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Fruit, my powerbook, and nibbles, our ibook.

my apple logo on my 12" PowerBook. I also have a pink one, but this one shows off my Texas pride. Ha.

 

Colourful Apples

Desk is slowly getting cluttered

I took a picture of my bestickered PowerBook before I took it in for service, because there was a chance they would swap out the top case.

And then there's Mail and Colloquy on the powerbook's own display :-)

This is my new toy. A 2005 12in PowerBook. I use this machine to do everything. Don't know what I would do without it.

Cleaner than usual.. i think.

For the latest Macintosh support visit Mac Users Guide's Help Desk. www.macusersguide.com/help-desk/. PowerBook 2400c (codenames: "Comet" or "Nautilus") was on of Apple Computer’s subnotebooks within the PowerBook line. Manufactured by IBM and introduced in May 1997 it replaced the PowerBook Duo 2300c. The PowerBook 2400c had an over-clocked PowerPC 603e processor at 180 Mhz. Missing from this model was a internal floppy drive that could be purchased separately; sound familiar - MacBook Air. Ports include: ADB, combined serial printer/modem port, HD-20 floppy port, HD-30 SCSI port, and VGA video out.

Pimp my laptop.com IT -manager Jukka and graphics designer Oskari with pimped 15" Powerbook.

 

www.pimpmylaptop.com

Updated picture of Joi's Powerbook stickers.

Sammy would sit down on a notebook, then got annoyed by all the beeping.

 

The funniest moment was an hour later, when he accidentally activated Accessibility VoiceOver mode and got angry when the computer started talking to him. :)

 

And right now, he managed to reboot it somehow, and then reflash its EFI. PowerBook in peril!

 

Mac Powerbook G4

 

- 본사진은 CC Photo&share 캠페인( photo.sharehub.kr ) 을 통해서 Ethan Lee님께서 (by Ethan Lee) 공유한 사진입니다.

CCL조건만 지키시면 사진을 자유롭게 이용하실 수 있습니다.

crashed with a loud continuous beep sound :)

This is a picture of my old 12" Powerbook's keyboard.

Sometimes, programming can nearly achieve literal requirements of blood, sweat, and tears. Be kind to your programmers.

On the left, the Powerbook Duo 230, purchased in 1994; on the right, my 12" Powerbook G4, purchased in 2004. The machine on the left cost about $2,500, has a 33 MHz 68030 processor, has 24 Mb of RAM, and has a passive-matrix 640x480 grayscale screen; the machine on the right cost about $1,500, has a 1.33 GHz G4 processor, has 640 Mb of RAM, and has an active-matrix 1024x768 color screen. That's only the *start* of the list of differences.

The old apartment, full to the brim, with just enough work space set aside. We're talking 40 boxes, minus the big stuff. That's only about half of it. How did I get so much crap?

Malak finds a warm spot.

All change again. The glass desks are back.

We're now downstairs from all the designers, which makes it all a bit more peaceful.

Apple mouse in the foreground with the Powerbook in the background connected to the network

It would have looked a chaotic sight, until the PowerBook appeared in the midst.

This is my brother's previous Apple PowerBook 15''.

He sold it to one of his friend.

This guy dropped it in the concertina vestibule of a tram.

Here is the result.

It still works and the guy still uses it.

 

From www.applestoreprices.com/

Yes, it’s a laptop. But, the fun of it all is taking a fairly ordinary object in a plain setting and getting your lighting just right so that the thing just looks cool.

 

Getting initial lights set up is usually pretty quick for this sort of shot, but the details are where the success of the shot lives. You have to think about the highlight on the right side of the image that defines the edge of the laptop screen (a honeycombed light coming from the back right).

 

You have to think about how you will give the keys texture and depth (another honeycombed light, this time from the back left that just skims across the surface of the keys, but is blocked from hitting the screen).

 

You have to think about how you are going to give more form to the subject by letting light fall off on its surfaces (small, close lights at just the right angles without much fill, so that you can get more fall off going into a bit of shadow).

 

More than anything, it’s an exercise in patience. Have an idea in your head of how you want it to look then start adding in the pieces to make that happen.

 

www.dsphotographic.com || www.darbysawchuk.com

 

© Darby Sawchuk. All rights reserved.

Ah, the joys of blogging in a reclined position. No socks, just some red nylon pants, a white t-shirt and a wifi'd Powerbook.

Genius bar PowerBooks

Mein PowerBook ist dank des neuen alten Gebrauchtnetzteils von Ebay endlich wieder einsatzfähig.

All the cool kids are doing it, so I thought I'd give it a try too! One of these days I am going to get better at white balance, but the greenish tint of the image does give it a sense of looking through glass, so I'm not totally unhappy with the result.

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