out :)

      --
      Fnord.sig
    3. Re:I still have one complaint... by PsychoSpunk · · Score: 1

      It's all Quartz Graphics. I think you are thinking about Quartz Extreme. Regardless, it's not like OSX looks less pretty without QE, it's just not as fast.

      --
      ALL HAIL BRAK!!!
  17. Hmm, even now it's not worth it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Let's analyze the requirements:
    1. Build it myself
    2. Stable Unix-based OS
    3. Very very few games to play on it

    Save yourself some money and build a blazing Linux box!

    1. Re:Hmm, even now it's not worth it by superangrybrit · · Score: 1

      Like Linux?

      Oh that's right Linux doesn't have games! Silly me!

    2. Re:Hmm, even now it's not worth it by gamgee5273 · · Score: 1

      Wait...you want to play games? Why are you using a computer? Except for strategy/simulation games (which, of course, most all of those come out for the Mac), there's no game on a desktop that can outdo the consoles. Save yourself even more money and buy yourself a PlayStation 2 or a GameCube...or, hell, even a GameBoy Advance (Metroid and Castlevania rock).

    3. Re:Hmm, even now it's not worth it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah right, name one console game that even comes close to Delta Force Black Hawk Down on a Athlon 2700+ w/Radeon 9800....

  18. Related News by ajw1976 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    WMB has released a kit that allows you to build a BMW for $200. However, the engine will be a go-kart motor, no windows, and no A-C. But hey, at least you have a BMW.

    --
    1. Bad signature
    2. ?????
    3. Profit
    1. Re:Related News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      link?

  19. Still very pricey by w3weasel · · Score: 1

    By the time you get done with it you are paying far more than just buying a good used G4 (yosemite) on eBay.
    If you really want a deal on a mac, you just cant beat the eMac

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  20. tech wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No x86 CPU is RISC; RISC refers to the ISA, ie. the part that is externally exposed to software.

    Current x86 CPU's from AMD and Intel both convert from x86 CISC opcodes into smaller micro-ops, but it is incorrect to call these RISC. First, they are not exposed to software, and second, they are presumably tailored to a register-to-memory architecture, not a load-store architecture, and so would likely not be RISC, even if they were exposed.

    I completely blame the hobbyist website ARS-Technica for this confusion. The architecture guru there, who is somewhat ignorant, came up with this pap. His ignorance has propogated very far, as evidenced by your comment.

  21. Re:But the question is who would want to? by MerlynDavis · · Score: 1

    Hmmm...my brand new ATI Radeon 9000 runs just fine on my Mac...and I had Warcraft3 right about the original release date...and I know a few people playing Shadowbane on the Mac... I tossed my XP box away because I was tired of crashes, system hang-ups, and incompatible drivers...not to mention more security holes than a block of swiss cheese.

    --
    -merlyn
  22. The case does not look like a Mac by YllabianBitPipe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's the bottom line here ... hardly anybody I know who owns a Mac is gonna want a case that looks like a PC. A fair amount of the fun of having a Mac is the wow factor when people come over and look at it. Superficial, yeah, but if you're gonna plunk down bucks to get a Mac you want it to LOOK like a Mac. My suggestion to whomever makes these cases: make it look cool and Mac like. Don't make it look like PC. Even them AlienWare designs ... not good enough. Make it a big globe or a cylinder ... anything but a copy of a PC case.

    1. Re:The case does not look like a Mac by ManoMarks · · Score: 1

      There's a lot of cases out there, available at shows or on the web, that are cheap and "Mac Like". I got a non-standard look case for $28.00 at a show recently, with a nice powersupply etc.

      --

      That's gotta fit into your schema somewhere

    2. Re:The case does not look like a Mac by Xaemyl · · Score: 1

      I'm with you on most of the stuff you say, but I beg to differ on the AlienWare cases. Those are spiff!

    3. Re:The case does not look like a Mac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree.

      Even when I saw the first pictures of even the screen, I thought it was XP because of the monitor.

      Don't tell Jobs though.

  23. what's really needed.... by 8282now · · Score: 1

    is a DIY Notebook kit!

    1. Re:what's really needed.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean a DIY notebook kit that doesn't force you to pay for a *genuine microsoft operating system* that you don't want.

  24. Re:But the question is who would want to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't want to start a war here....but, does anybody like XP? Seriously. I have used it for a total of 15 minutes and that is all I ever will.

  25. mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  26. Re:But the question is who would want to? by SlashdotMirrorer · · Score: 0, Troll

    Well I'm glad that you're able to play your games on your Apple, but there's people with serious work to do with their machines. If they're not doing anything very CPU/GPU intensive and the Apple's what they prefer working on, so be it. I'm not Applebashing here, I'm just saying that building your own is not the right solution. If you're going to buy last-generation hardware, at least get good support and some software to satisfy those bearded-terminal-hacker cravings.

    And I hope you didn't literally throw out that XP machine. I'm sure there's someone who could have given it a better home. I've found that running a legitimate copy of XP with proper signed drivers gives perfectly fine stability.

  27. Re:how it works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Troll? up yours.

    I merely was explaining the way it is.

  28. Of course by lpret · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of Yellow Dog Linux? Why? Is Unix-based not good enough for you?

    --
    This is my digital signature. 10011011001
  29. Yup, I got one and built it by MyDixieWrecked · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Took some pictures too. More coming tonight...

    http://www.sadistech.com/newbox/

    --



    ...spike
    Ewwwwww, coconut...
    1. Re:Yup, I got one and built it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Nice, now go clean your room...

      That is an order young man.

    2. Re:Yup, I got one and built it by MyDixieWrecked · · Score: 1

      btw, now that I actually have time to write something (it's been a hectic-ass day at work).

      The whole thing cost me about 600$ in the longrun. I had a regular sawtooth G4 that I have slowly been upgrading. Current specs of the machine:

      800mhz G4 (pulled from my old g4 that is now back to 450mhz)
      1GB RAM (spent 120$)
      RADON 9000 (pulled from old g4- that machine now has the AGP Rage 128 again)
      RAGE 128 (pulled my my g3 so I can do dual monitors)
      60GB HD (70$ at compUSA after rebate)
      40GB HD (I had laying around)
      SCSI card (that I had laying around)
      52x burner- Pacific Digital (20$ at office depot after rebate)
      32x burner (pulled from G3 because it has spin problems, but works well enough)

      I was planning on building a g4 because I had all those extra parts kicking around, so I had picked up a Gigabit G4 logicboard on ebay a couple weeks ago, so I have that extra now. Maybe I'll just sell it on ebay again.

      I wouldn't have built this machine had it not been for the fact that I had all those lose parts kicking around, it would have been too expensive. But this worked great.

      --



      ...spike
      Ewwwwww, coconut...
    3. Re:Yup, I got one and built it by b_pretender · · Score: 1

      This guy has some major disposeable income. He must still be living with mom & dad. Did you notice the guitar & amp, skateboard, Ti Powerbook? I hope that he's setting aside some money for his future.

    4. Re:Yup, I got one and built it by EggMan2000 · · Score: 1

      Spike! Nice Rig! NOW GO CLEAN YOUR ROOM!!

      I saw a sock, a beer bottle, um TacoBell cup, ..

      Yeesh!

      --
      what? what I thought we were in the trust tree in the nest, were we not?
    5. Re:Yup, I got one and built it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, and the case STILL looks better than any PC case I've ever seen! Even in the BYO market, Macs are still cooler :)

    6. Re:Yup, I got one and built it by MyDixieWrecked · · Score: 1

      Sirs, I don't live with mom and dad, been moved out since I was 17 (4 years, going on 5, now).

      Yes, I've got some major disposable income. Comes from having a nicely paying job and not spending all my money on clothes/car and stuff.

      When you shop at wal*mart for your clothes, get yer shirt at concerts and work 3 jobs (1 real one plus freelance art and sell screenprinting/embroidery) you find yourself having extra disposable income.

      I also have a habbit of aquiring computer parts and computers.

      Besides, if I lived at home, I'd have a MUCH bigger room, but screw their rules, I can't stand that. Never live at home, it isn't worth it. You can't get away with anything, and you can't stay up all night fucking around with your computers with the music blaring. ;)

      --



      ...spike
      Ewwwwww, coconut...
    7. Re:Yup, I got one and built it by Servo · · Score: 1

      That's how you know its a real geek's room.

      --
      A slip of the foot you may soon recover, but a slip of the tongue you may never get over. -Benjamin Franklin
  30. Re:how it works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mod this!

  31. Re:But the question is who would want to? by SlashdotMirrorer · · Score: 0, Troll

    And yet you're the same sort of person who if I said I didn't like Lord of The Rings 2: Elrod Strikes Back or whatever you people's favorite movie or music (The System is Down?) is, after 15 minutes, you'd be all "you didn't give it a chance".

    Why don't you ask that question once you gain a little experience, kid? At least the other replier had used both. For games, maybe, but still better than judging your opinion on how distracted by Junkyard Wars you were while it booted up.

  32. Re:But the question is who would want to? by w3weasel · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Do you think "I'm bored, I should troll?". I think almost everyone who understands OSS knows where Apple stands, and most even understand why. Apple does support OSS, and no one is claiming that OS X is OSS. If howver you wish to run Apple's OSS project on your x86, there's nothing stopping you.
    as for:
    You're much better off putting the same money into a Windows machine
    Pass that pipe my way dude!
    As for me, I own four Macs and one PC. My newest mac is 3 years old, and the oldest is 5. All the macs just keep chugging away, and while more speed would be swell, Its nice to not have to replace 30% of the machine every 6-8 months, as has been my experience with all PC's.
    What you're really paying for with an Apple is their support
    Unlike Dell or HP??? Them are some rock solid components you find inside those branded PC's huh?
    their backwards-compatible-with-BSD operating system
    and you're saying that the backwards-compatible-with-DOS operating system is a better option?
    and the pleasure of doing business with a company like Apple
    Well, yes, that's worth a few extra bucks :)
    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  33. Cult of the Cube now available for x86 by Greedo · · Score: 1

    I just noticed these cases today, and they made me think of the Cube.

    Useful for those who want to build a Mac-ish lookalike, I suppose.

    --
    Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
    1. Re:Cult of the Cube now available for x86 by JLyle · · Score: 1
      I just noticed these cases [soldam.com] today, and they made me think of the Cube.
      Price in USD, for the POLO R Figaro FAV (130,000yen), is $1087.23. Umm, no thanks ;)
    2. Re:Cult of the Cube now available for x86 by Greedo · · Score: 1

      A bit expensive, true, but it is a bare-bones system, not just a case. From the specs:

      - Shuttle FB51 mobo
      - 200W power supply
      - 8x CDR / 8x CDRW / 24x CD / 8x DVD drive
      - case fan
      - IDE cables, etc.

