YES! The 15" Apple Studio Display would be *perfect* ! You know the one... the semi-translucent bondi-blue or smoke grey with the stand that telescoped up and down... one of the first LCD monitors I'd seen in a computer lab growing up... everymac.com/monitors/apple/studio_cinema/specs/apple_studio_display.html
Maybe it's just me but I think you could probably fit the guts out of a PPC Mac Mini into this case with a bit of work. That would certainly perform better and feel more authentic. Before he said it was for a Pi I was already thinking that's what the case would be designed to hold.
@@ActionRetro I did on my 3b+ and it ran HORRIBLY it barely loaded and even when it did it crashed when I dragged a window. Also sound diddn't work for some reason.
@@dialupdave6276 try putting the sd card in your PC and commenting out the overclock options in /boot/config.txt - the 3b+ usually can't handle overclocking from what i understand
Dude, this is awesome :D im glad you like the design, i spend a lot of time getting the curved "handles" and the opening to be like the real PowerMac G3
This is really good ! I don't know who impresses me the most - the "Craft Dude" who did the case - and he has done many other projects at the Thingverse - or what you've done to make the "RaspIntosh" work. Well done both ! And kudos to Taylor !
That case is awesome! The use of rubber bands in place of springs is very creative. Yes, it's rubber which will break down eventually, but still! It just needs a tiny internal ZIP drive (COUGH COUGH SD CARD reader...)
You can buy durable EPDM synthetic rubber bands, and where suitable length/diameter O-rings can replace bands use that even higher end but cheap option and with some color choice.
We need a G4 Mac reproduction motherboard, cool fact: someone on the 68KMLA forums is already developing a Mac SE motherboard. He’s trying to reverse engineer it and he’s gotten pretty close actually.
@@MaxOakland He has a few videos but they're unlisted, I'll try to post them in some time MacSEReloaded is what his project name is? Right now he got some wonky checkerboard or something?
Actually it seems someone (a company called Bomarc Services) reverse-engineered quite a few Macs way back in the 90s and now all the schematics are available online.
Never mind, I found that thread! He's doing an SE board, and only the board itself in order to save broken SEs, mainly boards that have battery damage. The board has quite a few custom chips that have to be harvested from an existing board, so no new SEs to come anytime soon. The thread is in the "Hacks & Development" section and it's called "Reverse Engineering the Macintosh SE PCB & Custom Chips for 1:1 reproduction".
@Monochromatik-Vision nope, it's quite possible to 3d print/machine a housing for loose iphone parts. It might not match completely, but it would kinda work.
Actually yes. Sure TheC64-Mini and all that have come the last few years and stuff.... But Apple were in a sence, the first ones. Just, they did not do replicas as mini editions. So in a way yes, and in a way no. Depends on how you look at the words.
@@ActionRetro I just gave it a quick test, unfortunately it seems to hang shortly after the initial fake Happy Mac, and gets stuck in a terminal window. I didn't have the time to do any troubleshooting myself yet, and I didn't memorize the error message, but I will return to it when I have the time, and hopefully provide some more useful info.
Just a heads up to anyone wanting to print the STL file, there's almost no tolerances to interconnect each components. There's also a lot of components to print. You'll a bit of sanding (or scaling) of parts to do to make it all fit together. My Dremel is getting a good workout from this project!
I'll have to try that at work! I've been wanting some kind of classic Mac emulation for years, so I can show kids Mouse Intro and all that cool stuff! Thanks for giving us the image file!
I am not a MAC person but I have to say that's wicked cool. There is something about putting a Pi in a custom case and having it emulate what the case represents. I did download the files and will get around to printing a MAC Case although it going to take a long long long time to print one of those puppies.
I don't know how I did it, but somehow ended up at your archive for your modified OS, and completely missed this video. This is absolutely FANTASTIC!!!!! I'm still experimenting with your OS tweak, hopefully I can get it working for the PowerBook modification that I hope to get out this weekend. Once again, a great video!!!
This is so cool. Always loved that case design, and the blue and white colors of the G3 version in particular. Very nice how you got it to boot straight into OS 9 with no intervention. Makes me wish my Dual 450 G4 still worked. I was always impressed with how responsive and usable those old dual processor Macs were, even a decade later. Systems these days are so hilariously powerful yet feel bogged down all the time thanks to bloated, poorly optimized software. Early versions of OS X were just so futuristic feeling back in the day, and such an improvement over classic Mac OS in virtually every way. Great video, and a very well executed mini G3.
the M1 Mac mini´s motherboard is really small, so it should, or you can just upscale the case design, but i designed it to use fillement for the hinge, thats the only real problem that might occure
Oh man! I've been making a Mini Mac Plus with a RPI 3+!! This couldnt have come at a better time! Gonna snag your image and switch out the ppc emulation with 68K! Thank you so much!
