The first computer I saw, touched, and even wrote programs for, was the Commodore PET 2001 with its 4KB RAM, built-in keyboard, and a cassette player for saving and loading programs — what today we call apps. I was captivated, and was certain I was seeing the future.
Two computers that had a big impact on Jeff's life: the Pet 2001 and Mac Quadra 610
What I couldn't understand was why the PET 2001 was kept on a cart in the math department where only a select few could see it, let alone use it. Even as a junior high school kid I knew computers should be for everyone.
In high school I got my first taste of Apple computers thanks to the Apple ][+ lab. My parents bought me a Franklin Ace 1000 my senior year, and that computer served me well through college. It was an Apple //e clone with 46KB RAM, upper and lower case text support, built-in 80-column text support, and a 5 1/4-inch floppy drive.
In college I got to see my first 128K Mac and was impressed at everything it could do, especially in such a small package. I didn't rush out and buy one for myself because my Franklin was tricked out and could do so much more and I didn't feel like I really needed a graphical interface for what I was doing.
When I had the chance to really get to work on a 512K Mac, things changed and suddenly I could do so much more. And yet I still didn't buy one. Instead, I bought an Apple //GS because it came with a powerful 68C816 processor, color graphics, great sound, a graphical interface that looked just like the Mac (but color!), and — best of all — could run all of my Apple //e programs as well as GS-native titles. At the time it felt like I was getting so much more for my money compared to the Mac.
It wasn't until it was time to replace the //GS that I finally bought my first Mac: the Quadra 610 DOS Compatible. Not only could it run all of the Mac programs of its day, but it also had a 486SX processor so I could jump between platforms with a quick keystroke. Yes, I was running Windows on a Mac in 1994.
The Quadra 610 was a little workhorse that lasted me up until I bought my PowerMac G3 tower — beige, not blue and white. Had MS-DOS not annoyed me and Windows 3.1 not been such a pain, I might've ended up buying cheap beige box PCs after that, and I'm so glad I didn't.
After the Quadra 610, I made the move to Mac laptops with the Pismo G3 PowerBook, and I haven't bought a desktop model since. I've run through several Mac laptops over the years and right now my daily workhorse is a 15-inch Thunderbolt MacBook Pro, and I have a 13-inch MacBook Air, too.
The Mac's big draw for me has always been how approachable it is. Instead of dealing with DLLs and IRQs, I was writing and recording. The Mac was simply the right tool for me.
Thanks to the Mac, I followed a path into printing and graphic design, and ultimately ended up writing about the little computer that was shaping my life. That path led me to The Mac Observer and a long list of friends that I work with, podcast with, and get to see at events like Macworld/iWorld every year.
The Mac hasn't ever been about gigahertz and specs; it's always been about empowering people to do what they do best. That's the best tool for any job, and I'm so glad Apple never gave up.
30 years is a long run for most any product, and in the computer world it's unheard of. Hopefully the past three decades have been the warm up act for the Mac and even better things are on the way.