Enjoy the new episode! I have a special one planned for mid-March, so make sure to subscribe (and click the *Bell* button) so you get new uploads sent to your device.
@Atari Master Nah both A and B ran at 233 mhz. They have different video cards and can take different amounts of ram, looking at the video chipset is the only real way to check.
The big difference between the Rev A and the Rev B is the video chip. The Rev A had an ATI Rage IIc, defaulted to 2 MB VRAM (upgradable to 4 or 6 MB). The Rev B had a Rage Pro with 6 MB. Because yours drops to "Thousands" of colors at 1024x768, *you definitely have a Rev A* with stock VRAM. Upgrading to 4 or 6 MB allows "Millions" of colors at 1024x768.
Rev A: the original bondi blue, had the mezzanine slot, a rage IIc with 2mb video memory, an infrared port, and a 233 mhz g3 cpu. Rev B: improved from the Rev A with a Rage Pro that has 6mb video memory Rev C and D: They had the infrared port and mezzanine slot removed and had faster CPU clocks like 266 or 333 mhz and came in different colors like blueberry (blue), lime (green), grape (purple), strawberry (pink), tangerine (orange).
SimOFFICIAL: A and B are almost the same, only difference we're the graphics chips. A and B were both Bondi Blue Only, Rev C being the 5 flavors (strawberry, tangerine, Lime, blueberry, and grape).
Probably not that much different to Windows mice in terms of shape and comfort. But not having right click or a scroll wheel really sucks. But hey, laptop users know this problem all too well, and we tend to compensate with Up/Down and Page Up/Page Down/Home/End leys.
I never owned one of these but my school's computer lab had them when I was in high school. I used to love playing around with the text to speech voices.
I remember when my college bought tons of these and put them throughout the school. No one knew how to use it. Fast forward now a lot of people are Mac Users.
I've got the Grape model. Got it free back in '05 or '06 or so (might have been earlier). It's still alive and kickin'. iMac won't restart/turn off? Yank the power. Works every time.
Been watching a heck of a ton of these episodes and I’m absolutely loving them! So cool to see an episode about the iMac G3 which is exactly the same I had as my first Mac! :D
Computer Clan I have to say it certainly is, thank you for creating all this splendid content :) Btw, have you done a tour of your studio/recording set?
also what was great about crts is the resolution capabilities. if I lower my resolution to 720 on my LCD panel it will be blurry, but on a CRT it remains as sharp as it should
In 2001 I was 14 years old and was just starting my second year of junior high school... Our "computer lab" at the time was filled with all Ruby iMac G3's, to this day I have no idea how or why they had them... I remember being fascinated with the design and still vividly remember I was the only person in the entire class day after day who simply loved the small "puck" mouse. I still love it. I can see why it wasn't for everyone though.
Getting an error type 10 was deadly. An application probably attempted to address an unprotected memory space that was being used and 💥 Paper clips were mandatory components during the Mac OS System days. Knowing how to manage Extensions was crucial to supporting Macs in ‘90s era IT departments.
That computer looks like it may have Kid Pix, because of "The Learning Company" folder. Kid Pix was my childhood (Studio 4 Deluxe in particular). And you can get that version of Kid Pix here: www.myabandonware.com/game/kid-pix-deluxe-4-cm9 which even works in Windows 10. On that note, you can buy Pajama Sam on Steam, as well as other games that may have been your childhood, such as Putt-putt and Let's Explore the Farm/Jungle/Airport. Hope this information helps.
I just got a G3 from 2002 or 2003 for Christmas. 500MHz, 384MB of RAM. I think the poor puck mouse gets ridiculed more than it deserves LOL. I actually like it! Cool system, Ken!
You can check the date (sticker is behind the I/O door). If it’s built after October 1998 it’s a rev b. You can always check out how much vram it has as well (rev a= 2 MB, rev b= 6 MB) At least that’s what I thought.