Great video! Very impressive, seamless experience! I tried to run Mac OS X for PPC on a modern Intel Core i5 laptop, and it was just as slow as on RPi. I suppose this is because QEMU cannot provide hardware acceleration for Mac OS X interface, due to which it has to use software rendering of the interface - which is not going to be fast even on a Core i9 :) One suggestion: have you tried to use Sheepshaver instead of Qemu? It can only emulate Mac OS 9, but it seems to be doing it quite a bit faster than QEMU.
Yea they do, they even have the option to have a software-based power button. Not sure why he didn't do that instead of making such a jank spliced power cable.
I printed a g5 case and stuck a raspberry pi 4 in it, also stuck a case fan if you could say that, the slider to remove the pi works as an air oath towards the front vent which is pretty cool.
This is really cool! Some well-intentioned constructive feedback: rubber bands degrade over time, lose their elasticity, and eventually break down into a sticky mess. Small springs, though harder to implement, will last forever. Also, it's been shown that acetone vapor baths can smooth the striations from 3D printing. This also leaves some shine to the plastic, which IIRC, was present on the actual case. Again, I think this is awesome and could truly be a well-received early prototype of a retail product, even (if licensing could be obtained).
Hey Thalamus, the reason i designed it with rubberbands, was to simplefy the construction of it, since more or less everyone has acces to them, compared to springs, but i dont think it might be imposible for me, to redesign the mechanism, to use springs instead ^^
I thought the case was cool but when you made it basically indistinguishable from a Mac by altering Linux, it became amazing. This is so awesome it’s not even funny
I'm glad you have the patience to setup QEMU, because I honestly have no patience for it. Maybe if it had a worthwhile Windows frontend then I'd use it more...
This is super cool. It will probably run a lot better on a newer Pi too. It would also be pretty cool to do something like this with a Mac Mini G4 logicboard...
Definitely gives me a reason to buy a raspberry pi now though. Might even become my daily use pc. Haha. Especially with Michael MJD just posting a video recently on his channel about the old net content, including a proxy that can be set so you can browse the web like back in the G3s day. 😁
I’d be curious to see the performance on a Rasp Pi 4. I have a 3B laying around and am considering using your disk image. I was literally looking for an image like this. Thanks for your hard work
I'm sure you could edit the 3d model to support something like the NUC, and then you could actually power a macintosh competently. not a bad attempt though.
This is super cute. I'm extremely fond of that case print, it came out beautiful! Though I can't help but feel a little cheated that it's a Pi, and not some crazy "Honey I shrunk a real G3 into here" :(
A later Power Mac G4 running Mac OS 9 is probably one of the best performing and easiest to setup retro gaming machines. I do have a Windows 98 rig but it was a huge pain to set up without all kinds of errors and other crap. Compare that to the Mac, which was just install Mac OS, install games, run games and have fun.
There's actually a mini Mac replica released back in the 90s sold as a playset for American Girl dolls, which a certain hardware hacker modded to actually run Mac OS via an ODROID.
You might want to put a flyback diode on the fan circuit. When those fans stop spinning on power down, they'll throw power back onto the line when the magnetic field on the coils of those fans collapses, causing a sudden spike that stresses the power circuitry of the Pi. It's okay for a while, but it does wear it down overall.
Man that is awesome! Would be cool to reprint the access panel so it could fit a 1st gen PowerPC G4 MacMini motherboard. Then it would really be a PowerMac!
I'll have to try and print this. I also have a Raspberry Pi or two lying around unused. I think there are some miniature mice and keyboards that might pair well with this.
Cool project to make a old Mac for those who don't have it and cannot afford it. Maybe there's a better distro for this so can run better. Or something like with batocera that's just for the task need. I love this project. I wish I had so many raspberry pies, I just have old x86 pc
One minor correction, we used crt monitors in the 90s except when they were attached to laptops. LCD desktop monitors weren’t really common until they became more cost effective in the 2000s.
