Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/09/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Eric writes: <<Apple pushed back the Dual 2GHZ G5 shipments 10-15 days for us mere mortals so they could send 1,100 of them to Virginia Tech which is setting them up in a cluster to become the fifth largest Supercomputer in the world. Other major educational institutions are getting theirs early too. I hear Berkley has had them for a week.>> Apple has an obligation to the universities that choose the system. In 1984, Apple funded the production of the original Mac with the Apple Consortium, a group of universities that took orders and advance payments for the Mac. You didn't receive your computer until months later. (Just like Hitler did with the VW) At that time the Mac 128 cost $2500, about the cost of a G5 today. It came with only two bits of software, MacWrite and MacDraw. Still, it worked right out of the box and connected to the Imagewriter printer without fooling with dip switches. Plug and Play, the Windows innovation in '98, was available on the Mac in 1984. When MacBasic came out in '85, we could write our own software with a fairly sophisticated interpretive language. Too bad MacBasic was killed because of Microsoft's threat to stop developing Mac software. Microsoft was, and is, very protective of the Basic language since it gave Bill his start. But at least we got Word and Excel before the other guys. Pretty much the same thing is happening today. A big order to one site is a lot less trouble to implement than dishing the computers out at retail. Two more weeks is not too long to wait. Larry Z - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html