If the model number is M6709LL/B then it is a Revision B model. If I remember correctly the revision B models shipped with an ATI Rage pro graphics chip and 6mb of video memory as well. I am currently in the process of upgrading my G3 revision DV (Strawberry) to Panther and then onto Tiger
I have a iMac like yours with a slot loading drive . I’ve been online with it at Mac repository and a message came up your actually browsing this with a old Mac we salute you
You can get Nanosaur here: macintoshgarden.org/games/nanosaur I think there are other versions of Nanosaur, including an iOS/Android version, you can look them up.
Honestly I find todays Magic Mouse less ergonomic than the old puck mouse. Though me not really caring for ergonomics when I was that young probably had something to do with the fond memories.
The best 'built-in' speakers on any Mac ever would have to be on the 20th anniversary mac. That had a great built-in audio system from Bose with a separate subwoofer. It easily rivaled small HiFi systems for volume and sound quality. The company I worked for in the late 90s had one as a display machine in the front office. We often used the built-in FM radio.
I had the 2nd Gen Purple iMac and loved it so much I got 2 more! I gave this one to my youngest Daughter while my oldest got a 3rd Gen blue one, while I then got the G4 Flst screen iMac!
Pajama Sam, that brings back memories. I had one of these as a kid too. My uncle was really good with computers. He was able to get an SNES emulator w/ Link to the Past, and a legal playstation emulator from back in the day called the Virtual Game station. I remember playing bugs life and nascar 98 on it. Time flies.
How many Vectras were sold, though? The iMac received 150,000 pre-orders before shipping even started. I have a feeling the volume of the iMac was much greater-making USB more mainstream.
I have a magenta iMac G3 1st gen and recently it succumbed to illness. When I got it back in 2012 it had issues and I couldn't fix them but when it worked it was a blast from the past. I will one day fix it as long as I can scavenge working parts.
Among the many computers that have crossed my path over the years, among them were 5 Macs, 4 of which were PowerPC models. One was a broken clone machine that I couldn't get working due to my nonexistant knowledge of old PSU standards at the time(I could fix it now if I still had it), but following that was one of these 1st gen iMac G3s. It wasn't very powerful, but it was a competent thin client for my home server(admittedly said server wasn't a powerhouse itself, but it was a great deal faster than the Mac), and its screen made document editing a breeze!
Yup. My community elementary school back around 97-98 got new computers in every class room. Our small computer lab (maybe 18 computers) we’re all iMacs. I was probably in third grade at the time. But my school replaced every one of those iMacs within a year or two for whatever reason. Probably because we used to love stealing the puck mouse balls. Lol. But I remember being one of the first classes to use these new computers. They were quite user friendly off the bat for a young kid like me. I remember the see-through green and clear monitor and mouse. I believe the keyboard was concave in structure. It was super cool.
I worked on a lot of these back in the day. I was on an old powerPC 6400 back in high school w/ mac OS 8.6.1. My best friends mother was a teacher at the elementary school I went to and they had just gotten iMacs in every room. But the teachers didn't use them because they were all crashing. Problem was that they where all on mac OS9 and it loaded all the extension, most that were not needed and they were really slow because they maxed out the ram and were running on virtual memory. I went room by room and turned off the virtual memory and de-activated all the unnecessary extensions and none of the teachers had any more issues. I got a lot of community service credit hours to help with college that year.
The further back you go with computers, the less sleep or 'standby' mode actually puts your computer to full sleep. The fans stayed on for Wintel PCs in standby mode as well, back before the ATX standard. Your iMac was definitely asleep when that orange LED was lit.
I recall one of the changes between rev A and B was the ability to hold down the power button to shut it down (on crash, etc). Where you held down the power button and nothing happened is a good indicator of a rev A.
If you're still wondering how to find out which revision it is you'll need to look at the analoge board. If it is green it's the first revision, if beige it's the second. The analog board is the one opposite of the power board
Just the other day I took my tray loader iMac G3 out of storage the and it runs great. I still have the MacSoft versions of Tomb Raider, Doom 2 and Prince of Persia and honestly everything just feels right playing those games on good old OS 9.1 nothing beats that trinitron display.