Can I suggest Twister OS? it's a native Raspbian-based distro of Linux, but it has a ton of skins, including one for Mac OS. Could make it way more usable.
What a beautiful little case. The level of detail and ingenuity behind it is top notch. Whilst it wouldn't be 'period correct' the RasPi is capable of emulating the 68K Macs at real 68K speeds using Basilisk 2 and Mini Vmac. It would certainly be much more usable than PPC emulation under Qemu. 🙂
Yeah and from what I know you could get nearly the same experience. (I did not grow up with macs so it's possible I'm wrong here.) You couldn't get system 9 but you can get system 8.
Turned out great, would be awesome to see a custom 3d printed case for that monitor to make it match the mini computer
Thanks Hugh! Yeah I'd love to figure that out, and make a casing like the original blueberry Apple Studio Display
@@ActionRetro you should get a 3d printer so you can make more videos like this
YES! The 15" Apple Studio Display would be *perfect* ! You know the one... the semi-translucent bondi-blue or smoke grey with the stand that telescoped up and down... one of the first LCD monitors I'd seen in a computer lab growing up... everymac.com/monitors/apple/studio_cinema/specs/apple_studio_display.html
Hugh Jeffrey's your car restoration was really good. Keep it uo
Hey it's Hugh Jeffreys
Action Retro - "Where's our miniature Macs"
Mac Mini - "I've been around since 2005!"
11 inch MacBook air: "what about me"
Maybe it's just me but I think you could probably fit the guts out of a PPC Mac Mini into this case with a bit of work. That would certainly perform better and feel more authentic. Before he said it was for a Pi I was already thinking that's what the case would be designed to hold.
@@ActionRetro lol
@@ActionRetro I have a 2015 11inch MacBook Air. 🤣
Honestly I love those 11 inch MBAs
THANK YOU FOR INCLUDING THE IMAGE!!!
You're welcome, let me know if you try it out!
@@ActionRetro I did on my 3b+ and it ran HORRIBLY it barely loaded and even when it did it crashed when I dragged a window. Also sound diddn't work for some reason.
@@dialupdave6276 try putting the sd card in your PC and commenting out the overclock options in /boot/config.txt - the 3b+ usually can't handle overclocking from what i understand
@@ActionRetro I attempted this as well and disabling it still didn't improve load/run times. Just another nudge to upgrade to pi4?
@@SatanicMac i think so 😂
Dude, this is awesome :D im glad you like the design, i spend a lot of time getting the curved "handles" and the opening to be like the real PowerMac G3
It's so good man! Thanks for making it!!
@@ActionRetro thanks, and you´re welcome ^^
Now if only we could build a case that turns this little LCD into a blueberry Apple Studio Display 🤔
Morning, can you build me one of these?
think you'd be willing to post the 3d files so we can print this design at home?
This is really good ! I don't know who impresses me the most - the "Craft Dude" who did the case - and he has done many other projects at the Thingverse - or what you've done to make the "RaspIntosh" work. Well done both ! And kudos to Taylor !
That case is awesome! The use of rubber bands in place of springs is very creative. Yes, it's rubber which will break down eventually, but still! It just needs a tiny internal ZIP drive (COUGH COUGH SD CARD reader...)
i did this on purpese when i designed the case, since i thought, that not everyone might have acces to springs, but rubberbands are everywhere
You can buy durable EPDM synthetic rubber bands, and where suitable length/diameter O-rings can replace bands use that even higher end but cheap option and with some color choice.
to the guy who made that case: "Shut up and take my money!" Also the fan has a blue LED in it. I guessed at 7:24.
I second this ;) Would totally buy one :)
Agreed. 😩 I want one so bad. And he's posted the design docs, but I don't have a 3D printer. 😭
I would love to buy this, my 3d printer isn't big or accurate enough!!
Thanks KOSMOS1701A, im happy that you like the design ^^ it took forever to design the curved "handles" and locking mechanism
@@Rune2650 Amazing Work :) If you ever get brave enough, I'm sure it would sell like fire ;) I know I would buy a few :)
We need a G4 Mac reproduction motherboard, cool fact: someone on the 68KMLA forums is already developing a Mac SE motherboard. He’s trying to reverse engineer it and he’s gotten pretty close actually.
Woah, that’s wild! What does it involve?
O would be cool a Raspberry PI CM4 board for example that fits a G4 case
@@MaxOakland He has a few videos but they're unlisted, I'll try to post them in some time
MacSEReloaded is what his project name is? Right now he got some wonky checkerboard or something?
