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255 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3224
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Title: HPR3224: Adventures in Retrocomputing with the Mac Plus
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3224/hpr3224.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 19:07:48
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3224 for Thursday 10th of December 2020.
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Today's show is entitled, Adventure in Retro Computing with the Mac Plus and is part of the series Mental Health.
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It is hosted by Port Work and is about 25 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summary is, I talk more about my hobby with retro computing and then green sleeves.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Good day, good listener of Hacker Public Radio and welcome back to the Paul Quark Show.
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Today I'm going to talk about my recent adventures in retro computing.
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But first, I'd like to answer some questions about this hobby.
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Number one is, why do I have all these old computers?
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Well, you see, it's like this.
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Back in the 1980s, after watching a typical 80s movie like, say, Ferris Bueller's Day Off or Back to the Future,
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my friends and I would always sit around and talk about what we do if we had a million dollars,
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and I thought it'd be a good idea to have a room full of computers just to play with.
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I remember walking into a computer store as a kid and telling the sales guy how lucky he was
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to get to spend all day with those great computers.
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Of course, he would remind me that it would be cooler if they were his and if he didn't
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have to sell them, and maybe that plan of the seed.
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Some of my friends would ask me, what would I do with all those computers?
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Well, I'd just play with them.
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Do whatever I wanted with them.
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If I was rich, I wouldn't have to do anything productive with them now would I?
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I mean, I could have if I really wanted to, but I always thought that the point of the question
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was to figure out how to spend my leisure time.
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I also knew I wanted a really fast hybrid bicycle with lots of gears so I could spend my time
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as a millionaire riding my cool bike and playing with my cool computers.
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I think I had some pretty good ideas at the time.
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As it turns out, I didn't need a million dollars to have those cool computers I wanted in the 1980s,
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because time took care of that for me.
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Now, this is a great hobby for me because not only does it provide me with a sense of joy and
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accomplishment, it's also something I can dip into and out of.
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Life gets real busy sometimes, so it's nice to have a hobby that I can leave for months at a time
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and then come back to it, especially when the warmer weather is better suited for bicycle rides.
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I think it's also probably better for the hardware not to get used too often,
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but just enough to keep things moving.
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The other question is, why am I still using Iomega zip discs?
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To be honest, this was all about keeping things within a budget.
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At the time, I decided to undertake a project preserving my library of Amiga jump discs,
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because the company behind them seemed to fall off the face of the earth,
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and I couldn't get in touch with anyone about replacements.
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I scored a lifetime supply of unopened brand new Iomega zip discs for free from the local
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community college, so I kept some for myself and gave the rest away at the free table at
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World of Commodore that year. At around the same time, I found a working scuzzy Iomega zip drive
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at the local thrift store for a few bucks. I had just bought an Amiga 2000 the year before for
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50 bucks and put in an A2090 controller card that I had got for free many years before.
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The zip disc made it easy to transfer those images between my Amiga and my desktop PC.
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The UAE emulator would mount and read those discs, and I mounted a directory as a second disc
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in the emulator to simply copy the images over. I had also acquired a Mac plus years ago,
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but never got around to doing much with it besides getting a genuine one-button mouse and system
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software discs. I decided to change that after the last podcast. I discovered that some people
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have made complete Iomega disc images of old abandoned versions of the Mac OS, including 608,
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with other abandoned software included. Now, I'm not going to leave links in the show notes because
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I think we all know abandon where is murky waters in some regions of planet earth.
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The zip drive from IPC is an IDE version salvage from an old compact. My computer at the time used
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what we now call a parallel ATA connection. While I do have a PCIS scuzzy card, I prefer not
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moving the external zip drive around too much for fear of inducing the click of death. Also,
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there's room in the tower case for an internal drive, so why not? I've held onto that old computer
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just so I could have use of that zip drive, but it has always been my goal to install it in my
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current desktop PC. As much as I'd like to have computers around me, I'd like them to be of a
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certain era, and that era is in the 1980s. I'm on a mission to get rid of old stuff I don't want
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or need anymore, and getting that zip drive working on my modern Linux machine means I can get rid
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of that old computer. At first, I tried to SATA to PATA adapter, but that didn't seem to want to
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work with the zip drive. Finally, I decided to buy a cheap PCI Express parallel ATA IDE controller
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card, and that did the trick. So the first thing I did was try loading in my Miga Workbench zip
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disk I had made years ago to try to load that into FS UAE, but my old trick of mounting the zip
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disk as an Miga drive wasn't there, like I mentioned in the previous podcast. Now that I think
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about it, that might have been with Win UAE since I did the jump disk preservation project
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before I really got in the Linux. After a bit of research, I found out that support for the
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MigaFast file system is now baked into the Linux kernel. So I mounted it using the mount command
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with the AFFS operator, and then I could see the Miga partitions on the zip disk fine. Good,
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now we're up to speed on the Miga side, now it's time to get the Macintosh a little love.