      --
      Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
    3. Re:Cult of the Cube now available for x86 by JLyle · · Score: 1
      A bit expensive, true, but it is a bare-bones system, not just a case.
      Whoops, I should have looked more closely. OK, yes, that's at least a bit more in line with reality. Thanks for the clarification.
    4. Re:Cult of the Cube now available for x86 by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 1

      " I just noticed these cases [soldam.com] today, and they made me think of the Cube."

      look at shuttle XPC's there not bad priced and are nice little computers. If i stood my SN41G2 on end and put a slot load drive in it, it would be very much like the cube. In the past year the world of SFF computers of cube shape has exploded.

  34. Re:But the question is who would want to? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

    1) it is system of a down
    2)I use Windows, OS X and Linux and I say that OS X is the best out of the bunch (though Linux is more exciting)

    windows lacks in a lot of places when it compaired to OS X IMO.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  35. Re:But the question is who would want to? by schiefaw · · Score: 1
    I don't want to start a war here....but, does anybody like XP? Seriously. I have used it for a total of 15 minutes and that is all I ever will.
    I use Win2k all day every day at work, so when my girlfriend bought an XP machine, I thought I would know all about it. I was eventually able to get to everything I needed, but I HATE that interface. It is ugly and intrusive. If it was my own machine I would have set it to the Win2K theme long ago. I realise that some of the problem is just getting used to another system, but when I went from OS9 to OSX, I had almost no problem at all. Where the XP interface hides all the controls and buffers your access behind "wizards" (by default, I know you can eventually get to the control panels), OSX allows quick access to control panels that make sense and are actually quick and efficient to use.

    Tony

    --
    Angleyne: You can't bend that girder - it's unbendable! Bender: Well I don't know anything about lifting, so that ju
  36. One piece at a time... by beerits · · Score: 1

    You know its going to be a good day when you find a Johnny Cash refrence on slashdot.

  37. Mac users, the thinnest-skinned people on Earth by corebreech · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I mean, really, look at some of these responses.

    On /. of all places we see people crying "Why would you want to do this?". Or, "What's wrong with the eMac?"

    This is only the first (or one of the first) homebuilt Macs. If enough people jump on the bandwagon prices will eventually drop. As it is now, the price is competitive with a brand new eMac, the comparable version of which was only introduced days ago.

    I want to see PowerPC chips on PriceWatch. I want to see different people competing to do motherboards that will run these chips. I want to see more and different case designs. Competition is good. Choice is good. Apple doesn't want us to have either of these things.

    And then, there's the thrill of building your own PC. I'm a former Mac person who is now running on my first homebuilt -- which dual-boots XP and Linux -- and the level of satisfaction I have with this machine surpasses anything I've ever owned from Apple (save, perhaps my Pismo PowerBook.)

    This can only be a good thing. And if Apple were smart, they'd put the resources in place up front to help them deal with the complexity of supporting what is sure to be the thousand different configurations or more of Macs that are yet to come. Turn your back on these people and you risk making the same mistake that Microsoft made and that is driving so many people to Linux.

    1. Re:Mac users, the thinnest-skinned people on Earth by slantyyz · · Score: 1

      At risk of getting modded down as a troll, I'd have to agree with you on this.

      There is something to be said about having the ability (be it a good idea or not) to build your own machine. As an ex-mac user myself, I gotta say that the first time I built my own x86 PC, I felt great. Definitely more rewarding than the sensation of opening up a carton and putting the Mac on the desk. Sure, it's not rocket science, but the sense of accomplishment has to be worth something.

      If I still wanted a Mac, AND I could build my own Mac (sure it may not be a good $$ value, but that's not the point), I think it would be a totally fun exercise.

      An eMac is cool, yes. But a MeMac is cooler.

    2. Re:Mac users, the thinnest-skinned people on Earth by weston · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I mean, really, look at some of these responses.
      On /. of all places we see people crying "Why would you want to do this?". Or, "What's wrong with the eMac?"


      It's not so much a "thin skin" thing as a reflection of the fact that slashdot isn't a homogenous group. Some people are going to want to do it because they can. Some people are going to want to do it to reach a new level of hardware customization. Some people are going to want to do it to have the level of configurability/performance that they could get out of a G4 tower at a cheaper price.

      Some people are going to primarily concerned with price. Those people should by an eMac. Some of those people have noted this on slashdot. It's not so much a matter of thin skin as the fact that their focus and accompanying heuristics for evaluating the value of a machine make it so they don't see the other points.

    3. Re:Mac users, the thinnest-skinned people on Earth by gerardrj · · Score: 1
      Competition is good. Choice is good.


      This is not always the case. Competition will drive prices lower, but will not necessarily advance technology. R&D isn't financed on a 5% margin. Look at Gateway, Dell, or any PC clone maker and figure out what they've innovated in the last 5 years. Nothing.

      My understanding is that there is actually no technical barrier to anyone building a mac clone motherboard. The ROM used to be the killer as it required licensing from Apple, but since OpenFirmware that has not been the case. I think that because as of the G4 - AGP, there is no ROM version or size listed in the Apple Specifications database.

      So that simply leaves making a MoBo that can run PPC chips, and interface with things the way Mac OS X expects.
      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    4. Re:Mac users, the thinnest-skinned people on Earth by beatniklew · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's two things people always overlook when talking about what Apple should do. The biggest strengths of the Mac Operating system have always been the limited hardware. If you control all of the hardware, and only have to worry about dealing with one or maybe two chipsets, you can make sure everything works pretty damn well. If the mac user base is comprised of people with custom machines (and there may be some now, but nowhere near a substantial amount), then their main advantage will be lost. Secondly, Mac is a hardware company. They also sell software, but that is not their bread and butter. Microsoft is a software company. They make money off of software (and some pieces of hardware, like mice and keyboards). But, and this is the important thing, while it might be better for Mac users if mac hardware were an open market, it would be worse for Apple. And it won't happen anytime soon. The world does need for there to be some actual competition for MS, but Mac is never going to be it. Linux might be, if any distribution could try to compete with Windows and not be labelled a sell out. BeOS would have been nice, but sadly, they are gone. Something needs to fill the niche, but it isn't Apple.

  38. I considered corecrib by OmniVector · · Score: 3, Informative

    But then i found out about this site: www.purchaseprogram.com. I haven't bought a system from there yet, but even after you pay the $250 fee, and tax, and shipping, you can still get a kick ass dual 1.25ghz powermac for less than the spare parts that corecrib offers.

    --
    - tristan
    1. Re:I considered corecrib by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      this looks like the scam that was running not that long ago (name rings a bell) and they are using the same tactics. I don't remember if it was on slashdot but it was all over the mac rumors sites -- you sign up you can kiss your $250 good bye

    2. Re:I considered corecrib by WebMacher · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yep, it's a scam. MacDV had a long discussion about it. Go to http://lists.themacintoshguy.com/Lists/MacDV/List. html and search for "Marbella".

    3. Re:I considered corecrib by ziggy_zero · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is what's called a straight-line matrix scheme, my friend. It's a scam.

      For more info on pyramid or "matrix" schemes, check this out.

      There are tons of sites like that out there, offering laptops, x-boxes, plasma TV's, etc. I know it's tempting, but don't send them your money, whatever you do.

      --
      I belong to the ______ generation.
    4. Re:I considered corecrib by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      Definate scam. The first thing that should have tipped you off was the fact that you didnt have to buy the computer if you didn't like the final price.

      So if 1 person out of 100 decides, "Hey that price sucks" no one can get their computer.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    5. Re:I considered corecrib by brauwerman · · Score: 1
      Unless you pay the $250 fee and get nothing. It's a scam.

      There is no way to know exactly how much your new machine will cost until all deposits are received by Marbella Technologies and we negotiate the order with the reseller.

      If you decide to cancel your order after your new system is committed, you are not obligated to pay the remaining balance, however, your reservation fee is retained.

      http://www.purchaseprogram.com/sites/purchaseprogr am/questions02.aspx

      http://www.purchaseprogram.com/sites/purchaseprogr am/questions06.aspx

    6. Re:I considered corecrib by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are some questions about how legitimate purchaseprogram.com is ... ymmv. Personally, i don't know anything about the place, but a little research on the web turned up this page

    7. Re:I considered corecrib by IdahoEv · · Score: 1

      This has got to be total horseshit.

      Two very simple reasons.

      1) Apple sets an MAP for all of their products. Resellers are not allowed to undercut that MAP; i.e. nobody can sell you a new mac for cheaper than list. It is my understanding that trying it can lose a reseller their license to sell Apple products.

      2) The example prices they list aren't just under MAP, they're under wholesale. Said hypothetical reseller that "purchaseprogram.com" is buying from in bulk would be losing money on each unit.

      --
      I stole this sig from someone cleverer than me.
  39. Yawn.. by WegianWarrior · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Hate to break it to the Mac-crowd... but those of us who has stuck to the open 'standard' that the ordinary* PC is has been able to do this for years. Got several OS's to choose from as well - even if I must say X looks sexier than most.

    And another thing; having looked at the article and done the numbers, I can't help to think that the same amount of green would have gotten you a more powerfull PC - even if you choose to support the devil and put Windows on it. Get hold of a linux-distro however, and I feel you could get a more powerful PC cheaper.

    *) By ordinary I mean a x86 based machine, with the CPU from Intel, AMD or another vendor who produces chips to the same spesifications. After all, PC means Personal Computer, which can include everything from a overclocked P4, via a Mac and down to, well, my old C64 for example.

    --
    Everything in the world is controlled by a small, evil group to which, unfortunately, no one you know belongs.
    1. Re:Yawn.. by binaryDigit · · Score: 1

      Hate to break it to the Mac-crowd... but those of us who has stuck to the open 'standard' that the ordinary* PC is has been able to do this for years

      Oh really, and we all though that this was something innovative!?!

      Of course we know that. No one claimed that this was something new, just something that is more novel for the Mac. Can you piece something together cheaper that'll run faster around an x86 mobo, of course, no kidding. Again, not the point. It's a hobbiest system for those who are interested in Macs. If you have no interest in Mac systems then there is nothing here that will interest you.