My first experience with this computer was in my high school’s Mac computer lab. They got a bunch of these and some G3 workstations. We used them for...typing
I remember when they were introduced. Had to have one. Got one new in I believe 1999. Installed SoundJam (Apple bought it & renamed iTunes). Used the FAX a lot. Played Nanosaur & arcade games: Zinna's Pinball & Firefall. Tinkered with Kai's PhotoSoap editing software. OS 8.51 would sometimes freeze & I kept a straightened gem clip nearby to restart. Used OS 9.04 & iTunes with a VERY slow Que 2X external CD burner. I have a lot of fond memories using this IMac!
iMac G3's had trinitron screens, 100+hz it's a crime they didn't make consumer TVs with the same tech back then. They had the ability to broadcast higher than 60Hz easy, but didn't because standards, right? And the human eye myth? (cough 144hz TVs today). Anyway, the G3 was a masterpiece. I inventoried an Apple store at the mall one day, and my crew members were all playing on the Macs. I noticed one bondi blue was running OS X and photobooth. I wish I knew what webcam they were using because the image was perfect. No distortion, no slow down, no pixelation. It was quite an experience. I remember wanting the whole setup very badly -_- I do have the Mac now, decades later... setting it up for the nephews and nieces, but I wonder which webcam to use for that same flawless experience? Suggestions? As for revision folks, if you pick one of these up, go for a Rev B. They're better and they're still the original Bondi Blue. Rev A would be for collectors. Rev B is the one you can play with without slow down. Diablo 2 worked pretty well.
If you want to get this online, Classilla is the most likely way to view anything. IE5 won't have modern https support. System Profiler may give you more info on the revision. You're thinking 'Option' at startup. Avoid 10.0 and 10.1. More memory will definitely help in OS X--it can go up to 512MB. The iMac speakers are great until they deteriorate and rattle, though that may be more likely in the later revisions.
just picked up a used one today, in perfect shape, running 8.5. trying to find the firmware update for it so i can upgrade it to 9.22, great video thank you!
I remember the imac G3 during in my elementary school during the 5th grade. Now I'm 34 years old damn I had fond memories. I think it's in 2000/2001 I don't remember.
It looks like your optical drive isn't mounted quite right. It was easy to get it wrong when putting the system back together, because it has a spring mechanism that is supposed to keep it pushed forward. You can tell it is not right when it is inset a bit like this one appears to be.
had usb headers on my asus board from early 97 as well. Now getting USB to run on 95 was an exercise in frustration. you had to have 95c or wait till you had 98 and still pray it would work.
You can figure out what revision your iMac is by looking at the video card and v-ram. The rev A has a ATI Rage IIc with 2MB and you can upgrade that to 6 MB. The rev B has a ATI Rage Pro with 6 mb. The rev B can also support up to 512 mb of ram and rev A only supports 386 mb of ram.
I honestly used to think that, too. I was watching Steve Jobs (the movie), and I noticed they ran the cables under the door. I was like… "huh, I've been doing it wrong".
The eMac is massively underrated. I had one as my main computer for years, but the crt started to have trouble. Probably a bad cap somewhere. Would love to get it working again just for rose tinted glasses sake. And maybe try out a ppc Linux distribution on it for kicks
You should be able to pick one up cheap. PPC Macs are virtually useless these days. Shipping will be murder though, I paid more for shipping on my 600 mhz G3 iMac, then for the bloody thing it self.
Hello. 🙂 I want to apologise for posting a snobby comment, a day or so ago, about profanity. I was in a terrible mood, and I make no excuse for my attitude. This is a fantastic video, it was me at fault and not you, I want to get that off my chest, I'm sorry if I came across all haughty and holier than though. I'm now gonna enjoy this video, thank you so much for taking the time to publish it, God bless you Sir, have a wonderful life. 😀 Matthew.
Comparing the OS between this iMac and the original Apple 1, roughly 20 years earlier (1976) there was a huge difference. They went from just a 256 byte OS and 64 character ascii display to 1024x768 graphical OS. Going another 20-25 years forward to today, however, the OS doesn't really look all that fundamentally different -- still just graphical windows.
Enjoy the new episode! I have a special one planned for mid-March, so make sure to subscribe (and click the *Bell* button) so you get new uploads sent to your device.
