anyone utilizing early Macs to access the internet?
Aaron Finney
afinney at wfi-inc.com
Wed Oct 1 10:09:48 CDT 2008
The IIfx was (is?) a very capable web-browsing machine. Considering
the initial cost of that unit, it seems silly to grade it in these
terms...but I was using a IIfx up until 1999 or so for web/ftp/email
and it was rock-solid.
Aaron
On Sep 30, 2008, at 8:53 PM, Tim McNerney wrote:
>> I've been told using the compact Macs are an exercise in futility.
>> But what about the Mac II's? (original II, IIx, IIfx, IIcx).
>>
>> I was just curious.
>
>
> Right. For a pre-Mac II (e.g. Mac Plus), even Appletalk network
> file sharing was an exercise in futility, let alone Ethernet. Until
> the Quadras came along, an Ethernet interface was not built-in. You
> had to buy a separate network card for you Mac II, and more likely
> than not, it used "thin ethernet" (coax) not 10-base-T. I did use
> some 10-base-T SCSI Ethernet adapters for non-expandable Mac laptops
> around 1975, but they were barely up-to-snuff.
>
> While I was in grad school, from 1997 through 1999, I used a Quadra
> 700 running IE for browsing the web. It seemed unbearably slow even
> then, and I think I switched to Netscape because its rendering
> engine was more efficient (IE often had to redraw the whole web page
> twice--e.g. to figure out how big the images were, and on a 68040
> that was a noticeable delay). Plus a lots of things have changed
> since then. I don't think I even needed a Flash plugins at the
> time. Not that you would even think of watching a YouTube video on
> a processor that slow. For email I used GNU emacs RMAIL running on
> my group's Unix server. I had to abandon it when MIME became the
> norm around 2000.
>
> Bottom line: For small values of "access the internet" the older
> Macs were serviceable. By modern standards, the old browsers are
> curiosities at best. But if you need to transfer some old files off
> your old Mac, the connectivity is there, and I have been grateful
> that FTP still works even today.
>
> --Tim
--
Aaron C Finney
Technical Services Manager
WFI Incorporated
626-857-5599 x314
afinney at wfi-inc.com
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