    2. Re:Yawn.. by ratfynk · · Score: 1

      Really I thought PC stand for P iece of C rap,
      That can run Linux (with hardware config hassles), that can run Windows (at least until you install an upgrade), or do not care about doing anything original, without a gui.
      That can run BSD if you really are a masochist, and study hardware configuration for two years before installing.
      Relies on software to do everthing, and in the long run has you wondering if there really is such a thing as a computer!

      --
      OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
    3. Re:Yawn.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sounds like someone's bitter about being too dumb to figure out one of those PC things. Linux isn't that hard to get. *BSD isn't that much harder than linux.

  40. Main text (sans pictures) by mrklin · · Score: 3, Informative

    from the /. page:

    My first Mac was a Beige G3 junked from work. I upgraded it to the max, but found it lacking the speed needed to run OS X. I started looking into buying a Power Mac but I was turned off by the inflated prices. $1500 for a box w/ no monitor? Insane. I like Apple's constant innovation but their prices are way too high. I finally came across this story about John Fraser, and his idea to sell a Mac kit aimed at do-it-yourselfers. I've built quite a few PC's but never a Mac. I decided this was the route for me.

    My core crib arrived on Sat. May 3, 2003.

    As you can see, it arrives in a non-descript brown box from USPS.

    The packaging was done well. The CoreCrib was secure in the box and was not damaged. Contents include, power cable, tower case, Apple Gigabit Ethernet motherboard, Apple Power Supply and blue/pink LED case fan. This is a very barebones kit. Provide your own IDE cables, drives, processesor, memory, video card etc....

    I had an old Beige G3 I decided I'd rob parts out of. Most of what was in that box was old PC hardware I had laying around. At first, I could not get the Crib to boot, I checked the support forums and noticed that the only other person who had received a CoreCrib kit said you "HAD" to update the firmware on the motherboard. I assumed this was my problem. So I put the Crib aside and tried to track down an older G4 processor.

    On Tues. May 6 another post arrived in the forums that the firmware was not needed to run newer CPUs. I then decided to investigate on my own. After an hour of testing, my problem was solved. The PC100 memory I tried to use from the Beige G3 did not like the faster G4 800 Giga Designs processor. I put a stick of PC133 memory in and the Crib instantly booted.

    Here are some pictures of the box itself.

    Here are some photos after my parts were installed:

    Back plane is missing. Personally I don't care, I push it under a desk.

    The Crib has changed colors and price. It is now available as Pro model and comes in a nice gmono white case. http://www.2khappyware.com/corecrib.html

    My current expense list:

    CoreCrib kit: $379, Gigadesigns G4 800 cpu, $275, 256mb pc133 $20, ATI Radeon PCI 7000, $100 The other parts I installed were extras from upgrading PC's. I've spent $775 on this machine and it runs OS X smoothly and without problems. I did purchase OS 10.2. I forgot to include that in the price. 2khappyware also sells complete and custom systems, you can add whatever parts you want if you don't want to buy them on your own. This case is expandable, you can add up to 5 hard-drives and multiple optical drives. Which is much different than the new Mirrored Power Macs. My next stop is to add the Radeon 8500 AGP card, the PCI card doesn't do Quartz Graphics.

    Overall I'm extremely happy with the Crib. The noise level is very low. No windtunnel noise going on here. It is upgradable to dual CPU's if you want to spend the cash. A new Support Forum has started flourishing, so help is available. I highly recommend buying this kit.

    Parts purchasing:

    http://www.macsales.com

    Information:

    http://www.xlr8yourmac.com/
    - Permalink
    Posted by Mark Dobie on 5/7/03; 11:36:45 AM

  41. Re:But the question is who would want to? by SlashdotMirrorer · · Score: 1

    Thank you for the correction.

    I have no problem with people who think the Apple OS is better; I started the thread talking about the hardware. If the Apple OS were ported to x86, I'm sure we could have the best of both worlds.

    And I certainly respect your opinion more than the one I replied to who dismissed XP after not even trying it. You're obviously one of the good ones.

  42. Re:Aw man by afidel · · Score: 1

    Unless the site is running a poorly configured MSSQL server or MySQL database backend it is rarely the server that has a problem (ok IIS blows up occassionally). Most of the time it is just a simple lack of bandwidth that kills sites that are hit with the slashdot effect.

    --
    There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  43. Missing the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if I could get an apple system for the same price, I don't want it. I like OSX and want to use it put want to be able to put what ever combination of CD/DVD/Hard drives. Also most of the extra parts that are needed, I have laying around collecting dust. It about choice and personal preference and if you don't like/understand it, go bitch about it on Slashdot.

    1. Re:Missing the point by knaakr · · Score: 1

      Choice, yeah thats the ticket. Wasn't that part of Apple's motto some time.

  44. Re:But the question is who would want to? by SlashdotMirrorer · · Score: 0, Troll

    I appreciate your response, but I think you're taking what I said at too much of a kneejerk reaction. I never said the operating system was bad, nor the support. Those are credits I gave to Apple in my post, and I think that it speaks for itself that there are still a handful of diehard Apple users because of these reasons, despite the hardware issues.

    Darwin is a token attempt at putting an open source face on, at best, and at worse (and likely), is an attempt to get some free code from the community to roll into their own projects. When there are more than a couple of dozen people using Darwin on a daily basis as a desktop or production server, then call me back.

  45. Keynux , storever , Ecs , Rjtec, mobileperipheral by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Keynux :

    http://www.keynux.com/default_zone/fr/html/home. ph p

    Storever :

    http://www.storever.com

    ECS :

    http://www.ecs.com.tw/products/notebooks.htm?sub me nu_id=16&function_id=13

    RJtech :

    http://www.rjtech.com/

    mobileperipherals :

    http://www.mobileperipherals.com

    They invented this nice thing called internet where you can use this nicer thing called google and type notebook and you get tons of real link , truely nice !

  46. XP stable compared to WHAT exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Well I'm glad that you're able to play your games on your Apple, but there's people with serious work to do with their machines.

    Hmmm.... like running M$ Office apps? Yep. Java/C++ development? Yep. M$ Access is missing from MacOS, but for what *most* people (in the WORKplace) use computers for it's all there. Are there apps that are Win-only without equivalent MacOS/Linux counterparts? Yep. Do they account for what *most* people use their computers for? Nope. (Check me out, I'm Rumsfeld!)

    > I've found that running a legitimate copy of XP with proper signed drivers gives perfectly fine stability.

    Not here it hasn't. I've got a new (and fully licensed) XP box sitting on my work desk here, just the usual M$ apps installed. All the latest signed M$ updates. It freezes at least once a week. Not tied to any particular task. It can be sitting idle and seize up.

    My co-worker recently bought one for home use (Dell). Fully licensed XP. Constant crashes.

    Two years ago I bought a Gateway. Regular crashes. Win2000 and XP.

    Today while I was on the phone with a friend in Seattle, he got the BSOD.

    Meanwhile my MacOS X box spins happily away.

    Glad XP is rock-stable for you, but it's hardly a universal experience.

  47. Re:But the question is who would want to? by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

    I've found that running a legitimate copy of XP with proper signed drivers gives perfectly fine stability.

    Ever tried dragging the IE window around during a windows update scan?

    --
    MORTAR COMBAT!
  48. It's no 17" tiBook by w3weasel · · Score: 1

    Hell, it isn't even an iBook, but here's about as close as you can get. Barebones kit counts as DIY right?

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  49. Re:But the question is who would want to? by SlashdotMirrorer · · Score: 0, Troll

    Ever tried dragging the IE window around during a windows update scan?

    Doesn't seem to have any problems on my machine with that... perhaps your system isn't quite up to par for XP, or you upgraded your video drivers to UNSTABLE and UNSIGNED versions so you could get a frame per second extra playing as the orcas or whatever in Warcraft III.

  50. Apple sells refurbished Macs by Andrew+Lockhart · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's silly to compare these kits to a brand new Mac when Apple themselves sell refurbished products.Keep in mind that the refurb'ed PowerMacs already come with ram, an hd, graphics, a superdrive, an os, etc. Oh yeah, they also have a one year warranty from Apple and are still eligible for their AppleCare Protection Plan. Two things that I doubt these kits have.

    1. Re:Apple sells refurbished Macs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but they still cost two to three times as much as the cribkit. Seems like Apple's discount on refurbished equipment is not all that hot.

    2. Re:Apple sells refurbished Macs by brauwerman · · Score: 1

      ...but you can't link to them :-/

    3. Re:Apple sells refurbished Macs by Staatkunde · · Score: 1

      How much are the refurbished Power Macs? Your link doesn't seem to work?

      I've looked at New Power Macs, Refurb. Power Macs. older Power Macs on ebay, nothing comes close to the price of the CoreCrib. It also gives me Freedom to upgrade whatever I want. It is hard to buy a brand new refurb for $1300, which contains a horrible video card, then chuck the card, spend another $200 for an ATI 8500 etc...

      Just buy a CoreCrib and build it how you want it.

    4. Re:Apple sells refurbished Macs by tuxedobob · · Score: 1

      Just go to the Apple store and click on the "Special Deals" tag near the bottom left. Doesn't look like there's anything quite worth getting in there, though.

  51. Re:I've only got 1 comment: by istartedi · · Score: 1

    Because.

    Sheesh! First semester philosophy students (grumble, grumble)...

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  52. This machine will only interest /. types by cenonce · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The CoreCrib will only interest ./ build-your-own-PC types.

    First off, anybody who uses a Mac uses it because they don't want the agg of PCs and all of the various config problems with hardware.

    Anybody who "switched" sure as heck isn't going to suddenly decide they want to experiment by building a Mac. Heck, the whole reason they switched was to just use their damn computer!

    I just don't see this ever going any further than the techno inclined... and only to those who really want to run OS X. And let's face it, a Mac capble of running OS X nicely can be had for 500 bucks now! Anybody who runs *nix is going to build a blow-em-away x86 box for the same price as the Core and not deal with the "finding compatible hardware problem". Besides that, at least for Linux, you basically have a choice between YDL, Mandrake (and Suse?)... you got four times the distros for x86!

    I think this is a great idea, but for the price and maybe more importantly the warranty offered, I'd rather buy a used Mac from say Macofalltrades.com. I may not get a brand new machine, but I can get a system that is equal or better than the Core machine with a 30 day warranty (and an option of a one year warranty).

    I hope it catches on though and I hope Apple maybe throws these guys a little help!