Actually it seems someone (a company called Bomarc Services) reverse-engineered quite a few Macs way back in the 90s and now all the schematics are available online.
Never mind, I found that thread! He's doing an SE board, and only the board itself in order to save broken SEs, mainly boards that have battery damage. The board has quite a few custom chips that have to be harvested from an existing board, so no new SEs to come anytime soon.
The thread is in the "Hacks & Development" section and it's called "Reverse Engineering the Macintosh SE PCB & Custom Chips for 1:1 reproduction".
We're one step closer to having mini iBook Clamshells.
Mini? We need life sized modern spec ones!
@@laurensnieuwland4657 I agree and in the same colours. Indigo is my favourite.
@Monochromatik-Vision nope, it's quite possible to 3d print/machine a housing for loose iphone parts. It might not match completely, but it would kinda work.
Yes I always wanted one. Even the ones that had the pen
@@laurensnieuwland4657 the holy grail, I still have mine in a cupboard juuust waiting
Brings a new meaning to 'Mac Mini' 😂
Introducing the new Mac Micro
(Granted: I don't think it's TOO much smaller than a Mini, but still)
@@BrightSpark *has flashbacks to the Mactini*
Actually yes. Sure TheC64-Mini and all that have come the last few years and stuff.... But Apple were in a sence, the first ones. Just, they did not do replicas as mini editions. So in a way yes, and in a way no. Depends on how you look at the words.
Mac Nano
@@macinjosh2223 just one, simple button
Okay, now I am curious how much better my Pi 4 will perform with this image!
Oh nice let me know how it does!
@@ActionRetro I just gave it a quick test, unfortunately it seems to hang shortly after the initial fake Happy Mac, and gets stuck in a terminal window. I didn't have the time to do any troubleshooting myself yet, and I didn't memorize the error message, but I will return to it when I have the time, and hopefully provide some more useful info.
@@BrightSpark I had to change the overclock and voltage settings in the config, but it'll run about the same as it does on the Pi 3.
Just a heads up to anyone wanting to print the STL file, there's almost no tolerances to interconnect each components. There's also a lot of components to print. You'll a bit of sanding (or scaling) of parts to do to make it all fit together. My Dremel is getting a good workout from this project!
I'll have to try that at work! I've been wanting some kind of classic Mac emulation for years, so I can show kids Mouse Intro and all that cool stuff! Thanks for giving us the image file!
I laughed when i saw that it looks soo cool
Haha thanks!!
That print is crazy good holy cow
It's amazing how much graphics acceleration makes a difference. Love your videos!
This is amazing, thank you for the image as well. I'm going to try this out myself!
The only thing missing is a clear case for the display. Maybe can be produced using vacuum forming method
That is brilliant all around!!
I need to see this with a pi 4 what a great project. Great vid as always.
I am not a MAC person but I have to say that's wicked cool. There is something about putting a Pi in a custom case and having it emulate what the case represents. I did download the files and will get around to printing a MAC Case although it going to take a long long long time to print one of those puppies.
I don't know how I did it, but somehow ended up at your archive for your modified OS, and completely missed this video. This is absolutely FANTASTIC!!!!! I'm still experimenting with your OS tweak, hopefully I can get it working for the PowerBook modification that I hope to get out this weekend. Once again, a great video!!!
Oh nice, looking forward to it!
That case is so cool, being 3D printed is even more cool.
Your channel is truly incredible.
Thanks Jeff!!
I would love to buy one of those little cases!
This is so cool. Always loved that case design, and the blue and white colors of the G3 version in particular. Very nice how you got it to boot straight into OS 9 with no intervention. Makes me wish my Dual 450 G4 still worked. I was always impressed with how responsive and usable those old dual processor Macs were, even a decade later. Systems these days are so hilariously powerful yet feel bogged down all the time thanks to bloated, poorly optimized software. Early versions of OS X were just so futuristic feeling back in the day, and such an improvement over classic Mac OS in virtually every way. Great video, and a very well executed mini G3.
I wonder if there’s enough room in there to fit the innards of an M1 Mac mini.
the M1 Mac mini´s motherboard is really small, so it should, or you can just upscale the case design, but i designed it to use fillement for the hinge, thats the only real problem that might occure
What an adorable little thing!