Is this the iMac from Crashing Computers?
@Atari Master Revision A and B had Bondi Blue. Revision C shipped with a faster processor and fruit colours.
@Atari Master Nah both A and B ran at 233 mhz.
They have different video cards and can take different amounts of ram, looking at the video chipset is the only real way to check.
I would love to see OS 9 on here more then OS X.
Anyone remember the game that came with the OG iMacs “Nanosaurous” that you played as a Raptor with a jet pack trying to collect dinosaur eggs??
The big difference between the Rev A and the Rev B is the video chip. The Rev A had an ATI Rage IIc, defaulted to 2 MB VRAM (upgradable to 4 or 6 MB). The Rev B had a Rage Pro with 6 MB.
Because yours drops to "Thousands" of colors at 1024x768, *you definitely have a Rev A* with stock VRAM. Upgrading to 4 or 6 MB allows "Millions" of colors at 1024x768.
Yup that is the case. In fact, I own a Revision B iMac G3 which has the Rage Pro chip.
@@WOSArchives Does the Rev B also lack the Mezzanine slot like later models? Thought that got removed as part of the video upgrade.
Rev A: the original bondi blue, had the mezzanine slot, a rage IIc with 2mb video memory, an infrared port, and a 233 mhz g3 cpu.
Rev B: improved from the Rev A with a Rage Pro that has 6mb video memory
Rev C and D: They had the infrared port and mezzanine slot removed and had faster CPU clocks like 266 or 333 mhz and came in different colors like blueberry (blue), lime (green), grape (purple), strawberry (pink), tangerine (orange).
SimOFFICIAL: A and B are almost the same, only difference we're the graphics chips. A and B were both Bondi Blue Only, Rev C being the 5 flavors (strawberry, tangerine, Lime, blueberry, and grape).
also it has the eject cd not slot loading
Risky click of the year opening a teenage boys Internet Explorer and repetedly hitting the address bar.
I doubt this computer was owned by a teenage boy. What sort of teenager is compiling referendum reports and budgets?? Haha.
@@ComputerClan one who's deep into white collar crime.
AppleScript. Back then, that forum moderator didn't even know what an.exe or .bat file was back in the day as its apple's version of that!
I might very well be the only person on the planet who actually liked the puck mouse and found it very comfortable to use.
Ast A. Moore you weren’t. I went out of my way to buy it for my iBook. The colors didn’t match though.
I also find it pretty comfortable to hold for some reason. I still don’t understand people actually ‘hate’ it lol.
@@ArnoLouwagie I used to rest my and against the mouse a bit as I held it and always ended up accidentally clicking it
It wasn't all that bad. Not the best mouse I ever used but not the worst. I wish it had a scroll wheel though
Probably not that much different to Windows mice in terms of shape and comfort. But not having right click or a scroll wheel really sucks.
But hey, laptop users know this problem all too well, and we tend to compensate with Up/Down and Page Up/Page Down/Home/End leys.
I never owned one of these but my school's computer lab had them when I was in high school. I used to love playing around with the text to speech voices.
I remember when my college bought tons of these and put them throughout the school. No one knew how to use it. Fast forward now a lot of people are Mac Users.
I've got the Grape model. Got it free back in '05 or '06 or so (might have been earlier). It's still alive and kickin'.
iMac won't restart/turn off? Yank the power. Works every time.
I did that once (didnt know about the restart button at the time) and i saw sparks under the CRT. Scared the shit out of me.
One surefire way to tell is to try to boot 8.1. If it's a Rev. A it will boot, if it's a Rev. B it will not. :)
This is the first computer I remember really well, probably got me interested in the computing field! Nanosaur! MDK!
No, I'm not Steve Jobs, you UFO tinfoil hats online drunk on Infowars again!
Watching this made me wanna dig out my ole Bondi Blue G3. thanks for this one, Ken!
The computer clan is so underrated. this channel deserves at least 1million subscribers.
Those old backgrounds really brought me back to when I was a wee little boy watching CC aspiring to get into Technology.