    1. Re:This machine will only interest /. types by Ded+Mike · · Score: 1
      Besides that, at least for Linux, you basically have a choice between YDL, Mandrake (and Suse?)... you got four times the distros for x86!

      ...don't forget the FINK Project for Linux and XFree/XDarwin on Mac OS X. Allows you to run Linux natively in OS X, if I remember correctly.

      --
      Remember guys, this is Amerika. Just because you have the most votes, doesn't mean you get to win.--Fox Mulder
    2. Re:This machine will only interest /. types by thunderbird46 · · Score: 1

      And Debian! How could you forget Debian! It's like the NetBSD of the Linux world, it runs on most everything! :)

    3. Re:This machine will only interest /. types by cenonce · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sorry... Debian too! My experience has not been good with installing Debian, but then I'm a quasi-geek with just enough knowledge to be dangerous! :)

      -A

    4. Re:This machine will only interest /. types by Ded+Mike · · Score: 1
      FINK is essentially apt and dselect for OS X. Linux software (including rootless XFree, KDE and Gnome) runs as OS X with all the nice Aqua eye-candy...root directory is under the /sw volume mount, so it nicely co-exists wiuth the existing XDarwin and OS X software.

      --
      Remember guys, this is Amerika. Just because you have the most votes, doesn't mean you get to win.--Fox Mulder
    5. Re:This machine will only interest /. types by tuxedobob · · Score: 1

      Wait, I thought *BSD was dying? ;-)

    6. Re:This machine will only interest /. types by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The CoreCrib will only interest ./ build-your-own-PC types.

      Exactly. I'm not sure who this kind of system is really aimed at. If you want to hack together a system to run some kind of customised OS then Linux or *BSD on x86 hardware would be a better bet for you. If you want the Apple 'it just works' experience then buy from a vertical monopoly.

      One of the main reasons I'm considering swithcing to Apple is that all of their kit is designed and tested to work as a whole. You don't get that in the PC world, and while I'm happy to tinker with Linux and the BSDs on machines I don't depend on to work on a daily basis I want my main machine to be as simple and reliable as a piece of consumer electronics.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    7. Re:This machine will only interest /. types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I'm running Gentoo on my old Macs, so add that to your mental list of PowerPC Linux distributions. Nice piece of work it is, too.

  53. eMac screen suXX0rs by metamatic · · Score: 1

    The eMac screen is a cheap, crappy triangular dot mask CRT, not even a Trinitron. Using it for 20 minutes gives me a headache. Hence my only option was to pay more for an iMac.

    Now, as it happened, I could afford to pay the extra. However, many other people can't or won't pay more for a flat panel, and would quite happily get by with a $100 Trinitron CRT or a monitor they already have. Except the cheapest Apple machine that'll let them do that is $1500.

    --
    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    1. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by Golias · · Score: 2, Informative
      However, many other people can't or won't pay more for a flat panel, and would quite happily get by with a $100 Trinitron CRT or a monitor they already have.

      Step 1: Put the eMac under your desk or wherever.
      Step 2: Plug the monitor you have and like into the video out plug (yes, it takes standard VGA connections).
      Step 3: There's no step three.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    2. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's a little more than half that. Look here (at the bottom of the page).

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    3. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by warkeng · · Score: 1

      (yes, it takes standard VGA connections).

      Not quite. You need to buy an adapter. The eMac has some kind of weird mini-vga out connector on it.

      --
      -- Spammers: My E-mail server is in California. Consider yourself warned.
    4. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by metamatic · · Score: 1

      I did think about buying a CRT Mac and running a usable display off the VGA output, but that's just so wasteful, not to mention ugly...

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    5. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by metamatic · · Score: 1

      The eMac wouldn't fit under my desk. Have you seen one? They're HUGE.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    6. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by Golias · · Score: 1

      Really? My iBook came with a free VGA adapter in the box. I'm surprised that isn't the case with other models. Then again, it's a relatively cheap adapter.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    7. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by Golias · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that a case mod would be a relatively trivial job to anybody that's talking about going to the lengths of building their own box just because they want to use a different monitor.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    8. Re:eMac screen suXX0rs by andrewski · · Score: 1

      15x15x17 is HUGE? Are you fucking Japanese or something?

  54. Re:But the question is who would want to? by PCBman! · · Score: 1

    Did she get XP Pro or XP Home. Pro really is just W2K with butt kissing extras (I should know I made the transition from W2K to XP Pro). XP Home though... now that's a piece of work. MS should just retire that the way of WMe and make Pro the standard for ANY single user single access box.

    --
    So, when's lunch?
  55. Re:But the question is who would want to? by w3weasel · · Score: 1

    My statements were carefully thought out, not kneejerk.
    You criticized another post for speaking without experience 'kid', yet you aparently havent figured out that Darwin is OS X minus Aqua. They are not seperate projects, they are parent and child (or Homo-Erectus, Homo-Sapiens, if you prefer that analogy).
    You are quite correct in saying that Apple wants free code, why shouldnt they use the OSS model to their advantage, don't you use it to yours? In relation, take a look at MS's recent pseudo-OSS license for WinCE, where you can have the source, but anything you derrive belongs exclusively to MS.
    While I am a Mac user, I am no evangelist. Apple has it's own special brand of evil, and the initial purchase price of hardware is very difficult to swallow. As I stated in my prior post, the cost of ownership for my Macs have been a fraction of that spent to keep my PC running.
    Perhaps you weren't aware, but the tone and structure of your first post makes it seem as though you are actually stating that the OS and (built in)support costs were a negative of the platform, thanks for explaining that you didn't actually mean for it to be like how you made it sound :)

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  56. Biting the hand that feeds by harveyswik · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I like Apple but I'd rather find a loophole in their buisness plan and avoid paying for all that messy R&D.

    Can you spell lawsuit?

  57. Re:But the question is who would want to? by MmmmAqua · · Score: 1

    I agree with your main points here, especially about security. Everyone knows you shouldn't go with Swiss - it's full of holes! Munster is too soft, so is mozarella. Feta crumbles under any attack, and gorgonzola's security just plain stinks. Don't get me started on that mass-produced processed cheese! As soon as you take it out of the wrapper, it goes all limp and falls to pieces!

    In the end, I made the only decision that made sense: parmesan. It's hardened, very difficult to cut through, and versatile. Plus, it's tasty on a salad or some pasta.

    --
    Arr! The laws of physics be a harsh mistress!
  58. Re:Aw man by Sethb · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm the admin of the server in question, it's running Manila from Userland as the web server/weblog product. Everything is dynamic on there, even the pictures are served out of the database, and it's basically running out of CPU horsepower in this case, Frontier.exe is using about 90% of my CPU time. :)

    --
    When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
  59. Look a bit deeper by w3weasel · · Score: 1

    Prices are controlled by Apple for this kit. The Mobo is a stock apple unit, and it wouldnt run a MacOS if it werent.
    Prices wont drop because Apple isn't lowering the prices on a bare Mobo.

    All anyone has said is that if it's about saving money on a mac, the eMac is more bang-for-buck. That's not thin-skinned, its miserly!

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

    1. Re:Look a bit deeper by corebreech · · Score: 1

      But if enough people express interest in building their own Macs, surely the boys in Taiwan will start punching our their own mobos.

      Then the prices *will* drop.

    2. Re:Look a bit deeper by w3weasel · · Score: 1

      Mobos arent the problem, its the 'NewWorld Boot Rom' Which is very strictly held by apple. Without the boot rom, MacOS wont run. One of the third party upgrade companies (Sonnet or maybe NewerTech) tried to reverse engineer the BootRom, but was forced to can the chip by apple.

      --

      Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

    3. Re:Look a bit deeper by Cirvam · · Score: 1

      From what I've read on slashdot, I think its only the older Mac's that have the boot rom, the newer ones don't have it or its emulated in software. Although I wonder if clone motherboards would still have the spiffy OpenBoot Bios.

    4. Re:Look a bit deeper by Staatkunde · · Score: 1

      How is the eMac "more bang for the buck"? It is an integrated all in one computer. If the monitor dies when the 1 yr. warranty is up, your screwed. If you ever want to add a different video card or CPU, you can't. The eMac isn't even comparable to the CoreCrib.

    5. Re:Look a bit deeper by GreenHell · · Score: 1

      Old World Macs have the actual boot rom chip.
      New World ones have it stored in software (this last bit is according to a friend with a New World Mac, I only have Old World ones.)

      --
      "I won't mod you down - I feel the need to call you a twit explicitly, rather than by implication."
  60. Re:But the question is who would want to? by noewun · · Score: 1
    There's a reason why artists and musicians are trading in on PC's running XP in droves.

    Care to back this up with some facts, or should we just treat your generalization like the revealed word? Where I live (NYC) and what I do (write) exposes me to lots of those artists and musicians folks, and there's nary a PC among them. Some sweet new Powerbooks, tho. . .

    --
    I am a believer of momentum and curves.
  61. Slashdot Headlines from the Future by ink · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Apple: CoreCrib Kit Website Taken Down
    Posted by smudge on Fri 09, 14:17
    from the apple-lawyers-strike-again dept

    Mark Dobie writes "I just put up a quick protest page against Apple's lawyers who demanded that the CoreCrib kit website be taken down. It's too bad that a company that makes such good products has such a fear of open hardware. [ed: see this story for more information.]

    --
    The wheel is turning, but the hamster is dead.
  62. No flames here, well a few sparks perhaps by w3weasel · · Score: 1, Insightful

    a 300mHz 604e PPC chip is a reasonable performer, but you are running OS 9 (possibly lower). If you would like to get into NT is better than OS 9 then I counter that Beta is superior to VHS.

    OS 9 had is good points, especially where the deisgner was concerned (back in the day when Win95/98fe were the alternative). And also, back in that day, Macs were sometimes marginally faster than PC's (meaning x86).

    Today, macs lag in performance, and are more expensive (initial cost). That looks to change soon with the next round this fall. Besides, when you spend all day working in BBEdit, Vi, Emacs, or Notepad, do you really need the fastest machine you can buy?

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  63. Re:But the question is who would want to? by jasonbw · · Score: 1

    Nearly every time i install something on my pc i get the warning that my driver is unsigned...The last time i upgraded my Radeon 8500 driver (from ATI's website, not some tweak site) i got an unsigned warning.

    Oddly enough, it works just fine.

  64. Damn right. by BoomerSooner · · Score: 1

    It's hard to beat having a G4 Tower, Apple Cinema Display (22") and an all wireless setup.

    Everytime I forget someone hasn't seen my apple setup they always say "Damn, what the hell is that thing? A TV?" I just have to laugh.