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So I started by downloading System 608 and 701. Both of them were Iomega zip disk images.
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I used Berlana Etcher to flash these images to the zip disk, and the process could not have been
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easier. I plugged in the zip drive, turned it on, and nothing, just a floppy disk icon in the middle
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of the screen with the flashing question mark. I checked my connections and made sure the termination
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was turned on. I thought it was, so I put my glasses on to be certain, and then realized that
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on was down for this switch, so I had it backwards. So I turned the termination on, and it booted
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straight in the Mac OS. I immediately went into the games folder, found Lemmings, and launched it.
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As soon as I pressed the mouse button to start level 1, I got a Mac bomb, with an unimplemented trap
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error. I decided to do some digging, and found out that only one megabyte of RAM was recognized.
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This is a problem, because in order to run a more functional operating system like 701 through
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to 755, I'm going to need the full four megabytes. Now I do remember opening this Mac at one time
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and doing something with the memory, but this was a case where my own memory may have failed.
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When I opened it, I found that the resistor that should have been cut for the four megabyte
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upgrade wasn't cut, so I cut it. I booted again, but the Mac behaved very strangely, showing a
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disk on a black screen and never showing the user interface even after going through the boot-up
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procedure. I put my glasses back on and checked the modules, and it turned out that these were
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256K modules. One was different from the other three, so maybe what I did was to replace a defective
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sim stick with a good one. Now that I cut the resistor, I figured I might as well commit and take
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it up to the full four megabytes. After looking around, I realized the expansion card of my Amiga 2000
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was populated with 832 pin 1 megabyte sim modules. I could take half of them, and the Amiga would
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still have five megabytes in total, which is okay, because my A288 PC card of my Amiga only works
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if the memory is configured for six megabytes or less. I really don't think the downgrade to the
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Amiga is going to make it any less functional since 8 megabytes was really uncommon in the 1980s,
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much less four megabytes. Then I turned the Mac on, and it took a lot longer to boot up, presumably
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because it's taking longer to perform a memory check. It was a little unnerving to look at a blank
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gray screen for so long, and just when I was about to hit the power button, I got the smiling Mac,
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and the zip drive spun up and loaded everything just fine. Now, when working with the computer
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of this age, the 100 megabyte zip drive is ideal, I think. Consider the Mac SC, which was introduced
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in 1987, that came with a 20 or a 40 megabyte hard drive. Even at the end of the decade, an 80 megabyte
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hard drive was top of the line. Unlike parallel port Iomega zip drives, scuzzy zip drives, and its
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IDE counterpart, they're fast. Almost as fast as a real hard drive from back in the day,
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with a maximum data transfer rate of 1.4 megabytes per second. Okay, maybe not quite as fast as a hard
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drive, but a lot faster than a floppy, and right up there with an 8 times speed CD-ROM drive.
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So these behave just like a real hard drive, including the ability to create partitions.
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So for example, my workbench 1.3 zip disk for my Amiga is split into 250 megabyte partitions.
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One partition is my workbench system partition. The other is an extras partition,
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which made it easy to represent the workbench and extra disks that came with an Amiga system
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and to map them accordingly. So now I'm going to come clean and tell you that I was an Amiga guy
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back in the days. The Mac Plus was being sold. I read all the magazines, new all the specs,
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visited computer stores to try out the hardware, and by gosh, I knew the Amiga was the greatest
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computer on the face of the earth. I just could not understand why someone would spend more money
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on an inferior Macintosh. When I rescued my Mac Plus in the late 1990s, my intent was to see just
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how bad it was up against my Amiga and to try to understand why the Macintosh became such an icon
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in our culture. To do this, I had to put myself in someone else's shoes, which is easier said than
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I had to take myself back to a time before I owned my first computer and imagine myself in different
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circumstances. Suppose, for example, that instead of being an impression of a 12-year-old kid,
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I was a 21-year-old college student or maybe a 30-year-old professional. Imagine if I had grown up
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in an environment where the only computer I ever used was a pocket calculator. Computers offered
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demonstrable advantages. Modern work processors were superior to the typewriters I would have been
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using and the power and utility of the spreadsheet goes well beyond simple budgeting. Then there were
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the games which became really popular because their alternative, which was television programming,
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was really crap with bad jokes, candle-aff tracks, and a never-ending stream of annoying commercials.