Oh yeah… you’ve been around a while : p
TIL Sosumi comes from "So Sue Me", lmao
Sosumi kinda sounds like "So Sue Me" lmao
Been watching a heck of a ton of these episodes and I’m absolutely loving them! So cool to see an episode about the iMac G3 which is exactly the same I had as my first Mac! :D
That’s awesome! Thanks for watching. It is bingeable show! Haha.
Computer Clan I have to say it certainly is, thank you for creating all this splendid content :) Btw, have you done a tour of your studio/recording set?
also what was great about crts is the resolution capabilities. if I lower my resolution to 720 on my LCD panel it will be blurry, but on a CRT it remains as sharp as it should
In 2001 I was 14 years old and was just starting my second year of junior high school... Our "computer lab" at the time was filled with all Ruby iMac G3's, to this day I have no idea how or why they had them... I remember being fascinated with the design and still vividly remember I was the only person in the entire class day after day who simply loved the small "puck" mouse. I still love it. I can see why it wasn't for everyone though.
Awwwww this brings me back, this was my introduction to Apple!
“We were too dumb to realize you could save” Exactly what I think when I remember my kindergarten days playing “Go Diego Go” for Nintendo Wii.
Getting an error type 10 was deadly. An application probably attempted to address an unprotected memory space that was being used and 💥 Paper clips were mandatory components during the Mac OS System days. Knowing how to manage Extensions was crucial to supporting Macs in ‘90s era IT departments.
wow didn't know that
PAJAMA SAM WAS MY CHILDHOOD. I still have yet to find all of Sam's socks.
stevey500 same
That computer looks like it may have Kid Pix, because of "The Learning Company" folder. Kid Pix was my childhood (Studio 4 Deluxe in particular). And you can get that version of Kid Pix here: www.myabandonware.com/game/kid-pix-deluxe-4-cm9 which even works in Windows 10.
On that note, you can buy Pajama Sam on Steam, as well as other games that may have been your childhood, such as Putt-putt and Let's Explore the Farm/Jungle/Airport. Hope this information helps.
Found this from YT recomendation, I really love your channel, wow that's amazing.
Thank you : )
This was so cool...kudos to you for taking very good care of this machine. It looks brand new. 😊
First personal computer of its time to come without a floppy drive. *GASP!*
I just got a G3 from 2002 or 2003 for Christmas. 500MHz, 384MB of RAM. I think the poor puck mouse gets ridiculed more than it deserves LOL. I actually like it! Cool system, Ken!
You can check the date (sticker is behind the I/O door). If it’s built after October 1998 it’s a rev b. You can always check out how much vram it has as well (rev a= 2 MB, rev b= 6 MB)
At least that’s what I thought.
If the model number is M6709LL/B then it is a Revision B model. If I remember correctly the revision B models shipped with an ATI Rage pro graphics chip and 6mb of video memory as well. I am currently in the process of upgrading my G3 revision DV (Strawberry) to Panther and then onto Tiger
Geez seeing this thing again brings memory's of a cold winter Christmas. Not in a bad sense but just because it was a 90s time.
That Mac will be worth a lot in the future due to the shape of the cd tray. Hold on to it
I have a iMac like yours with a slot loading drive . I’ve been online with it at Mac repository and a message came up your actually browsing this with a old Mac we salute you
That's beautiful.
I had one of these, a friend bought one at a yard sale for $1.00! It worked great!
I remember my parents buying this as a kid, and the first time I got to see it my sister was playing Nanosaur on it, and it ran great.
One of the early Intel iMacs had very powerful speakers. When I was younger the startup sound used to freak me out cause it was so powerful
I have an early Intel iMac. It is nowhere near the volume of these G3 speakers.
I don’t know why I’m mesmerized by this video...can just go to the basement and boot up mine. Great job Ken!
i've got a 2006 imac, and i LOVE the speakers on that thing. They just sound amazing.
They're amazing on my 20 inch 2009 imac too.
3:20 “doors weren’t a long lasting trend” iCar: removes doors in 2nd generation
I wanted to play Nanosaur so bad! That was my favorite game by far on the iMac!