Hah! I JUST found the STL files for this the other day. 😂 I’ll keep this video in mind when I decide to finally do something with it. Thanks, man! ✌🏽
This is AMAZING! Any thoughts of building an OS9 image for RasberryPi 4? I would contribute money to the efforts.
Thanks Steven! The linked SD image should work on a Pi 4 with no issues! In fact, it should be way faster!
Oh man! I've been making a Mini Mac Plus with a RPI 3+!! This couldnt have come at a better time!
Gonna snag your image and switch out the ppc emulation with 68K! Thank you so much!
Oh woah, I'd love to see it when it's done!
@@ActionRetro Absolutely! I'll post some pictures when its ready! :D
@@ActionRetro Hey So i cannot seem to get that image to boot. Just sits at the happy mac forever :( Any ideas?
fixed it. win32diskimager was not writing the image correctly. BalenaEtcher works!
@@ale6242 Woohoo!
Great video! Very impressive, seamless experience!
I tried to run Mac OS X for PPC on a modern Intel Core i5 laptop, and it was just as slow as on RPi. I suppose this is because QEMU cannot provide hardware acceleration for Mac OS X interface, due to which it has to use software rendering of the interface - which is not going to be fast even on a Core i9 :)
One suggestion: have you tried to use Sheepshaver instead of Qemu? It can only emulate Mac OS 9, but it seems to be doing it quite a bit faster than QEMU.
I would love a 3d printed Bondiblue iMac. I miss those so much.
Don’t those PIs have the capability to power them from one of the headers? Would make it tidier
Yea they do, they even have the option to have a software-based power button.
Not sure why he didn't do that instead of making such a jank spliced power cable.
I printed a g5 case and stuck a raspberry pi 4 in it, also stuck a case fan if you could say that, the slider to remove the pi works as an air oath towards the front vent which is pretty cool.
Dude. DUDE. D U D E.
I'm back to 2000 when I was working in a print shop. FINALLY I can put my MacOS sound themes, and run QuarkXPress again.
This is really cool! Some well-intentioned constructive feedback: rubber bands degrade over time, lose their elasticity, and eventually break down into a sticky mess. Small springs, though harder to implement, will last forever. Also, it's been shown that acetone vapor baths can smooth the striations from 3D printing. This also leaves some shine to the plastic, which IIRC, was present on the actual case. Again, I think this is awesome and could truly be a well-received early prototype of a retail product, even (if licensing could be obtained).
Oh thanks for those suggestions! Springs are such a good idea!
Hey Thalamus, the reason i designed it with rubberbands, was to simplefy the construction of it, since more or less everyone has acces to them, compared to springs, but i dont think it might be imposible for me, to redesign the mechanism, to use springs instead ^^
what a incredible build !That would be a cool addition to go with my PowerMac G3.....
Is there a SheepShaver version for the Pi? Also is there a performance difference in speed?
Was wondering that too. I wonder which is better QEMU or Sheepshaver
I'm guessing the fan has PWM control or it can light up
I was right! Also you can power the Pi through the GPIO header to avoid the cable sticking out the back.
It's so cute!
it would be really cool if you put a mainboard from a macmini in this case and have a real mini Powermac
Nice idea!
I thought the case was cool but when you made it basically indistinguishable from a Mac by altering Linux, it became amazing. This is so awesome it’s not even funny
This is fantastic! Thank you for posting this!
Great project ! You have to add a G3 logo on the sides
I love the Raspintosh name!!!
That just realy neat and cute. Awesome idea and great video
Totally awesome 🤩. Well done.
Best Pi case ever! If the creator decides to take orders I will buy one today!
What brand was used for the translucent prats?!
I'm glad you have the patience to setup QEMU, because I honestly have no patience for it.
Maybe if it had a worthwhile Windows frontend then I'd use it more...
that is very slick, i kind of wonder what sort of performance a pi4/8gb model would give in os10
Back in the day all fans were really whiny so this is perfect.
This is super cool. It will probably run a lot better on a newer Pi too.
It would also be pretty cool to do something like this with a Mac Mini G4 logicboard...
Light up G3 (Mini) tower. Jay will be proud of you!
🤣
Simply amazing, as always!! Loved it!!
Totally awesome.
That’s really really cool.
It's GREAT!!!. I hope the G3 case fits for STX board.
I'm looking for the STX case like this.
