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iMac Turns 10

UnknowingFool writes "Ten years ago, Apple announced the original iMac. In some ways it was Apple returning to its roots with an all-in-one design, but in other ways it was a departure from the normal. Certainly it didn't look like any other computer. Apple dropped SCSI, their proprietary connectors, and the floppy drive. Instead Apple used USB for all peripherals including the ergonomically uncomfortable hockey puck mouse. At the time, both the lack of a floppy and the inclusion of USB were much criticized. In hindsight, these moves are now considered forward thinking."

13 of 179 comments (clear)

  1. I can remember by jayhawk88 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Working at CompUSSR right about the time the iMac's were starting to become available. Maybe it was the second model that came in your choice of "flavors"? Don't recall exactly. What I do remember is that in the Wichita, KS store you could get pretty much any color you wanted, except the purple ones. The purple they used was almost an exact match for K-State purple, and people were buying them as soon as they hit the sales floor. That's when I knew computers had changed.

    1. Re:I can remember by Phroggy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I spent a couple days as an Apple representative in Circuit City, making sure their sales guys knew what iMacs could do. In addition to Apple's demo software, I brought in a copy of Unreal Tournament and an Ethernet crossover cable. Of course you can't really play UT without a two-button mouse, and iMacs at that time were shipping with hockey pucks, so I asked the sales guys if there was a PC with an extra USB mouse we could borrow.

      They had no idea that an HP USB mouse could be plugged into a Mac.

      They had also never heard of Unreal Tournament before, although a very attractive girl from the appliances department wandered over and mentioned that she had seen her boyfriend playing it at home. I was shocked that none of the computer salesmen were aware of such a popular game. It was definitely an eye-opening experience.

      This is why Apple now has their own retail stores.

      --
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  2. It looked like an ADM 3A by Animats · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Certainly it didn't look like any other other computer.

    Yes, it did:

  3. Re:floppy drive by crow · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Absolutely correct. We bought a floppy drive with our Bondi-Blue rev.B iMac (it read 120MB "Super Disks" also, but we never used that). We needed it to copy old files from our previous Mac (which didn't have Ethernet). We (well, actually my wife) continued to use the floppy to transfer files to computers at her school until I bought her a USB flash drive. We finally retired it last summer when we bought a new iMac.

    It was still working just fine when we retired it, but it was too slow for YouTube, and the last OS9-compatible Mozilla was incompatible with Yahoo's login system. It may serve as a classroom computer next fall--it's still better than nothing.

  4. It's as if a thousands hands screamed out in pain by Bryansix · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ...And then were silenced ... only to scream out in pain again.

    The original iMac brought two major travesties to the personal computer industry. One was the mistake that was puck mouse. That thing caused more carpal tunnel syndrome then the whole porn industry. The second was the Throw out and Replace mentality it pushed on consumers. Yes, you could upgrade the memory and you MIGHT be able to replace a dead drive. However real upgrades were right out. Plus accessing anything in the original iMAC with its obtrusive CRT monitor was a nightmare. I kept my PC going for 6 years with incremental upgrades. The iMac might last you 2-3 years max!

  5. So can we now be told... by wandazulu · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...what the purpose of that "mezzanine" bus was for? As I recall the original iMac had this expansion bus that was called the "mezzanine" that apparently disappeared in subsequent models, never to be seen again.

    I also seem to recall somebody actually released a product or something that used it, though I can't remember anything about it.

  6. Criticized for use of USB? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I remember 1998. I don't remember anyone criticizing them for the use of USB. At that time, as I remember it, lots of people were expecting PCs to ditch PS/2, parallel, and serial ports. Granted it's 2008 and a new PC you buy still has all three of these, but I heard them called "legacy" even in 1998.

    Also, did the original iMac have ADB too? I have an old Mac that is slightly newer, and it has ADB...

    My biggest gripe about iMac was that it wasn't a very expandible desktop. A trend which Apple continues to this day, unless you fork out the cash for a Xeon...

  7. Re:It's as if a thousands hands screamed out in pa by profplump · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually the original iMac had an upgradable processor and some sort of system-bus interface slot that was later used by several companies to produce FireWire and other cards for the system.

    But frankly I think it's ridiculous to expect the average person to upgrade anything on their system -- they'd be hard pushed to install more RAM or upgrade the OS, let alone swap in a new CPU or motherboard. If there were an industry to support it you might get them to *hire* someone to do it, like they do for their cars and whatnot, but they sure aren't going to do it themselves.