You can get Nanosaur here: macintoshgarden.org/games/nanosaur
I think there are other versions of Nanosaur, including an iOS/Android version, you can look them up.
Honestly I find todays Magic Mouse less ergonomic than the old puck mouse. Though me not really caring for ergonomics when I was that young probably had something to do with the fond memories.
The best 'built-in' speakers on any Mac ever would have to be on the 20th anniversary mac. That had a great built-in audio system from Bose with a separate subwoofer. It easily rivaled small HiFi systems for volume and sound quality. The company I worked for in the late 90s had one as a display machine in the front office. We often used the built-in FM radio.
I had the 2nd Gen Purple iMac and loved it so much I got 2 more! I gave this one to my youngest Daughter while my oldest got a 3rd Gen blue one, while I then got the G4 Flst screen iMac!
This computer and Bugdom, have a special warm place nestled in the farthest regions of my heart.
Pajama Sam, that brings back memories. I had one of these as a kid too. My uncle was really good with computers. He was able to get an SNES emulator w/ Link to the Past, and a legal playstation emulator from back in the day called the Virtual Game station. I remember playing bugs life and nascar 98 on it. Time flies.
Ultimate Mac experience was that I had a Bondi blue, while living a few hundred meters from the ocean water it was named after in Bondi
I had a HP Vectra from 1996 with integrated USB 1.0 :) So it was definitely not the first mass produced computer with USB.
How many Vectras were sold, though? The iMac received 150,000 pre-orders before shipping even started. I have a feeling the volume of the iMac was much greater-making USB more mainstream.
It was.
I have a magenta iMac G3 1st gen and recently it succumbed to illness. When I got it back in 2012 it had issues and I couldn't fix them but when it worked it was a blast from the past.
I will one day fix it as long as I can scavenge working parts.
The good days of using our Windows 95-98 desktops and Imac G3's/G4's on Myspace.
Also "Unreal Tournament" UT99 was the big game of the 2000s.
Among the many computers that have crossed my path over the years, among them were 5 Macs, 4 of which were PowerPC models. One was a broken clone machine that I couldn't get working due to my nonexistant knowledge of old PSU standards at the time(I could fix it now if I still had it), but following that was one of these 1st gen iMac G3s. It wasn't very powerful, but it was a competent thin client for my home server(admittedly said server wasn't a powerhouse itself, but it was a great deal faster than the Mac), and its screen made document editing a breeze!
Yup. My community elementary school back around 97-98 got new computers in every class room. Our small computer lab (maybe 18 computers) we’re all iMacs. I was probably in third grade at the time. But my school replaced every one of those iMacs within a year or two for whatever reason. Probably because we used to love stealing the puck mouse balls. Lol. But I remember being one of the first classes to use these new computers. They were quite user friendly off the bat for a young kid like me. I remember the see-through green and clear monitor and mouse. I believe the keyboard was concave in structure. It was super cool.
I worked on a lot of these back in the day. I was on an old powerPC 6400 back in high school w/ mac OS 8.6.1. My best friends mother was a teacher at the elementary school I went to and they had just gotten iMacs in every room. But the teachers didn't use them because they were all crashing. Problem was that they where all on mac OS9 and it loaded all the extension, most that were not needed and they were really slow because they maxed out the ram and were running on virtual memory. I went room by room and turned off the virtual memory and de-activated all the unnecessary extensions and none of the teachers had any more issues. I got a lot of community service credit hours to help with college that year.
The further back you go with computers, the less sleep or 'standby' mode actually puts your computer to full sleep. The fans stayed on for Wintel PCs in standby mode as well, back before the ATX standard. Your iMac was definitely asleep when that orange LED was lit.
Ohhhh man I didn't even know I played this game back in the day but that intro brought back hella memories.
Whichever game you're talking about, you can look it up and download it.
Dig the camera work.
Good to see so many of these little guys still functioning. If only I could get my IIcx running.
I recall one of the changes between rev A and B was the ability to hold down the power button to shut it down (on crash, etc). Where you held down the power button and nothing happened is a good indicator of a rev A.
