Cube + old FireWire 400 Companion Iomega Drive + OWC SATA enclosure chained with FW400-FW800 cable.
Only role of the the Iomega so far is to make the OWC enclosure +SSD work reliably on the Cube. It provides sufficient FireWire power I guess.
Now can boot Sorbet Leopard from FireWire SSD and Classic Mac OS 9.22 from internal IDE drive (fast enough really).
Also discovering hotline which I never used back in the days. Is it archeology or piracy ?
@santiago
> from internal IDE drive (fast enough really)
When I boot an old Mac from its internal "spinning rust" drive, I get the vibes that it has an SSD — simply because having bazillion things running in the background simply wasn't common back in the days, so starting them up didn't take forever 😂
@m0xee Same. I was running OS 9 on this (very fast) Cube yesterday and really everything responds well from the internal IDE. Different times. Booting OSX 10.5 (Sorbet) really needs an SSD not to feel sluggish.
Of course the dream stops when you need a modern browser on the modern web. It simply is much faster to launch Virtual PC and run windows (98!) apps emulated than try reading the news on a “normal” 2024 site.
@santiago
Yes, and TenFourFox was never exactly stellar in terms of performance, it feels sluggish even on my PowerMac G5 Dual.
I used to be able to make music — including recording a couple of instruments at 48 kHz applying effects in real-time on my PowerPC Mac Mini, now I doubt I would be able to even read the news using a more or less modern browser on that machine.
The Web is one of the worst offenders when it comes to making machines obsolete.
@m0xee In retrospective one of the companies that pushed intensively for more complex web apps was Google. Incidentally they are mostly a large ad company which profits from this. Then they made a mobile operating system probably with the same intent.
Not that others wouldn’t do the same. I blame capitalism as usual for the death of the good old web 🤷🏻♂️
@santiago
True, people were greeting Google with open arms in hopes that it would help strip Microsoft of their market dominance, not realizing they were falling into a new trap, probably even more cunning than the old one. In the end Google just took MS' place and some realized it all too late.
But I remain positive, we have lots of decentralized alternatives now and Gemini gives me lots of old Web vibes, having enough content to not feel like a ghost town.
@santiago
Yep, now on checkout I have to scan a QR code with a phone that has to be connected to the Internet to enjoy the same discounts that I used to just carrying a piece of plastic with me — there are certainly people who are always online and always have their phone with them, who might like it, but to me it feels totally dystopian, and they probably don't even realize it 🫠
But in any case, I think there are more good things than bad ones 😁