    I got the new iBook 900 and I'm waiting on the new 15" Powerbooks and the 970's. Until then I'm set.

  65. decode would still be necessary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because on PCC, the decode stage is also the dispatch stage. And any superscalar processor needs a dispatcher. Also the PPC does branch folding there too.

    As to it not being a true RISC chip. No, according to the old old definitions it is not. But RISC doesn't mean "reduced" instruction set anymore, it means "reasonable".

    RISC was created to conserve transistors. If you had very few, you wanted to use each one on every cycle. Now, we have so many transistors and chips are so far apart that using them all each cycle isn't that important anymore (besides, how would you get rid of that heat!). So now the key is to make a instruction set that it is still easy to decode and fast to execute, but not so much super-simple anymore.

    1. Re:decode would still be necessary by afidel · · Score: 1

      Sorry but except at the ISA level the PPC970 doesn't even really fit that definition. The PPC970 has as deep an execution pipe as the P4 (excluding the signal propogation stages from the P4's pipeline). In fact other than the complexity of the decode stage the P4 and PPC970 are fairly similar. I would even go so far as to say that the PPC970 is closer in design philosophy to the P4 then it is to the G4.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    2. Re:decode would still be necessary by caouchouc · · Score: 1

      No, according to the old old definitions it is not. But RISC doesn't mean "reduced" instruction set anymore, it means "reasonable".

      Nope... The interpretation of the acronym may have changed in some circles, but the acronym itself hasn't. The R still stands for "reduced".
      I'm being pedantic, but it's better than leaving a spurious assertion stand.

  66. Building a Mac can be expensive... by DA_MAN_DA_MYTH · · Score: 1

    After I was done, this was the only case I could afford to house it in.

    --
    "It takes many nails to build a crib, but one screw to fill it."
  67. Go Apple by Yi+Ding · · Score: 1

    Great, now I can use the my penny ram sinks and paper cooling system on a new dual G4.

  68. Re:DIY Mac.. - NOT: get $400 dell p4 machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would you want to spend that amount of time and money getting old hardware when you can get a brand new Dell for $400 every other year?

  69. Re:mac shmac! by jasonbw · · Score: 1

    The place i used to work had a few 8600's...much more memory on them though. yeah, they had problems....know why?
    They were still on the original operating system that shipped with it. Never had a wipe and reinstall, and hadn't had a point upgrade run on them for years. They'd do stupid things like this all the time. In your situation, i'd wager its not the hardware, but the lack of upkeep thats the problem.

    as for the comment about why anyone would choose a mac, well, some of us like them. And if personal perference is too difficult a concept for you to grasp...well, i guess that explains you posting AC.

  70. This underscores Apple hardware cost problems by StandardCell · · Score: 1

    People wouldn't be going to such desperate measures as to build these special kits if Apple would simply sell their hardware at a more reasonable price. Yes, I'm aware that there are warranties, AppleCare, build quality, etc., but the fact is that the alternative - PCs - are a much better value overall. You can buy a PC with virtually all the features of a Mac that is far more powerful for less money.

    One of my current conundrums is whether I buy a Mac-based or PC-based video editing solution. Apple's Final Cut Pro is the video editor's dream from an overall cost/benefit perspective, but the render speeds for apps like Adobe After Effects are dreadfully slow relative to the PC equivalents. In addition, I would frequently need to encode using different CODECs. A 3GHz P4 will whip any dual G4 Mac into the ground in raw speed, but the PC-based solutions doesn't have the visibility or legitimacy which some clients require. Still, for someone just starting out and doing small jobs like editing commercials and training videos, I don't think that there's a reason to go with a Mac. I'll get along just fine with Adobe Premiere 7 until I can get the funds to buy a better solution like would exist on a Mac. All MHO of course.

    1. Re:This underscores Apple hardware cost problems by sjonke · · Score: 1

      People wouldn't be going to such desperate measures as to build these special kits if Apple would simply sell their hardware at a more reasonable price.

      Hmmm... such kits are far more prevelant in the Windows and Linux worlds. What does that imply for you?

      --
      --- What?
    2. Re:This underscores Apple hardware cost problems by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      Sometimes it's just a problem of companies being too lazy to take advantage of Mac-specific optimizations. You can double After Effects' Mac performance with a few minutes of tweaking.

  71. whats the cool case on the front page?? by cgifool · · Score: 2, Informative

    I dont understand, the home page has a cool looking slim machine pictured, but it just says its a "concept drawing".

    Then, when you go to click "purchase", it looks like any old clunky PC box.

    Whats the deal?

    1. Re:whats the cool case on the front page?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool case == Bait
      Clunky PC case == Switch

      The deal is that it's "In Development". Eg, might happen or might not, but it looks nice and draws in the punters. Some people would call it misleading advertising...

  72. Can we be any more elitist? by User+956 · · Score: 1

    The whole point of buying from Apple is that it's NOT cheap crap like a PC, or worse my mom's Dell.

    You realize, of course, that Apples are built of the same "cheap crap" as PCs (RAM, IDE drives, etc), and that same "cheap crap" is assembled for Apple by the same company that assembles computers for Dell, HP, and Compaq.

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    1. Re:Can we be any more elitist? by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      IDE drives and RAM aren't cheap crap, true. Second-rate IDE drives and RAM used to cut the overall price of the system are, and that's what Apple doesn't use.

    2. Re:Can we be any more elitist? by User+956 · · Score: 1

      IDE drives and RAM aren't cheap crap, true. Second-rate IDE drives and RAM used to cut the overall price of the system are, and that's what Apple doesn't use.

      Dell uses Micron RAM and Quantum Drives. Guess what I have here on my desk? A drive I pulled out of an iMac (with a bad screen, so the computer's useless. great design). It's a Quantum, and the RAM I pulled out of the Mac is Micron.

      The only thing worse than elitism is ignorance, and you're heavy on both.

      --
      The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
  73. Re:But the question is who would want to? by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

    Well, right click on My Computer, go to device manager, and set XP not to complain about unsigned drivers. How hard is that?

  74. Re:Aw man by carpe_noctem · · Score: 1

    So basically, you came on /. to tell everyone what a terrible and poorly designed webserver you run.

    Sir, I tip my hat to you. I hope the masses do not eat you alive. ;)

    --
    "Quoting famous computer scientists out of context is the root of all evil (or at least most of it) in programming." - K
  75. Re:But the question is who would want to? by drsmithy · · Score: 1
    Its nice to not have to replace 30% of the machine every 6-8 months, as has been my experience with all PC's.

    Why do you do this ?
    It shouldn't be speed, as a 5 year old PC is more than fast enough for day to day use (once the RAM is bumped up, and the same would apply to any similarly-aged Mac). The only exception here is games, and a 5 year old Mac is going to fare even worse. Heck, *brand new* Macs can barely run OS X at a reasonable speed.
    It shouldn't be reliability, as long as you bought good parts to start with. Again if you didn't a comparison with a Mac is hardly fair.

    I've got plenty of PCs here, the oldest being a ~nine year old 486 that chugs along quite happily as a firewall/proxy/mail/etc server - it's only replacements being an extra hard disk (the old one still works fine) and a bit more RAM. The next up would be ca. 7 year old dual P200 - again with upgraded RAM and hard disk and it runs Solaris 8 fine. In fact, the newest PC I have here is over a year old, and I've yet to feel even the slightest urge to upgrade it - the only time I use it is when I play games (rarely). My "daily user" machine at home is a ~4 year old dual P3/700 that hasn't been upgraded since the day I assembled it. And, well, if I'm prepared to put up with Windows being as atrociously slow on it as OS X was on my 667 PowerBook, it should be good for another ~four years.

    It seems to me most of the people making "Macs last five years, PCs only last one" aren't comparing on an even remotely fair playing field.

  76. it actually seems to be cheaper... by vena · · Score: 3, Informative

    CoreCrib Dual 1200 Computer for $1799.99

    CoreCrib Fully Assebled System
    G4 Dual 1200Mhz 2MB cache
    1024MB Memory
    52x CD-RW
    120GB Harddrive
    Geforce4MX 32MB ADC DVI and DVI-> VGA Adapter
    2 Firewire, 2 USB Ports, 10/10/1000 Ethernet, Audio in/out
    Front Firewire, 2xUSB and Audio OUT
    Just Add keyboard, mouse, and OS
    ATA, Power Cable and Fans/Heatsink are included.
    Just plug in, add keyboard/mouse, boot from OS Install CD and install your OS. No hardware Installation!

    you're losing .05 ghz of speed (like you'll notice) but gaining ram and hd space for $200 cheaper

    1. Re:it actually seems to be cheaper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      $200 cheaper

      Mac OS X is about $130. So..... a whole $70.00.

    2. Re:it actually seems to be cheaper... by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      OS X is $90 or cheaper if you buy from someone other than apple or CompUSA

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  77. Re:Here's something I don't understand: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah. This wouldn't happen if you were running OS X.

  78. Re:Hmmm...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Buy the box and motherboard and throw in all of your drives and PCI cards from your other macs.

    I am looking at turning a beige G3 into a G4 tower. This mod gets me a case and mobo. I then add G4/800-DP1200, and throw in ram. I would start with a G4/800/2mb cache/512mb, so basic cost is less than $800 for a loaded G4/800 tower.

    I can reuse my DVD-R, CD-RW, old 24X CD-ROM,and zip drives, plus I can add two IDE drives on the IDE chain, and throw my PCI IDE card and add two more 100B drives (video stuff). Then I also have space for a second video card.

    Apple doesn't make a tower that does that!

    This is what PC users love, flexibility to build towers that hold too much and get really hot inside ; )

  79. Real cost comparison or The myth of low cost by gerardrj · · Score: 4, Informative

    Using the prices the author posts in the review, adding in $120 for Mac OS X and $50 for labor the real cost for hardware for this machine comes to $944, and that doesn't include shipping. Let's assume $5 per item and that's another $20 for a total of $964 for this "low cost Mac"

    Okay, but Apple sells a spiffy new machine for $1,500. That's a difference of $536. Now the question is this:

    Are the "extras" you get with the new Apple Mac worth the extra $536? Lets look at the "extras":

    (numbers in parenthesis are estimated upgrade costs)
    1. Support and warranty. You have someone to point the finger at with hardware failures (priceless??)
    2. 200Mhz faster CPU speed ($225 assumes purchasing 1Ghz instead of 800)
    3. 33Mhz?? faster bus speed (can't upgrade)
    4. 2x faster memory (can't upgrade)
    5. 32MB more Video RAM ( $65 more than the 7000 for the Radeon 8500)
    6. GPU is about 2x more powerful
    7. FireWire 800 ($100 includes USB2)
    8. USB 2.0
    9. Built-in AirPort antenna
    10. AGP port is 2x faster (can't upgrade)
    11. A better looking case

    The things that can be upgraded will cost $390 to do so, and a total build-it-yourself cost of $1,356.
    And this machine still doesn't perform as well as the new system will, and would cost only $140 less than the new Apple PowerMac.