    However that service industry can only exist if you can sell service for a very small fraction of the replacement cost. A car is worth $10k, so paying a few hundred dollars a year for professional services is reasonable. But there are a lot of people buying $300-$500 computers, and it just doesn't make a lot of sense to pay someone $50/hour plus $50-$100 in parts to upgrade the thing -- you could have a whole new system every 3 years for $100/year.

    This isn't something new to computers or electronics or this generation. Think about how many 40+ year-old planes and buses are still in active service, versus the number of 40+ year-old sedans. Cars cost $10k, and rebuilding an old engine is rarely worth the maintenance cost, while busses cost $150k, and an engine rebuild is a much smaller proportion of the replacement cost of the vehicle. If everyone drove busses and had $5k computers, upgrades would be much more popular (as they were when computers did cost $5k), but while prices are low it's just economically unsound.

  8. Re:It also lacked wireless.. by sootman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In my mind, Apple really missed the boat on that one. First of all, Palm was still pretty big in '98. Apple should have gotten over their failure with the Newton and their NIH-ness, recognized how great Palm was, and actively promoted the ability to wirelessly sync a Palm with an iMac. (I don't know if you actually could sync a Palm with an iMac via IR, but I used to love doing that with my ThinkPad. And Palm's USB/serial kludge of the time (which stuck around for waaaay too long) sucked out loud.) A rising tide lifts all boats, and both companies would have benefited greatly.

    Secondly, when Apple came out with the DV iMac a few years later--featuring FireWire ports and (gasp!) a DVD drive--they should have offered a remote. How much better would that have made the iMac for dorms and kids? Apple did, of course, wind up moving to remote-controlled, entertainment-oriented systems just a few years ago. They really, really missed an opportunity ten years ago. They never pushed the point of why there was an IR port--the marketing materials at the time pretty much said "there is one" and nothing more--and IIRC (I am too lazy to look it up right now) they dropped the port on the very first major revision. (When they went to 266 MHz.) It became just another body on the heap of potentially cool, unused, and eventually killed neat things from Apple.

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  9. Re:Hmm... by jcr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Apple was never on the verge of shuttering its building, even though some pundits liked to pretend it was.

    Actually, that's not quite correct. There was a low point in '96, when Gil Amelio pulled off a pretty amazing trick and got emergency bank funding from wall street. If the banks hadn't gone for his pitch, Apple would have been through. They were down to less than two months' worth of cash on hand.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  10. Re:Hmm... by MojoStan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I would say that iPod/iTunes actually saved Apple

    No, Apple was already back on its feet financially by the time the iPod shipped.

    But Apple got "back on its feet financially" largely because of cost cuts and downsizing (started by Amelio), not from increased revenues. If I remember correctly, the revenues didn't really start "rolling in" until the iPod became a cultural phenomenom.

    I remember Steve Jobs's first use (I'm pretty sure) of his "One Last Thing" catchphrase at Macworld 1998 to announce Apple's first quartly profit in ages. However, revenues were down half a billion dollars from the same quarter the previous year ($1.6 billion down from $2.1 billion).

    Three years later, quarterly revenues would be down to about $1 billion and Apple would be losing money again. Apple had a net loss for the year 2001 and a net operating loss in 2003. Revenues/profits bounced back, then took off in 2004 and 2005. Note that iTunes Music Store and iTunes for Windows were launched/released during 2003. In January 2007, even with increased Mac sales, 48% of revenues were from iPod sales.

    A nice page with Apple's income data over the last ten years: AAPL - Apple, Inc. Stock Report | Financial Statements

    I'm not sure if the iPod "saved" Apple, but I don't for sure if Apple could have continued with Mac sales being their primary revenue source (without the iPod halo effect and a smaller share of the market).

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  11. Re:It's as if a thousands hands screamed out in pa by jrothwell97 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I disagree. My 2000 iMac DV is running Tiger, which is still supported well. Quarterly security updates are still released.

    The only problem the machine's ever given me is that its old AirPort card doesn't like WPA2 networks using AES encryption. Otherwise, it's still running perfectly. And quite well, considering it's had at least two previous owners. At times, it runs Tiger quicker than Vista runs on a brand-new £500 (~$1000) PC. But, then again, Vista sucks, so that's understandable.

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  12. Re:Hmm... by jcr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I sometimes wonder if he was really as useless as he gets accused of being,

    From what I've been able to piece together (although I didn't start working at Apple until after his time), he was unable to manage a company where people would say "yes" to what you told them to do, and then go off and do whatever the hell they wanted. Sculley let this happen, and trying to get a lid on it just about killed Spindler from stress.

    When Steve Jobs came back, he made it very clear very quickly that people would get canned for behavior that was tolerated in the past. It doesn't actually take too many people getting the boot for everyone else to shape up.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."