This is the perfect 'retro' Mac (www.spacebar.news)
from corbin@infosec.pub to apple_enthusiast@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 16:20
https://infosec.pub/post/19981548

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acosmichippo@lemmy.world on 11 Nov 16:40 next collapse

TIL Snow Leopard is retro.

corbin@infosec.pub on 11 Nov 16:59 collapse

It is 15 years old, but the “retro” is more about running apps and games from as old as 2001 natively.

TagMeInSkipIGotThis@lemmy.nz on 11 Nov 17:58 next collapse

I still have one of these, I bought it & set it up as a server 14 years ago so its been powered on the majority of its life, and still functions ok. I’ve slowly moved most stuff off it and now it kinda just exists as a computer to buy & download albums from iTunes on if I can’t get them on bandcamp etc.

If I didn’t need OSX for the iTunes part i’d have rebuilt it a long time ago with some more lightweight linux distribution but its doing a job and now i’m reminded of how old it is I kinda want to see if I can get it to 20 years.

carl_dungeon@lemmy.world on 13 Nov 04:53 next collapse

Nah, the 1.4ghz g4 Mac mini is better. It’s old enough that you can get it to boot OS 9 without emulation. I have mine running stuff as far back as system 7. In my experience, sheep shaver is super buggy and doesn’t work with most old games. An os9 mini is effectively the most powerful native os 9 machine you can get, being more than double the speed of the best machine that ever shipped with os9 for boot (not Rosetta). macos9lives.com/downloads

DJDarren@thelemmy.club on 14 Nov 16:25 collapse

I’d be tempted to say that the 2014 Mini is a better bet for retro Mac usage.

It’ll still run Sonoma via OCLP, but has the benefit of USB 3. Bung a huge SSD in there and you can use it as a media server too. I have a 2014 that’s about to become surplus to requirements, so that’s precisely what I intend to do.