    I'll take the Apple eqipment for the extra $140.

    --
    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  80. Re:But the question is who would want to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Unlike Dell or HP??? Them are some rock solid
    > components you find inside those branded PC's huh?

    My 1995 Dell P133 ran 24/7 since the day I bought it...never a problem.

  81. Apple/CoreCrib like Dinan/BMW? by cenonce · · Score: 1

    I wonder if Apple would do something like this?

    Basically, for those of you who don't know, Dinan is an aftermarket part supplier for BMW... they sell chips, exhaust, suspension kits, clutches, even superchargers for BMW. A couple of years ago, BMW (I guess) decided that enough people were installing Dinan's stuff on cars to allow certain Dinan parts to be sold/installed by BMW dealers and not void the factory warranty.

    Would it be possible for Apple to establish a similar relationship? How would it work?

    -A

  82. great idea by kardar · · Score: 1

    I think this is a great idea; the G4 is an awesome processor. I have my doubts that this is going to work out, but I think it's a great idea, and I wish the company all the best. It's certainly cool to see it done. I thought about this a little, and it's nice to be able to get away from the PC architecture and move over to some other hardware once in a while. Maybe one option that can compete with this in coolness is the FreeBSD 5.0 on UltraSparc - I haven't tried it yet, but it's something to consider, as far as upgrading systems, reusing old hardware, and it's probably within a similar price range with what is being done here with the Mac. Yes, there are less Linux distributions for the Apple hardware, but it would be interesting to try and build one yourself. I think this is a great idea.

  83. Re:But the question is who would want to? by w3weasel · · Score: 1
    Apologies if i sounded like I was trolling. I spoke only of my experience. By the way, I currently Admin a network of 90 PC's and the failure rate, when compared with that of my home PC, is reasonable. Even among those machines, the failure rate is far far higher than those experienced by my fiancee at her job. She is a Journalist/Designer for a local newspaper, and they have about 40 macs. I am the would-be Tech Support for that office, but have not had to do a hardware repair at all for that office. The PC network I admin averages at least one minor failure every few weeks.

    I fully understand that PC's can be reliable, but there are many studies showing much lower total cost of ownership on mac as compared to PC... and that is not including software licenses.

    All of this is strictly my opinion, grain of salt not included

    --

    Just as irrigation is the lifeblood of the Southwest, lifeblood is the soup of cannibals. -- Jack Handy

  84. This is noething new. by amacman · · Score: 1

    The best reason for doing it is to get a case that holds more that the 1 or 2 externally accesible bays that Apple thinks is enough. I've done this before myself, but even cheaper. PC case for $30. Apple AGP logic board for $100 from ebay. Apple power supply from ebay $100(you can also modify a plain old PC PS) and a Sonnet 800mhz G4 new for $299. And mine has 2 Pioneer DVD-R drives, a 52x CD-R a Sony 5.2 gig MO drive, and, ready for this?...A 200mb Syquest drive!!!!
    All internally mounted-that is why this makes sense.

  85. Oh YEAH? by TerryAtWork · · Score: 1

    How long is it going to be before Jobs buys THIS company up and closes it like he did the LAST one that made cheap macs, thereby assuring I'll always be a PC guy. Thanks Steve.

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
    1. Re:Oh YEAH? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have some deep-rooted jealousy issues.

      I hope they get solved before you die.

  86. such a critical distinction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure you always refer to old PC CGA graphics adapters as Color Graphics Arrays too. And you know, CGAs don't display pixels, they display pels. (IBM's official pixel designation). And don't forget your IBM PC with its "fixed disk" (as opposed to hard disk).

    Good thing we got all that important hair-splitting done. It could have lead to serious problems down the road.

  87. you cannot equate depth with complexity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pipeline depth is not a good indicator of the complexity of an instruction set. Pipeline depth simply increases as the speed of the chip increases.

    Lets test the theories:

    Pipeline depth relates to simplicity of instruction set:
    Well, the 68000 and 8086 had no pipelines, so the depth was 1. But they both have complex instruction sets.
    P4 and PPC970 both have deep pipelines even though the instructions in PPC970 are clearly simpler (despite all the bitching on here, it is at LEAST load/store, unlike P4).
    G4 has a short pipeline even though it runs the same instructions as PPC970.

    Pipeline depth relates to speed of processor:
    68K and 8086 had 1 stage pipes and ran at slow speeds.
    G4 has a (relatively) short pipeline and is moderate speed.
    PPC970 and P4 have long pipelines and are quite fast.

    Simply put, making the pipeline longer and increasing the clock speed makes it possible to run more instructions at the same time (even if each one runs no quicker end to end).

    Thus pipeline length goes up as chip speeds go up, despite the instruction set.

    Oh, and frankly, your argument that the ISA of PPC isn't RISC (and did you really say P4-like?) is false on its face.

    All PPC instructions are the same size. This is a RISC feature. This is not true of P4.
    PPC has many registers and is a true register-based architecture. This is a RISC feature P4 is a juiced-up accululator architecture.
    PPC is a load/store architecture. This is a RISC feature. This is not true of P4.

    I know it's cool to knock "tainted" architectures, but your argument is more entertaining than convincing.

    1. Re:you cannot equate depth with complexity by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Pipeline depth relates to speed of processor:
      68K and 8086 had 1 stage pipes and ran at slow speeds.
      G4 has a (relatively) short pipeline and is moderate speed.
      PPC970 and P4 have long pipelines and are quite fast.

      This is almost true. A longer pipeline can actually make a chip slower at executing a single instruction. The first advantage is that it can be (in theory) executing as many instructions as there are stages in the pipeline at any given time (not counting the parallel pipelines found in superscalar architectures). The second advantage is that pipeline stages are shorter. This allows the chip to be clocked faster, (oversimplification) since clock speed is limited by the distance light can travel in a one cycle being the maximum size of a pipeline stage.

      The drawback comes with pipeline flushes. If the chip incorrectly predicts a branch, then it will have executed a portion of code which it should not have done, so has to discard everything in the pipeline after the leading instruction (the Itanic gets around this by taking both branches, and using the correct one). This means that in an 8 stage pipeline a miss-prediction will result in 7 discarded instructions (although one will only have gone one stage in the pipeline etc). In a 16 stage pipeline the performance hit will be twice this. This can be diminished by predicting branches accurately, but you obviously can't predict them with 100% accuracy (if you could then there would be no point in actually bothering to perform the calculation required to determine if the branch should have been taken.)

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  88. Re:Aw man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Poor design is a relative term. Dynamically composed everything has some benefits. Surviving a slashdot meltdown isn't one of them.... however 99.99% of the time that site will not have to worry about /.

    So what is a better design... design for a load you'll encounter once or twice a year or design the nominal state.

  89. Re:But the question is who would want to? by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1
    It depends on brand as well.

    Dells are very reliable since they use maxtor hard drives and asus motherboards. They are on par with the gigabit motherboards Apple use's.

    However people want cheap and that emachine or gateway costs hundreds less. These are crap. Quality will vary.

    Other brands like IBM and HP are puting lesser quality components in an effort to reduces costs as well. Dell still is king of reliablity.

    Last is software. Until Windows2k and XP, windows majorly blew. Poor dll management and registry corrupt is what causes this. I remember actually reinstalling Windows every 3 months becuase I would install and uninstall alot of apps and shit would hit the fan.

    MacOSX and Windows2k no longer suffer these problems. If any app writes to the registry in my windows2k box it will take a few minutes to shutdown. The reason why is Windows is doing a database corruption scan.

    Anyway the situation is changing and pc's are close to the reliablity of macs.

  90. Sabra Price Is Right by DannyiMac · · Score: 1

    So, how much you give for computer like this?

    >> I don't know $20?

    Oh come on! This is expensive computer the fastest in the world.

    >> $35

    Oh this is ridiculous! It's a good computer, it's an Apple!

    >> It doesn't look like an Apple computer...

    It's Apple-like.

    >> What do you mean?

    Its got Apple guts, ya know?

    --
    - Danny
  91. Emacs or Vi implies compilation of code... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    Which could use the speed.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  92. Straw man argument by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

    Your example is so fictitous as to be meaningless.

    At work I run a Xeon (whatever that is). At home I have an Atlon 1600 and a K6-2. These are all used 5 days per week, plus, typically 5-8 hours per day.

    Typically they run www, spreadsheets and engineering programs, and the fast machine at home runs games and demos.

    I don't log downtime or lost productivity, generally, but I know I have lost 4 hours to a RAM failure in the last year. That's it.

    As far as software and reboots go the Xeon, running W2k, gets rebooted once per week as a matter of course, and has maybe fallen over once in the year. The K2 runs NT4 and has chucked me out of a few programs, but ha snot 'crashed'. It gets turned off overnight.

    The Athlon runs win 98 SE and has a pretty gruesome life running game demos and so on. I have had to re-install windows once. I would guess it falls over in such a way as to lose work in progress perhaps once every couple of months.

    That is not 50 minutes of productivity loss per day, more like 1

    And of course Macs never crash, do they? I've got a couple of those hanging around, but they don't run often enough for me to get a picture of software reliability. But the sad Mac appears remarkably often, in my experience.

    1. Re:Straw man argument by PetWolverine · · Score: 1

      But the sad Mac appears remarkably often, in my experience.

      Man, you must be doing something wrong. I've been a Mac user for over a decade, and currently have six of them in the house, and I've never seen a sad mac. Besides, the sad mac only existed in Mac OS 9. As overblown as OS 9's supposed "stability" was, OS X really is stable.

      --
      I found the meaning of life the other day, but I had write-only access.
    2. Re:Straw man argument by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

      Not all of us are running OSX

      or 9

      or even 8

      !

