To whom it may concern,

I figured out how to use the Curtis Roads Pulsar Generator software in OS9. There was a help document I didn’t read properly, which mentions the “synthplay” error. It didn’t quite work for me, so I got the folder zipped from someone who had it working who then sent it over. Now it chirps away.

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Bit of an odd question, and I hope it hasn’t already been asked. I am typing this on my 2019 13" macbook, because my early 2011 15" MBP succumbed to the logic board failure back in August / September. I’m really bummed, because it was such a solid workhorse and still had about 50% remaining on the hard drive! At any rate, I’m wondering if there is anything that can be done with the rest of the machine. Do people buy these on ebay? I briefly looked into replacing the logic board, but they run about $150-200 and the job is just nervy enough to make me think it’s not worth me making an attempt and failing. Cheers.

You can probably move that drive with 50% remaining into an external case, and then access it from your new computer or any other computer for that matter.

Doesn’t Apple take back their old computers? Perhaps they only do so when you buy a new one. My city has local computer recycling and refurbishing companies, any of which might be interested in your 2011 MBP. Alternatively, you could place a Craigslist ad offering the old hardware. No sense tossing those electronics in the trash, even though fixing it yourself might be way more than you want to get in to.

By the way, sometimes it’s not the whole logic board that fails, but perhaps one of the smaller boards. My very old MBP was dropped, damaging the charging input, which means that I was one charge away from permanent death, since there’s no way to run off battery or mains power if the connector doesn’t work. This turned out to be a small board with power, USB, headphones, and microphone. I found it new, online, for $60, and it was easy to replace. Of course, you may have already confirmed that your entire logic board is bad, but I just wanted to point out that there are other failures that can take out the whole laptop, even with a perfectly good logic board.

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I still have a G4 15" Powerbook from 2004. Honestly, it is really stunning that this machine still works nicely. The screen is a bit dim by current standarts but it does some jobs.

Does one know if some early versions of Max and early monome apps would run on OSX 10.4.11 ?

LC

here is Apple’s program, though I think they might take anything (?)

https://www.takebackelectronics.com/OEM-Takeback

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well…

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A buddy using my Mac SE in my college dorm room in 1988. People would line up to play Tetris on it, which, other than writing papers, was its primary use.

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Aha! Finally, a mac old enough to be one that I worked on when I was at Apple. This one ran my Sound Manager code.

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…and cool jimmy’z shirt

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Portrait of the Artist as a Young MacUser

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My first exposure to MIDI sequencers was Cakewalk running on an IBM XT as part of a class at the local community college. The second semester exposed me to Opcode Vision and this strange and marvelous program from IRCAM called Max (v0.8 iirc) running on a new SE/30. …then there was M.

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Ah, this reminds me that I need a replacement battery for my 2006 white MacBook (first generation). I retired it in 2012 when I got my current MacBook Pro… but I still have an old film scanner which works with the old computer…

Just saw this outside a trainstation, came to think about this thread.

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I’ve recently dug out my old G3 with MacOS9 and decided to get it up and running again!
Looking for recommendations for good OS9 software! I’ve got photoshop and reason on there, but hoping to dive into some more hidden gems of the software (music related or non) if anyone has any suggestions.

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i was right after you in ‘92 at Stevenson College, took intro to electronic music with Mumma. great times on unix in those days, you could write elaborate plan files and really meet people. such a cool community and i loved the feel of terminal linux, you felt smart even if you were just a casual user. i have very similar photos of my friends in surf tshirts hunkered over SEs in dorms rooms. did yours have the moose that would read text in a robot voice??

anyway, here’s my 2004 G4 tower, running Reaper really well with my 10+ yr old Maudio Delta 1010. it won’t even run Dexed so all it does is multitrack. got it for $25.
image

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yesss - 2020 and I’m still using M/cloning it in Max to future proof it!

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I don’t remember the moose! I do remember trying to put HyperCard to good use, but I never managed to sort it out properly. Played a good deal of Lode Runner on that SE, though.

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I wrote a few words on the Digidesign Samplecell, a hardware sampler on an expansion card for (really) old Macs.

https://rven.se/samplecell/

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Well this is… impractical. :smiley:

Some pretty lovely classic mac ephemera and stuff at: https://www.instagram.com/hypertalking/

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talking to some cousins
at the auto parts store yesterday…
austin’s dad fixes up old Schwinn bikes really nice
bruce’s dad was a big part of the OC Hot Rod car scene
got a new perspective on working with old Mac’s
and how it could be thought of kinda like a Hot Rod
(just like that scene, there’s many different levels
at one end, you strip it down, clean all the parts,
get new parts if necessary, put it back together
and keep it spotless for the next car show /// other cars,
might be in a constant state of repair, keep it drivable
and see how far you can take it)

I put High Sierra 10.13.6 on this MBP 2012
and now it’s rockin’ a firewire apogee duet
with this American d7t mic from the 1940’s (made in Los Angeles)
as well as Orca and Tidal at the same time
(Pilot, SuperDirt, with BlackHole)

https://www.instagram.com/p/CG7iqY_hmog/?igshid=ulrw57n7cf3s

or at least it’s cool to think of it like a Hot Rod :slight_smile:

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