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Mac Mini (1.2ghz) with 512 MBs of RAM once I get a putty knife. I'm sure some of you remember me arguing how terrible Macs were when OS9 was around, but I gotta say, OSX combines everything I like about Windows, everything I like about Linux, and a whole lot of unique features.

Now to find some free software, which is apparently less of a community than on Windows/Linux.

My brand new iMac G5

Specs:

20-inch widescreen LCD

1.8GHz PowerPC G5

600MHz frontside bus

512MB DDR400 SDRAM

NVIDIA GeForce FX 5200 Ultra

64MB DDR video memory

160GB Serial ATA hard drive

Slot-load SuperDrive

Brand new iPod Photo 60GB (firewire, dock etc included :D )

Loving them so much! :D :happy:

I got a Mac mini. :D

My PowerBook is still my main machine, so I got the 1.25Ghz Mac mini. I suddenly got it as a gift from my grandparents for no reason, so I'm pretty happy about it. :happy:

So far I have the following Macs:

Mac mini, 1.25Ghz with a 20" Apple Cinema Display (Perfect match, the Mac mini looks twice as awesome next to a Cinema Display) :p

PowerBook G4, 15", 1.5Ghz, SuperDrive

Xserve G5, 2Ghz, 1GB RAM, Dual 80GB ADMs in RAID 1 (Mirror)

:woot:

Mac Mini

1.25Ghz G4 CPU

100GB 5400 RPM HD

300GB Firewire External HD

1GB PC3200 Memory

Airport Express

Dell 2005FPW 20.1 Widescreen Display

OS X 10.3.8

17" Powerbook (lunchtray)

1.67Ghz G4 CPU

100GB 5400 RPM HD

1.5GB PC2700 Memory

128MB ATI Graphics

OS X 10.3.8

512MB iPod Shuffle

4GB Silver iPod Mini

My Mac Mini arrived today!!!

G4 1.25GHz

40GB HD

512MB PC3200 DDR

OS X 10.3.8

Nothing special for now. Its very easy to install apps on a Mac. I'm already using FireFox on it. I might just dump windows since all my desktop does is run thunderbird. I don't really play games on it, since I have converted from a PC gamer to a Console gamer.

Bought an iMac G5 1.8GHz 17" Screen + 768 Ram, 200GB Hard Drive (which I upgraded myself from an 80GB). Mac OS X Panther (Tiger will be in when released).

This is my 3rd attempt to switch and this time it's a success. I sold the PC and don't really feel concerned with the Microsoft evolution with Longhorn anymore.

Previous Switch attempt were and iMac G3 500MHz and eMac G4 1GHz

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    • I remember when Louis used to just do interesting Mac/iPhone repairs, now he's boring and just launches "crusades" every week
    • A shame it don't allow people to bypass the MS account, I will stick to using Rufus.
    • Microsoft about to radically change how often your Edge browser updates by Paul Hill Microsoft has just announced that starting with Edge 152, it will be moving to a two-week release cycle for faster, smaller updates. This faster release cadence will begin on August 27. This change comes just several months after Microsoft switched Visual Studio Code to weekly updates. The company said that the Extended Stable releases will remain on an eight-week cycle and that no admin changes are needed to experience the faster release cycle on the Stable channel. The new two-week release cycle will enable the faster delivery of security updates and platform improvements, all while reducing the size and complexity of individual updates. Microsoft claims that organizations will benefit from this change as it offers predictable validation cycles. For organizations that prefer a “more deliberate pace”, the Extended Stable channel remains an option. This change will affect Edge Stable releases on Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile. The Extended Stable channel will continue to be updated every eight weeks, or every fourth Stable release, for example: versions 152, 156, 160, and 164. The Extended Stable could be a good option for organizations that don’t want the latest updates twice a month and don’t want as much hassle constantly updating browsers. In the case of Visual Studio Code, many of the updates being pushed by Microsoft are AI-related. As we all know, Microsoft Edge has a lot of AI features, so we could see Microsoft pushing more AI, thanks to the faster cycles. On the flip side, quicker releases could mean faster security updates, which is beneficial in a world where AI systems are hunting for software exploits. What do you think? Let us know in the comments. For more updates on Edge, be sure to follow Neowin's coverage. In May alone, we reported on Edge offering in-browser pop-ups to assist users with website compatibility issues, that Edge was losing Copilot Mode, and that Microsoft had fixed a plain-text password bug in Edge. Source: Microsoft 365 Admin Center
    • not yet, because at the moment it is not a threat to MS, if and I mean if it did become a threat to MS Office, then it may be a different thing. MS don't like competition
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