Pajama sam on an iMac G3. That is some tasty nostalgia right there.
And yes I did pause to see the blue screen in the intro
Same.
Reminds me of my collage days I loved using the G3.
5:54 My mind has been corrupted. That sound right there makes me think of TF2 GMOD videos.
they used it that's why
@@NepgearGM6.1 I KNOW that.
iteachvader so your mind is not corrupted by the videos
Our school gave us a brand new iMac Dv. I forgot the reason but some families where eligible to have one for free. It became my neopets machine!
I miss these old style videos, I liked them more.
If you're still wondering how to find out which revision it is you'll need to look at the analoge board. If it is green it's the first revision, if beige it's the second. The analog board is the one opposite of the power board
I love old iMac os so much
Just the other day I took my tray loader iMac G3 out of storage the and it runs great. I still have the MacSoft versions of Tomb Raider, Doom 2 and Prince of Persia and honestly everything just feels right playing those games on good old OS 9.1 nothing beats that trinitron display.
I just got a free green first gen today with OS 8. worked perfectly
My first experience with this computer was in my high school’s Mac computer lab. They got a bunch of these and some G3 workstations. We used them for...typing
I really want one of those to mess around with. They're so aesthetic!
I spent a lot of time playing Bungie's Marathon Trilogy on a first gen G3. Great computer, really miss mine.
I love you're retro videos! great fun
Thank you : )
Ah, captain's log meme.
I remember when they were introduced. Had to have one. Got one new in I believe 1999. Installed SoundJam (Apple bought it & renamed iTunes). Used the FAX a lot. Played Nanosaur & arcade games: Zinna's Pinball & Firefall. Tinkered with Kai's PhotoSoap editing software. OS 8.51 would sometimes freeze & I kept a straightened gem clip nearby to restart. Used OS 9.04 & iTunes with a VERY slow Que 2X external CD burner. I have a lot of fond memories using this IMac!
If you want to see those old games and programs, look 'em up. You will be surprised.
hi ken, it as about time for KKTM, always keeping an eye for these since they're so fun to watch
I appreciate it, but… “about time”?! There was one last week!
also 14:02 ITS BEEN
@@ComputerClan i know, there's one every week but the week feel sooo long to me xd
Oh the nostalgia of pajama sam! I played that game so much was I was a kid on a blueberry G3 iMac!
i played pajama sam on a mac, but on a Performa 5200 all in one with Mac OS 8.5.
You can still get Pajama Sam on Steam. It is a game you don't have to miss!
i was at a forfeiture auction once in like 2012 and there was a lot of 15 of these in different conditions and i really regret not bidding lol
There it is! There is my original iMac.
man, this a blast from the past! that orange / green power light...
iMac G3's had trinitron screens, 100+hz it's a crime they didn't make consumer TVs with the same tech back then. They had the ability to broadcast higher than 60Hz easy, but didn't because standards, right? And the human eye myth? (cough 144hz TVs today). Anyway, the G3 was a masterpiece. I inventoried an Apple store at the mall one day, and my crew members were all playing on the Macs. I noticed one bondi blue was running OS X and photobooth. I wish I knew what webcam they were using because the image was perfect. No distortion, no slow down, no pixelation. It was quite an experience. I remember wanting the whole setup very badly -_- I do have the Mac now, decades later... setting it up for the nephews and nieces, but I wonder which webcam to use for that same flawless experience? Suggestions?
As for revision folks, if you pick one of these up, go for a Rev B. They're better and they're still the original Bondi Blue. Rev A would be for collectors. Rev B is the one you can play with without slow down. Diablo 2 worked pretty well.
If you want to get this online, Classilla is the most likely way to view anything. IE5 won't have modern https support.
System Profiler may give you more info on the revision.
You're thinking 'Option' at startup.
Avoid 10.0 and 10.1.
More memory will definitely help in OS X--it can go up to 512MB.
The iMac speakers are great until they deteriorate and rattle, though that may be more likely in the later revisions.
This channel is underated
just picked up a used one today, in perfect shape, running 8.5. trying to find the firmware update for it so i can upgrade it to 9.22, great video thank you!