Definitely gives me a reason to buy a raspberry pi now though. Might even become my daily use pc. Haha. Especially with Michael MJD just posting a video recently on his channel about the old net content, including a proxy that can be set so you can browse the web like back in the G3s day. 😁
This was so rad! I need a mini g3 tower now! Sooo cool
Finding the best cheap(ish) SBC for a Mac emulator would be a great project. Have you tried it with the Pi4?
What's that small mointor that you use? Where to get it?
I’d be curious to see the performance on a Rasp Pi 4. I have a 3B laying around and am considering using your disk image. I was literally looking for an image like this. Thanks for your hard work
Where is that monitor from? 😊
I'm sure you could edit the 3d model to support something like the NUC, and then you could actually power a macintosh competently. not a bad attempt though.
That is SO cool!
This is so cool !! Really want to build a Macintosh Classic.
This is super cute. I'm extremely fond of that case print, it came out beautiful! Though I can't help but feel a little cheated that it's a Pi, and not some crazy "Honey I shrunk a real G3 into here" :(
A later Power Mac G4 running Mac OS 9 is probably one of the best performing and easiest to setup retro gaming machines. I do have a Windows 98 rig but it was a huge pain to set up without all kinds of errors and other crap. Compare that to the Mac, which was just install Mac OS, install games, run games and have fun.
Does he print in graphite color as well?
This is so neat. Any chance of a copy of your vm?
hey what wallpaper do u use i like it and want to use it
Why not a Macintosh color? Or something that runs a m68k proccesor?
There's actually a mini Mac replica released back in the 90s sold as a playset for American Girl dolls, which a certain hardware hacker modded to actually run Mac OS via an ODROID.
is there an image for regular 64-bit pcs? and if not, can you make one?
You might want to put a flyback diode on the fan circuit. When those fans stop spinning on power down, they'll throw power back onto the line when the magnetic field on the coils of those fans collapses, causing a sudden spike that stresses the power circuitry of the Pi. It's okay for a while, but it does wear it down overall.
oh thanks!
Fan lights up?
Can this be done with an early OS, like System 6 or 7?
Probably yes, and would run more smoothly than the OS9 installed here.
I’d buy that! Would love a G4. Painted mine black and white back in the day
Man that is awesome! Would be cool to reprint the access panel so it could fit a 1st gen PowerPC G4 MacMini motherboard. Then it would really be a PowerMac!
I'll have to try and print this. I also have a Raspberry Pi or two lying around unused. I think there are some miniature mice and keyboards that might pair well with this.
Nice! I'd love to find some suitably mini peripherals for this!
@Action Retro Any chance you could post how you got aplay to play the sound file at start?
Cool project to make a old Mac for those who don't have it and cannot afford it. Maybe there's a better distro for this so can run better. Or something like with batocera that's just for the task need. I love this project. I wish I had so many raspberry pies, I just have old x86 pc
How did you make it so you can reboot into macOS X directly from 9
Please make a tutorial to hide RaspPiOS and do a seamless boot, since I really want to make an iBook G3 Clone.
One minor correction, we used crt monitors in the 90s except when they were attached to laptops. LCD desktop monitors weren’t really common until they became more cost effective in the 2000s.
Can I suggest Twister OS? it's a native Raspbian-based distro of Linux, but it has a ton of skins, including one for Mac OS. Could make it way more usable.
This is really neat. How about a miniature Apple IIgs setup…now THAT would be wicked!
That’s really cool.
Noctua fan - problem solved. Sloves this setup -- i want one!
Someone did one for the g4 cube, can you take a look?
Wow this mini monitor is so cool lol
I would love to know how you get it to show the boot screen so early. I can't get mine any sooner than 8 seconds after power on.
Are you using this disk image? Or is it something you're working on?
I’d love to see this mini power Mac fully maxed out
needs a miniature ATI Rage 128 lol
Downloading the image now!
Awesome gunna print this off thanks
Man thats pretty neat.
What a beautiful little case. The level of detail and ingenuity behind it is top notch. Whilst it wouldn't be 'period correct' the RasPi is capable of emulating the 68K Macs at real 68K speeds using Basilisk 2 and Mini Vmac. It would certainly be much more usable than PPC emulation under Qemu. 🙂
Yeah and from what I know you could get nearly the same experience. (I did not grow up with macs so it's possible I'm wrong here.) You couldn't get system 9 but you can get system 8.
I was on the fence on what kind of case I wanted for my Raspberry Pi, I don't need to choose anymore.