28 comments
@sashk @NanoRaptor No penetrations in the chassis at all. The power was an experimental, high power, version of the Qi standard, the network was WiFi and the keyboard had this neat induction coupled interface (similar to NFC) on the back. Repairs were a pain because it didnβt use screws. It is the only device given a rating of ππΌby iFixit. @lymenzies @NanoRaptor apart from the stand underneath this looks very close to the eMacs we had in my high school @lymenzies I'd be OK with that if it was. Everyone's coming from a different place and all - and half commenting to their own followers too. No stress! @NanoRaptor They learned from the iPhone prototype's infamous aquarium test, by making something that couldn't fit in any aquariums on site. @NanoRaptor@bitbang.social yeah we had a couple of these at work and it was super hard to carry them up and down the stairs. Ever drop one on your foot? Luckily I didnβt but we still have the indentation in the floor to prove it. @NanoRaptor The lawsuits and recall almost bankrupted Apple - putting a 27β widescreen Trinitron CRT in an iMac caused fatigue issues with the stand, but worse, many iMac cubes fell through modern lightweight desks, causing injuries to owners. @NanoRaptor Well no wonder! Those quad G5 processors put out so much heat that it required 16 fans to keep the temps down, but that meant it also sounded like a dual jet engine taking off whenever you tried to open a Finder window! :blobfoxgoogly: @NanoRaptor I choose to believe that it's just a massive CRT. @NanoRaptor maybe if theyβd used all that space for something useful like expansion slots but no, they had to go and weld the damned thing shut. |
@NanoRaptor people often complained of shoulder injuries reaching to insert DVD's