  93. Re:Aw man by Sethb · · Score: 1

    Well, the server wasn't really intended for this, it's basically a test server, if you read the site:

    http://weblogs.csbs.uni.edu/

    It's running on an old box, mostly used just for some internal communications within our network, getting maybe 400 hits a day, not 40,000/hour, which is what we hit at the peak. :)

    --
    When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
  94. Re:Aw man by Sethb · · Score: 1

    Oh, and for those interested, it's running Win2000 Pro on a 600mhz CPU with 256MB RAM. It's an old Dell Precision workstation, I think it's a 220, if I recall correctly. The thing is stable, even throughout the slashdotting, just the poor CPU couldn't churn fast enough. Next time we try something like this, we'll put it on one of our dual-Xeon servers. :)

    --
    When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
  95. It Will Never Happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lowest eMac just dropped to $799.

    Have you tried just going out and buying a vanilla CD-ROM drive? Most won't work. They're software driven.

    Have you tried to get Retrospect 5, the leading Mac OS software backup vendor, to support (whatever you install in the way of drives)?

    You guys are great. Fun experiment. So it supports 10.2. What about 10.2.6, 10.3?

    PC types don't get it. Apple hardware is tuned to run with Mac software, Apple software, and 3rd party components are often specially designed and tuned solely for Apple.

    Replace the power supply in an Apple built Mac with an OEM? Been there and tried that twice myself. Doesn't work.

    OSX is designed to run on a mobo built by Apple, for Apple, and enuff said. Glad you got 10.2 up. Good luck, even if you buy it from Apple, in getting your video to do Quartz or.... ....what's next in 10.3 or even 10.2.7?

    Using canabalized *Apple* G3 parts? What if eBay doesn't have what you want for those who don't have them handy.

    Look at the real cost of what is described + cost of OSX. Look at what you *don't* have and then look at a one year guarantee from Apple that the Tower you buy from them *will* work, *will* come with a G4 DP setup.

    (shakes head, wanders off mumbling, has dealt with a dozen Apple clones circa 1997 and all their woes even when Apple built the mobo)

    Won't work guys. The End. (as in "the end is in sight" just unknown at present as to all the limitations)

    Buy an Apple Mac. They work.

    1. Re:It Will Never Happen by ahector · · Score: 1

      Yay for trolling. RTFA, you get an APPLE mobo with this package. This is basically the same thing as: 1. Going on EBay and finding a cheap older G4 mobo 2. Putting it in some PC case 3. Getting a G4 processor from Sonnet, et. al 4. Getting other parts and putting it togther (HD, ram, video card, etc. etc. etc.) Essentially, it's the same as taking your old 450 G4 and upgrading the hell out of it. It IS an Apple mobo, it IS a processor from companies like Sonnet etc. who will support future versions of the OS and all of that. Why do you care so much that people want to build a Mac? You take it like a personal insult or something. :)

      --
      sig
  96. Re:Hmmm...... by Staatkunde · · Score: 1

    Exactly! Which is the reason I bought a CoreCrib. Apple isn't making a tower case below $1500. Everyone says "look at ebay", I've looked at ebay. You can spend $700 for a Yikes! B&W with a G4 500 CPU and a bunch of other drives you don't want, why not buy a Crib instead?

  97. Are you kidding me? by jo_ham · · Score: 1

    We use a Dual 450 Powermac in a professional video production environment.

    This is 4 or 5 year old tech and it performs flawlessly! Render times in Final Cut Pro are perfectly satisfactory, although we don't use After Effects so I can't comment on that.

    We encode in mpeg2 using Cleaner 5, then make DVDs with DVD Studio Pro and it doesn't take a long enough time that we start cursing its slowness.

    Remember, this is a Dual 450, not the current Dual 1/1.2/1.42Ghz machines available at the moment.

    I would strongly suggest you go to an Apple store and try out Final Cut Pro before making your final decision. If you phone ahead they will install it for you ahead of time and have it ready for you to try.

    If you can wait for the PPC970, Final Cut Pro will be even better still.

  98. Re:But the question is who would want to? by jasonbw · · Score: 1

    perhaps you missed the point. the previous poster was attempting to knock the guy for using 'unsigned drivers'. what i was trying to communicate that often official, nonbeta drivers are not signed. Honestly, i could give two shits whether or not MS signs off on a damn driver.

    besides, i use win2k.

  99. Re:But the question is who would want to? by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

    My comment still applys to Win2K as well.

  100. Apple needs to recognize their new audience. by corey18_70 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm more on the graphics side of things than most posters here, but I did start to play around with Solaris and LinuxPPC before Mac OS X, and I've noticed since the release of OS X that Apple has a growing contingent of people who want to be users but can't deal with their hardware restrictions. My thoughts on how they might feasibly begin to encroach on Windows/Intel/AMD/Linux.

    The need to address a new market. Currently their hardware appeals mainly to:

    1. Professional graphics dorks
    2. .edu (losing battle) and home users
    3. Some small business professionals - music, a few lawyers, etc.
    3. Servers meant for Pro use, but too pricey for pro-sumer or consumer use.

    But their new OS appeals to computer professionals, higher end educational and scientific professionals, and anybody else who wants to experiment with and learn about an OS from the ground up. The robustness of the OS is going to be fairly transparent to their current hardware purchasers, manifested by the fact that it doesn't crash and is easy to use (two things which should be expected). But the people who are attracted to the OS by its capability and flexibility expect the same from the hardware and Apple doesn't currently offer that.

    I say reconfigure the product line and the store. Keep the beautiful professional and entry level laptops. Keep the readymade economic and powerful desktop options. But give us one more category. The Tinker-Mac.

    -Appealing yet super-functional case. Easy to open. Designed more to the aesthetic of the Xserve than a desktop. Sleek, basic, tough looking.
    -"Apple" processors in several grades.
    -The option to add another processor.
    -Optional HD's. Space for 2-3.
    -Optional optical media.
    -Optional video board.
    -One Enet card + slot for at least one more.
    -As many open PCI slots as possible
    -Firewire, USB, etc (optional?) preferably on the front
    -Feel free to contribute what I'm forgetting.
    ~$400-500

    Apple needs to capitalize on the fact that many people who like to tinker with the OS and box love their OS, and want a box that's affordable enough to truly personalize. And I think they'd make a ton of dough by offering this option. They give us the option of an empty case with that's capable of running their OS on their processor spec, and accept that the people buying it are capable of researching compatible components on their own will not only sell a boatload of boxes, but persuade more HW developers to write drivers for OS X. Or the open source community will.

    Screw all this "port to Intel" crapola. Apple needs to accept that there are people who want to run their OS in a build-your-own manner, and they can build the bare bones machines for that crowd, make it a unique selling point, and still make their margins.

    1. Re:Apple needs to recognize their new audience. by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      Apple doesn't think you are stupid. If they did, the case would be screwed shut and completely non-expandable, and Macs haven't shipped like that for nearly 20 years. There are lots of other good reasons for Apple to limit their officially supported hardware base, most of which have been mentioned before in this thread (and most other Apple stories here).

    2. Re:Apple needs to recognize their new audience. by corey18_70 · · Score: 1

      I agree that the towers are upgradeable. And I agree it's good to have a set pool of officially supported hardware. However, the major complaint I see here is that the base configuration price is still too high for a certain crowd that wants OS X in a less expensive and highly configurable box. I think Apple should do all they can to extend and embrace this crowd, because a large chunk of them could become third party developers.

    3. Re:Apple needs to recognize their new audience. by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      I say reconfigure the product line and the store. Keep the beautiful professional and entry level laptops. Keep the readymade economic and powerful desktop options. But give us one more category. The Tinker-Mac.

      What do you think this is?! Apple supplies the motherboard, so unlike a "real" clone, Apple can effectively control their prices to not really threaten Apple-brand computers.

      Whatever you say, low-cost put-together boxes with an Apple brand will attract some users who really don't know enough to not blame Apple when things go wrong. The loss of reputation, through no fault of their own, can be costly.

      Want an Apple-branded peace of mind and top-of-the-line industrial design? Ah, gotta pay extra for that. Allowing this venture to live will probably be the best of both worlds, rather than opening a new FrankenMac product line.

    4. Re:Apple needs to recognize their new audience. by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      I just don't see where the cost savings will come from to get to your target price range that still allow Apple to maintain a profit margin that allow the level of R&D they must maintain.

      To design and produce a quality and vertical version of the Xserve would be expenive, but lets say it could still cost $100 less than the current tower case.
      Processors in several grades: Save $140 using an 800Mhz G4 instead of 1GHz?
      Optional HDs: $60 for not installing the 60Gig
      Optional optical media: $50 for not installing DVD-ROM/CDRW drive
      The FireWire and USB optional would save maybe $20 in parts not installed on the mobo.
      Optional video: $90 saved for the chip and connector
      To remove the FW,USB and video by redesigning a new motherboard would likely elminate these savings.

      So, omitting the "add-in" hardware from Apple's low-cost G4 tower could potentially get the price down to $1040 from $1500
      That still leaves $540 that we have to cut to reach the high end of your desired range.
      Let's assume that Apple is willing to halve their profit margin on this machine just to get market share and that cut accounts for $300. The machine retail price is still $740, or $240 more than your upper target price, and there isn't much more one can remove and still have a functional system. I fact, you have to ADD cost to figure in your labor for all the configuration and troubleshooting you'll be doing.

      I think the only way you can get hardware at the prices you are looking for is to have a company produce it that doesn't have to support R&D, and is willing to run on razor thin profit margins and hope that volume will keep the profits up. IE Dell, Gateway, and the other un-inspired harware spewers.

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      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  101. Re:Yawn Again From a masochist. by ratfynk · · Score: 1

    I use Linux all the time I am a confirmed masochist, and love it! I have fun with not having a working sound card because the old working CMI8X38 linux drivers which worked fine with 2.2 Debian got hosed by the 2.4 kernel, and the new ones just do not work. Bsd will not config my onboard SIS 620 correctly so I cannot use X at anything greater than 640x480 in BSD, so I do have some experience with these things. I am sure that if I do discover the right settings for these devices I will
    become sadistic to other seekers of Unix wisdom, by writing a man page!

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    OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
  102. Re:Real cost comparison or The myth of low cost by dave+at+hostwerks · · Score: 1

    Which G4 has USB 2.0?

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    d a v e
    "Hmmm...upgrades."
  103. EXACTLY! by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    The cost savings of my PC hasn't been in the fact that it was cheap when I purchased it.

    It's the fact that it is UPGRADABLE. i.e. every year or so I dump a small amount of money in it.

    In addition, I already have a number of my peripherals in external 1394 cases (shared between laptop and desktop). Since Macs can supposedly boot off of Firewire drives - No need for an optical drive, already have one. No need for a monitor either - Already have one, WITH a spare unused input.

