56 points by polishdude20 5 hours ago | 43 comments
  • I don’t think I’ve seen a cookie banner pop up with a “please reconsider” on refusal … ever, actually. Neat?

    I had Debian running on an old clamshell iBook for a bit; the main things I remember were that it was kind of neat, and that it took less cpu to play music from my server via mpd and pulseaudio-over-network than it did to play the files directly on the iBook.

    • I'm struggling to come with why reasons why such a website should display that banner. Apple doesn't.
    • > I don’t think I’ve seen a cookie banner pop up with a “please reconsider” on refusal … ever, actually. Neat?

      On the subject of cookie banners, https://gdpr.eu/cookies/ says

      “To comply with the regulations governing cookies under the GDPR and the ePrivacy Directive you must […] Make it as easy for users to withdraw their consent as it was for them to give their consent in the first place.”

      I don’t think I’ve ever seen a site with “withdraw cookie consent” functionality.

      The best you can get is that it is as easy to not consent as to consent (and this site doesn’t even accomplish that. Not consenting requires two click, consenting only one)

  • Oh memories! The iBook SE was the first Mac I had.

    This was pre-Mac OS X. The thing had a terrible 800x600px screen but still it was my gateway to decades of Macs.

    The switch to Unix in MacOS X cemented their place in my life.

    I will totally deny that the Macs in Independence Day and Mission Impossible were major influences on my juvenile mind to switch to the Mac.

    • I just remembered that it came with a Yo-Yo charger! Fun times!
  • It’s interesting to remember Apple used to orient the logo so that it was upside down when opened.

    That looks right to you as you open the laptop, but wrong to everyone else. Now when you’re in a coffee shop, all the little metal promotional billboards are correct.

    • Classic Thinkpad use to do that as well. A reasoning I've read somewhere (here perhaps ?): the laptop is here to serve you, not be an advertisement.
    • Check your local classifieds for « DY » laptops, you’ll find a lot of hp computers for this exact reason !
    • It seems that other laptop manufacturers were doing the same thing around the turn of the century, although usually not as prominently.
      • In the OJ Simpson trail IBM made a sbecial thinkpad for the judge so the logo would be right side up on tv.
    • It also looks wrong to the owner as they return to their table without closing it. Which is quite common.
    • A wise laptop manufacturer would choose a logo which looks the same both ways up.
  • The clamshell iBook had one very distinctive disadvantage: when the laptop world had finally arrived at a default display resolution of at least 1024x768, the iBook had an 800x600 display. This forced web designers (in a time before widely supported CSS or even responsive design) to design for the smaller viewport of the iBook instead of being able to take advantage of the higher-res displays of the rest of the world.
    • Peter Gabriel gave me his in ~2000 because I needed a crappy Mac to test our music streaming and downloading on. I liked the design, but was very underwhelmed by the hardware and software. In that way, it was good for testing. I remember it quickly ended up in a closet with some big elastic bands pushing something onto the trackpad button, since there was an online game at the time called "Hold The Button" with a leaderboard and we wanted to be #1.
      • Any more interesting tidbits to share about working with the man?
    • Ha! That 800x600 screen was the first thing I remembered about it, that the composite (or s-video) out…
      • It had a weird/custom TRRS adapter, I believe, to get analog video out.
  • Compare the prices vs a Neo…

    1499 usd for the cheapest clamshell!

    https://www.ibook-clamshell.com/index.php/en/model-overview

  • They should resurrect that design for the Neo.
  • Man do I love that old Apple typography, the tall serif'd letters.

    I'm sad everything's serifless these days...

  • Shame Apple didn't have the balls to release the Neo in those bright colors in homage, and instead went with the safe, bland, corporate committee, focus group approved, muted colors like the rest of their product lineup. Booo! Missed opportunity.
    • I am quite sure that they will expand the colour palette in the next gen. One more way to distinguish that you have "a new version of the thing".
      • The limited color palette isn't the issue, it's that the colors have no vividness as the iBook.
    • This could simply be because you can’t get colors as bright as plastic from anodizing aluminum.
      • That couldn't be more false, you absolutely can gen bright colors anodized to aluminum. See: bike frames and carabiners.
    • It's almost like companies know what sells best and go with that for maximum profit :)

      Why is it a shame that they didn't choose to lose money on purpose?

      • Yeah, the ones that aren't being made sell terribly!
      • Why is it a shame that companies safely maximize profit at the expense of expressive and novel design?
  • I've been thinking about getting into retro Apple laptops! I'm wanting to start with either a Tangerine iBook or the glossy white MacBook A1181.
    • Power Mac G4 Cube design is something unique. I was thinking of getting a full set with a keyboard, mouse, speakers, and monitor.
  • Cool site.

    I always enjoyed the concept of the iBook, but never found it something that I wanted, personally.

    I used to refer to it as "the MacBook Toilet Seat."

  • I remember when it came out, John C. Dvorak called it a toilet seat.
  • Better known as "Barbie's electric toilet seat".
  • I wanted one of these so much.
  • I was in 8th grade and the school's computer lab was filled with iMacs and the library had iBooks students could check out. That was where I discovered Wikipedia, Yahoo Clubs, and Geocities. We had a PC at home but it was older and we could only get dial up at the time, so the higher speed connection at school and the faster hardware was great.
  • [flagged]
  • clamshell, that is a name from the past. But has nothing to do with Apple

    >Clam is a Unix(tm) shell that has many features of tcsh, sh and improvements all its own.

    >Clam is copyright (c) 1988 by Callum Gibson. Clam is provided free of charge.

    This came on CohWare Vol1 with Cohorent OS and gave one a small csh(1) environment. I think it was for the 286 version of Coherent which I used back then.