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The online world also delivered the promise of up-to-the-minute news and stock quotes with various
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online services. A young person without a computer would become out of touch with the rest of the
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world in due time, so the case for owning a computer was pretty clear and it's easy to understand
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why home computers became so popular in the 1980s. So that only leaves one question. Why Mac?
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When I think back to those early days, it wasn't very easy to learn how to use a computer.
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If you're a lucky, you had a friend who knew a few things about computers who could teach you,
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but by and large, the computer enthusiasts at the time tended to stick to their clicks. A computer
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back then required a large desk and was complicated enough with all the wires and cords that you
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wouldn't just temporarily set it up at a kitchen table or writing desk like you would a typewriter.
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Rather, it would occupy a fairly large place like a home hi-fi system or television and VCR
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and be permanently on display. A student living in a tiny dorm room would certainly struggle with
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even an Amiga 500 due to the fact that even small-color monitors would take up a lot of space
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because they needed as much space behind them as they needed side to side. So here would have been
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two problems that needed to be solved before I could have bought a computer. I had to find
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or create a space for it and I had to learn how to use it. It's easy to forget about these things
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that I had learned about my computer, but imagine being a student already crushed with a ton of
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things to learn and then suddenly I would also need to learn how to use a computer. A busy
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professional may not even have the time to learn how to use a computer properly. I came to realize
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that as a 12-year-old boy, I could have been very flexible in how I was going to live my life.
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I had all summer to learn about computers and how they worked because I had no other
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responsibilities besides delivering the newspapers in my neighborhood. I didn't own any furniture
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yet on my own and so as I matured, I could make that choice to buy a computer desk instead of
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a writing desk. Today I have my Mac Plus set up right next to my Amiga 2000 and it immediately
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becomes clear that the Amiga 2000 looks very imposing while the Mac Plus quietly blends in.
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I can set up my Mac Plus on my writing desk quite comfortably and use it. This is the same writing
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desk I struggled to set up my VIC-20 on. A good writing desk made out of solid wood, not the glue
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and sawdust manufacture computer desk a traditional computer would have demanded. This is because
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monochrome monitors didn't need as much depth as color monitors needed and the max monitor was
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smaller than most while still delivering a very usable resolution of 512x342 pixels. The monitor
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is still stacked on top of the disk drive and motherboard which does put the monitor at an
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ergonomically correct height but the components were designed to fit a small footprint.
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So while the Mac Plus was a computer of compromises, these compromises are what actually made it a
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better computer. A person buying a Mac Plus over an Amiga Atari or PC in the 1980s didn't have to
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go out to buy a new furniture for their new computer nor did they have to rearrange their home,
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apartment or dorm room to set up a functional workstation area. Nor did they need to read a
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thick user's manual or take a night school course in computers to learn how to use it. They could
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bypass learning a bunch of commands and get straight to the business of learning how to use the
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applications that they wanted to use. Now let's think about those applications and how they looked
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on the screen. One of the issues we had to deal with when it came to computers in the 80s was
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the Amiga's monitor was effectively a television with the same 50 or 60 hertz refresh rate depending
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on where you were in the world. This made it great for doing video work and it was fantastic for
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video games but there was a barely perceptible flicker that was made more pronounced with the
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dark horizontal lines that would appear across a blank light colored window. For this reason,
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many people myself included preferred a dark screen background with light colored text.
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Some even resorted to sticking a mesh overlay on top of their monitor screen to help reduce the
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eye strain. It's also probably the reason why Commodore included a composite port on the Amiga
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so one could connect the monochrome monitor. Monochrome monitors in the 80s didn't have these lines
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and they didn't have a noticeable flicker. In contrast to the Amiga's display, the Mac Plus is
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crisp and solid. When it came to productivity, most printers couldn't even print color so this is
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actually a pretty smart compromise. I now believe my aversion to the Mac back in those days
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must have been similar to the reaction to the automatic transmission when it was introduced to a
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world that only knew how to manually shift gears. Someone like me would not have seen it as liberating
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people from the task of shifting gears and freeing us from the demands of the machine. I would see
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it as a loss of control. However, to the person who never had the time or the opportunity to learn
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to shift their own gears, the automatic transmission would have been very liberating. We have taken
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the time to learn what we've learned in order to use these machines and so it's easy to become
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resentful as something that can give another person similar capabilities without needing to put
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in the time or effort to learn. As it turns out, many people who bought an early Mac were using
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their own valuable time learning something else that had greater value to them. Perhaps they were
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studying law and seeing a Mac in the office of a professional sent a signal to everyone that
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they're so focused on their profession that they have no time to learn how to use a computer.