    These kits aren't for people looking for a new computer - These are for people looking to upgrade their box or add a box that shares hardware with their existing setup.

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  104. Excellent point, plus: by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    Built-in 17" - What do I care?

    It's a waste when I already have an 18" flat-panel with a spare input and NO ROOM for another 17"-monitor-sized device anywhere.

    If Apple had stuff in the eMac's price range WITHOUT the built-in monitor (total waste for me), I'd bite. But they want $1500 minimum if I don't want to waste money on a 17" CRT.

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:Excellent point, plus: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulatios, you've demonstrated multiple times that your's is a special case. Now what do you have to add to the discussion?

  105. In short: by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    A longer pipeline allows for a higher clockrate, but usually decreases performance per MHz.

    This is why the P4 is significantly slower than the P3 at a given clockrate, and the Athlon can keep up with the P4 in benchmarks despite being clocked at 2/3 the clockrate. The P4's big advantage is that it can scale WAY up in clockrate.

    Unfortunately for Apple, the G4 isn't efficient enough MHz for MHz to compensate for the fact that for the same price you can get an Athlon running at twice the clockrate of a G4. 10-20% more efficient MHz for MHz, maybe. But not 100% more efficient.

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  106. but what's a 2nd hand G4 system go for anyway? by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    But are these any Cheaper than just buying a complete 2nd hand Apple Mac G4 system, sans monitor?

  107. And in addition... by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't call Dell cheap crap. MAYBE if you order their dirt-cheap systems, but their slightly better systems are excellent.

    I have an Inspiron 8200 laptop, and my dad has an I8000. Both are rock-solid, excellent systems.

    At work, we use Dell machines almost exclusively. Their business machines are built EXTREMELY well. Newer ones are COMPLETELY screwless - Not only the case, but the PCI cards too. (Neato latch-down mechanism.) Yes, the Mac's case itself is screwless, but not the PCI cards, and it also seems flimsier than the construction of the OptiPlexes and Precisions at work.

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  108. Ah the old 'CISC outside, RISC inside' thing (nt) by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    nt

  109. Youre forgeting the big & little endian difere by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    X86 PCs are Little Endian while Macs are big-endian.

    This means PC graphics cards won't work unless they are bi-endian.

    Voodoo cards, the GeForce MX & some GeForce 3s are bi-endian, meaning a simple flashing of the firmware would make them Mac compatible.

    However ATI makes their Radeon cards either exclusively little endian for the PC, or exclusively big endian for the Mac, meaning simply flashing the firmware will make sweet fuckall differance, the PC card still won't work in the Mac, & vice-a-versa

  110. yep, it's big-endian verses little endian by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1

    X86 PCs are Little Endian while Macs are big-endian.

    This means PC graphics cards won't work unless they are bi-endian.

    Voodoo cards, the GeForce MX & some GeForce 3s are bi-endian, meaning a simple flashing of the firmware would make them Mac compatible.

    However ATI makes their Radeon cards either exclusively little endian for the PC, or exclusively big endian for the Mac, meaning simply flashing the firmware will make sweet fuckall differance, the PC card still won't work in the Mac, & vice-a-versa

  111. not if you drag the damn thing around by dj_virto · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I do magazine design work, which involves mostly working at home but then visiting client's offices. The imac is surprisingly well adapted to this lifestyle. LCD is right out, because the colors are too inaccurate, especially when you have 2-4 people looking at the screen at once from different angles.. Anything bigger than 15" would be tough to carry in one hand while you carry everything else in the other one. Anyway, don't be so snooty. Plenty of people who use their computers all the time are perfectly satisfied with 15".. or even 13" *gasp* monitors!

  112. Europe? by Earlybird · · Score: 1

    So you can buy a cheap barebones system + CPU in the US. But shipping such a system to Europe costs hundreds of dollars, price depending on weight and volume. Does anyone know where to buy the same stuff in Europe, eg. Norway/Scandinavia?

  113. Re:Real cost comparison or The myth of low cost by gerardrj · · Score: 1

    I thought it was confirmed that Apple's most recent systems have USB2 chipset on them, and that a driver change would enable it. Similar to the way a prefeene fil edit enables Quartz Extreme on PCI Radeon cards.

    Slashdot article
    Quoted MacNN report

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    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  114. Re:But the question is who would want to? by drsmithy · · Score: 1
    The PC network I admin averages at least one minor failure every few weeks.

    Sounds atypical. We have a few labs here of several hundred machines each (Dell desktops) and they haven't had more than about a half dozen failures (each lab) in total for the last 18 months or so. I don't deal with the machine directly, but the desktop support folks tell me it's usually the floppy drives that go (because they cop such a caning). There have been a few hard disks go and a monitor had to be replaced because it got knocked off a desk. That's pretty much it.

    I fully understand that PC's can be reliable, but there are many studies showing much lower total cost of ownership on mac as compared to PC... and that is not including software licenses.

    The lower TCO costs of Macs are generally a result of their lower *software* support costs - although I haven't seen such a study for many years (ie: since OS X came out and long before XP came out), so I'm not sure how relevant that data would be today.
    Really, there's no way a desktop Mac has any better construction quality and QA than a decent name brand desktop like Dell. Most of the parts are identical.

    As I said originally, most of the people I read about saying Macs last much longer usually aren't making a fair comparison.

  115. Re:Aw man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what is a better design... design for a load you'll encounter once or twice a year or design the nominal state.

    Please don't ever design anything that someone else might use.

    See: Seat belts. Bridges. Air bags. Sprinkler systems. Surge protectors. RAID. etc.

  116. Re:DIY Mac.. - NOT: get $400 dell p4 machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dell is like Linux in that way. Great as a server solution, awkard on the desktop.

  117. wow that's some great advertising! by iamhassi · · Score: 1

    Let's see, 3 Slashdot articles in just over a month! How many millions of hits must that be?

    You've probably increases his profits 1000x or more..... hey, I have a small business and I could use 1000x more profits, what do I have to do to get /.'d 3 times in a month?

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    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  118. HE'S USING PAYPAL!!!! **RUN AWAY** by iamhassi · · Score: 1
    He's using Paypal to accept payments!!!!
    http://www.2khappyware.com/order/

    And this is after thousands of people have complained about losing millions to paypal:
    http://www.paypalsucks.com/

    If you give him money DO NOT expect to recieve a system. From paypalwarning.com
    "Merchants finding themselves on the wrong end of a frozen Paypal account will still have to find some way to pay their obligations and fill orders for the weeks and months while the account is restricted. A domino effect occurs when a merchant's account is frozen, leaving them with no means to fill orders. Those orders are then disputed by customers, creating more chargebacks and the illusion of fraudulent activity on the part of the merchant."

    What this means is WHEN PAYPAL FREEZES HIS ACCOUNT, HE WILL NOT HAVE THE MONEY TO PURCHASE MERCHANDISE TO BUILD YOUR SYSTEM, so in the end you'll be out hundreds of dollars with no system, and he'll be flat broke and probably jailed for alleged fraud.

    And if you don't think this really happens think again. Just go read the forums at PaypalSucks.com and you'll realize Paypal routinely steals money from users and nothing can stop them.

    sad, isn't it?

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    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  119. guys.... by 2khappyware · · Score: 1

    trying to compare an emac to a Crib is like comparing a emac to a G4 Tower. yes you get a nice bundled solution but: emac: no dual option later no 2048GB memory no choice to upgrade video past 32MB no choice to add anything bigger than 1280x1024 no more than 1 internal harddrive no more than 1 internal optical drive. The $799 price is great on the emac but lets face it. You purchase it and your limited to upgrading the memory or spending 2 hours to take apart the emac and swap harddrives or optical drives out. I thought slash dotters would figure that out?

  120. Re:HE'S USING PAYPAL!!!! **RUN AWAY** by 2khappyware · · Score: 1

    Or you could be a smart business man.... not piss off your customers *AND* be smart enough to empty your paypal account twice a day. The only problem with paypal is that it gives credit card processing ability to the masses (think people who can't run a business). The whole paypal hate thing is just a little out of hand started by a few people who are just lazy and pissed off a few too many customers.

  121. Re:Real cost comparison or The myth of low cost by 2khappyware · · Score: 1

    Your numbers sound good in theory but the 33Mhz bus difference is maybe a 2-3% speed increase.... the 2x memory is a marketing scheme (no difference) Firewire 800 is just for nothing right now.... since when did you use a 4x AGP card? Even "4x" Agp cards work great and no loss of frame rates on the macintosh platform can be proven. where do you get built in USB 2.0? sad sad

  122. Re:Real cost comparison or The myth of low cost by gerardrj · · Score: 1

    The higher-end these components are the less likely you are to neeed upgrading ot a new machine in the future. I've finally decided that my G3/333 needs replacement after about 4 years. I just DLed the new UT2003 demo. I get about .5 frames per second. Mind you, each frame is rendered beautifully and with stunning detail (even of the lowest settings).

    The speed imrovements of the bus and memory speed increases I can not debate as I have not seen any benchmarks that attempt to quantify that difference alone (throttling down/up CPUs, etc). Game slike UT2003 and beyond will start making 2x AGP look sluggish rather soon now.
    the USB2 I answered in another reply. There was a thread on Slashdot and on another site where users had confirmed that the new MoBo has a USB2 chipset and that different drivers intalled will enable it. Not having access to a new G4 (donations welcomed) I can not verify the information myself and trust (haha) the posters.

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    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  123. A perfect example of computer snobbery by FredFnord · · Score: 1

    The idea of having a computer, for you, is obviously to have something to play with. That's fine, if you like toys. But don't look down at the people who don't WANT to spend their days and nights learning how to recompile kernels, dick with video card drivers, try to figure out why the install floppy can't find their ethernet card, et al.

    If you postulate that there are some people that want to get a Mac on the cheap, and who are willing to spend a day putting together their computer, but who don't then want to spend the rest of their lives screwing around with it... who might, ohmygod, actually want to get something useful done on it and NOT have to worry about dicking around with it, your argument goes right on our the window. Linux and BSD aren't hard to get, but they're a decision that a person like that will regret for a long time to come.

    -fred

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    Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
  124. eMac size by metamatic · · Score: 1

    The eMac is 16x16x17. I'd say twice the volume of a G4 tower is pretty huge, yes.

    Even on top of the desk it would be problematic. 16" + 24" from nose to screen + space for cables = 4' deep desk. Not everyone has that kind of space.

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    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak