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Ken Mingis's picture
Ken Mingis

Mingis on Macs

My first Mac was a Performa

It's a wonder I ever stayed with Apple.

I say that because the first Mac I ever bought is now widely panned as one of the worst the company ever turned out: a Performa 6200CD. Don't blame me; At the time, I didn't know any better.

It was Thanksgiving 1995, and I remember asking my friend Tom whether I should buy a Mac or get a Windows machine. After all, Windows was what we used at the newspaper where I worked. He told me in no uncertain terms to get a Mac, and I followed some of the wisest advice I've ever been given.

Cruising along at a whopping 75MHz, with a spacious 1GB hard drive, 8MB of RAM and a 14.4k modem, the Performa offered me a whole new world. I quickly signed up for Apple's eWorld. I quickly left it, too. It wasn't long before I realized that eWorld and AOL and all the rest of it wasn't really the Internet. But I did learn. And a couple of years later I bought a PowerBook 3400, quickly and permanently falling in love with Apple's laptop line. Then came wireless. And I fell in love with that, too. Sure, I dabbed with Power Macs and iMacs along the way, and even bought a Sony Vaio to see how the other side lived. But my first love was really with the PowerBooks and MacBook Pros I've owned. (I'm typing this post on a late model Air, the one with the SSD. All my future Macs will have SSDs.)

I recount this history because I was struck while editing Michael DeAgonia's look at the 10 greatest Macs of the last 25 years by how clearly the pattern of innovation has been at Apple since 1984. Starting with that first Mac -- and no, I don't remember the commercial, or the computer craze it helped start -- all the way to last week's Macworld Expo, Apple has been at the cutting edge, rolling out not just the computer for the rest of us, but technology for the rest of us.

There were dead ends along the way -- how about that Cube? -- but whenever Apple reached them, it managed to shift course and keep going. That, ultimately, is the beauty of the Mac. It, and the Mac operating system du jour, always seemed to be somehow slightly ahead of where the rest of the world is at any given point.

And ultimately, isn't that the best place to be? Just a bit ahead of the curve?

I don't know where the Mac, and Apple, will go from here. Foresight isn't like hindsight. There's no 20/20 clarity looking ahead. But if past is indeed prologue, I look forward to the next quarter century.

What People Are Saying

My 1st love was Macintosh 128K

Bought the most expensive personal computer (in Malaysia) in 1984 when only a fraction of 235 million people in America can use a computer. It was a Macintosh 128K (upgrade 512K) + external drive + Laser Writer and it was my expensive right decision. Days full of enjoyment and fun using it with Mac Write, Mac Paint and sold it 3 years later. When Jobs got back to Apple, I knew a new Macintosh will be coming back. It was true and bought my 2nd Mac, an iMac sunflower. Enjoying it till now running along with Tiger 10.4.11. Never look back as your choice is only PC or Mac. I think what makes Mac is a Mac, goes back to the point when Jobs decided to keep its hardwares and softwares under one soul and mind. And now in digital world, having a Mac is a never ending story...

First Mac

My first Mac was an original 128K Mac which was part of your tuition at Drexel University. It has a blue stenciled "D" on it. With the variable speed floppy (we called them stiffies) it played "Volga Boatmen" when it booted. I still have it and am looking for an external floppy drive for it.

The year was 1985. My first

The year was 1985. My first Mac was the Original Mac 128K. That's 128K of RAM, internal 400KB floppy, an external 400KB floppy, 300baud modem, original ImageWriter printer, MacWrite, MacPaint, and a host of other early version software available at the time.

Quadra 950

My first Mac was a Quadra 950, I bought second hand in 1994. It served me well for many years, and when emigrating to Australia 3 years ago I gave it away to a friend of mine who is still using it. In my mind one of the most reliable Macs to date.

Did you mean 8 MB of Ram?

Else, since your Ram was 8 times the size of your hard drive, you should have loaded your entire hard drive into a ram drive, and computing would have been lightning fast. Nonetheless, though I've never had the privilege of owning one, I agree Macs are the bomb.

8 MB of RAM

The Apple tech sheet shows the minimum RAM was 8 MB and the max was 64 MB -- it was definitely a typo.