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This is how the Macintosh achieved its place as a status symbol and could demand such a high price
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take. Sure, computers were a status symbol in and of themselves, but the Mac was clearly a
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functional status symbol. Or perhaps the buyer of the Macintosh discovered the need to live in
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minimalist lifestyle. For some people, it is important for them to only own things that bring
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value to their lives. Steve Jobs himself was a minimalist and this Mac was speaking to his kind
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of people. When you think about it, if you eliminate everything that is unnecessary in your life,
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it becomes much easier to focus on what is needed for your ideas of first success. While I believe
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that Steve Jobs may have been a deeply flawed man, his minimalist ideals were the antithesis to
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the absurd excess that represented everything that was wrong in the 1980s. Over the decades,
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we've seen the Mac capture the market of creative artistic people, and now it's easy to see why.
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To become great at any aspect of the creative arts, whether it's music, photography, graphics,
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it takes a considerable amount of time and effort for someone to become great at what they do.
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I know this all too well, even with a professional camera and many years of experience,
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my photographs today still don't come close to those of a season professional. Their reason for
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paying for professional tools like Lightroom are the same reasons why I would only want to use
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professional tools in my trade. We both want to deliver a high quality product in as little time
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as possible and good tools contribute to an efficient workflow. There are elements of dark table
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that would be familiar to a seasoned graphics artist that I know nothing about, but I can compile
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a kernel for whatever that's worth. Even in my own life, I question my need for a computer.
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I didn't need one to complete my three years of trade school, and even today, I'd rather go for
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a long bike ride or take my camera on a hiking expedition if the weather's fair. So now we've come
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to the real reason why I have this collection of computers from the era of my teenage years.
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It started out as a thought experiment that has grown to help me to open my mind and see things from
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different perspectives. I finally got Lemmings to run on the Mac Plus, and the gameplay was dreadful.
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Honestly, it's better on a Commodore 64. Then again, the type of person who would buy a Mac
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back then might not have had enough time for video games, or maybe they already owned a video game
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console, or maybe the strategy and textile games that play very well on this computer were more to
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their tastes. Whatever the case may be, I can now see the reasons why the Mac was so revolutionary,
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and just like that, I indoctrinated myself into the Cult of Mac. Well, not really, because Apple
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today is not the same revolutionary company that made the Mac Plus. See, the original Mac Plus was
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introduced in 1986, and sold well into the year 1990 as a consumer level premium computer.
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It was built to last, and this shows. The last supported OS for this Mac was System 7.5.5,
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which was released 10 years after the Mac Plus was introduced. I tried Jigsaw running System 7.5
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on my Mac Plus, and it ran just fine. It really justifies a higher price tag considering the build
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quality and length of support. I think we know that today's Apple isn't like that. The closest
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thing we have today to this sort of design philosophy is in products like the Raspberry Pi and the
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Pine Book. So, no need to worry about me. I'm beyond the Cult of Mac. I'm now indoctrinated in the
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Cult of Open Source. If there's enough of us, maybe we can turn it into a religion. My Pine Book
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reminds me of this philosophy, and this experience makes me think there's a market for a high-end
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premium minimalist open source, open hardware based computer with 10 years of support.
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I believe there's an opportunity to develop open source software into premium professional
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grade software. I would hope that it wouldn't become so obtuse as to set up something called
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a genius bar. Yeah, that was another wrong term for Apple. Well, looks like we're getting into
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the holiday season, so let's listen to one of my holiday favorites. The name of this song is Green
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Sleeves, which is a traditional English folk song from the Renaissance era. While this song is
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often regarded as an anonymous piece, many English composers are on record for having claimed
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authorship. The leading theory today is that it was created by a Spanish composer named
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Santiago de Mercia, and this performance was performed by Paul Arden Taylor and Carol Holt. Enjoy.
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Well, that's it for this episode. I hope everyone is doing well, and I'm certainly enjoying your
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podcast contributions to HPR. I don't know how much longer I can keep doing a weekly show for,
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as my calendar for the new year is starting to fill up. But hopefully more people will record
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their own episodes. I think if everyone listening records their own shows, we can keep this going
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and have a lot of fun doing it. So, as usual, please remember to drive safe and have fun.
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You've been listening to Hecropublic Radio at HecropublicRadio.org. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is. Hecropublic Radio was found
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by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club, and it's part of the binary revolution
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at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment
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on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is
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released on the creative comments, attribution, share a like, 3.0 license.
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