At 22:42 in an Apple menu sub menu, I see OpenDoc Stationary. Did you ever make use of that?
I breezed right by that. I may look into that for a future episode.
Not gonna lie, in elementary school school I REALLY liked the hockey puck mice.
Don’t be ashamed of your history Ken!
I remember the imac G3 during in my elementary school during the 5th grade. Now I'm 34 years old damn I had fond memories. I think it's in 2000/2001 I don't remember.
Me: Can I have a computer for Christmas?
Mom: I will see what I can do
The computer:
Never in my life have I seen that bomb popup's restart button work. EVER. And I was using Mac OS classic since 1990
It looks like your optical drive isn't mounted quite right. It was easy to get it wrong when putting the system back together, because it has a spring mechanism that is supposed to keep it pushed forward. You can tell it is not right when it is inset a bit like this one appears to be.
Ah… good point. It was taken apart MANY years ago, and I probably put it back together incorrectly.
19:41 why are there picture1 picture2 and picture3 files from 1956?? im curious
My 97 IBM Aptiva had USB, which predates this.
had usb headers on my asus board from early 97 as well. Now getting USB to run on 95 was an exercise in frustration. you had to have 95c or wait till you had 98 and still pray it would work.
You can figure out what revision your iMac is by looking at the video card and v-ram.
The rev A has a ATI Rage IIc with 2MB and you can upgrade that to 6 MB.
The rev B has a ATI Rage Pro with 6 mb.
The rev B can also support up to 512 mb of ram and rev A only supports 386 mb of ram.
Thanks. I’ll have a look. Stay tuned…
@@ComputerClan Will do.
The Tray loaders can only run up to Panther officially but with XpostFacto you can unofficially run Tiger.
i have a tangerine one which starts but does not give any image, no startup chime just four short beeps. What can i do?
Ah the memories was sophisticated tech back in 1998
WHou else thought the cord was supposed to go through the blue hole? 3:44
I honestly used to think that, too. I was watching Steve Jobs (the movie), and I noticed they ran the cables under the door. I was like… "huh, I've been doing it wrong".
Well, you can honestly do it both ways. Find the way that works best for you I guess.
21:30 I'm surprised you don't know about the eMac speakers. Those feel like the natural upgrade over the already fine iMac G3 ones.
The eMac is massively underrated. I had one as my main computer for years, but the crt started to have trouble. Probably a bad cap somewhere.
Would love to get it working again just for rose tinted glasses sake. And maybe try out a ppc Linux distribution on it for kicks
@@IanC14 Mine works, should try the Linux thingy as well, that would be cool.
It is indeed so beautiful!
It's a great system even with the moving bar.
I still have mine 💯 percent complete with original box and foam dam thing is huge
Man I love the look of that machine, I wish I had one 😍
You should be able to pick one up cheap. PPC Macs are virtually useless these days.
Shipping will be murder though, I paid more for shipping on my 600 mhz G3 iMac, then for the bloody thing it self.
@@dvdbytes4348 good to know!
One of those was my first Mac!
I would not say that the tray loading models have the best speakers but the slot loads have really good ones
When this old screen from 1998 crushes the refresh rate of my modern monitor (75 Hz, marketed as gaming)
Hello. 🙂
I want to apologise for posting a snobby comment, a day or so ago, about profanity. I was in a terrible mood, and I make no excuse for my attitude. This is a fantastic video, it was me at fault and not you, I want to get that off my chest, I'm sorry if I came across all haughty and holier than though. I'm now gonna enjoy this video, thank you so much for taking the time to publish it, God bless you Sir, have a wonderful life. 😀
Matthew.
Comparing the OS between this iMac and the original Apple 1, roughly 20 years earlier (1976) there was a huge difference. They went from just a 256 byte OS and 64 character ascii display to 1024x768 graphical OS. Going another 20-25 years forward to today, however, the OS doesn't really look all that fundamentally different -- still just graphical windows.
This is so cool, i wish mine still worked. Mine just refuses to boot, the hard drive is probably long gone