Hi Chuck,

No the electrical box is for our whole house. Two 20 amp circuits feed six power strips, each with their own circuit breaker. I have been using a Mac since they first came out. We had them in our office at Illinois Bell. Eventually the whole Ameritech Corporation went with Mac. That is until somebody thought they could save money with IBM clones. So from 1984 to 1996 everything was Mac.

I won over a million award points in a company idea team program. Since my team and I had so many points they let us pick items outside of the program catalog. One team member got a mini-van! Anyway... we received many things we needed for our family. My main prize in 1988 was a Mac SE with two floppy drives, keyboard, mouse, Imagewriter II, and system software. The tab was around $1,800. I bought an Ehman Engineering two page grayscale display that worked off a special video card made for the SE. With simple word processing software (WriteNow) I was able to do many things I was not able to do before. In addition to the 2 page display I had an Ehman Engineering 20MB SCSI hard drive. That was 1988. The company found other jobs for the ladies in the typing pool since we all went to Macs.

Before retiring from Ameritech in 1996 I started collecting the older Macs no one wanted anymore. Word got out that I was collecting Macs. So people would donate their old Mac after replacing it with a newer model. Some of them are parts units for others. What you do not see in the photos are large shelving units with more macs on them. All in various stages of being updated and made to run again. I also have several Macs and a LISA II at the San Diego Computer Museum.

Some Macs are more interesting than others. Especially the Mac IIfx. It was like no other Mac and cost over $9,000. when new. It uses special memory 64 pin simms. I have some other unusual Macs, one (I cannot remember the model number right now) uses interleaving memory. The Quadra 950s have 16 simm slots inside.

I fix up beige G3s and give them to my friends that do not have computers. It is a hobby. I have been upgrading Macs since 1985. We progressed from a LISA I and 8 Mac 128s to 12 Mac 512Ke s then to Mac Pluses to Mac II s to Mac IIsi s and Mac IIci s and also Quadras.

Here in my home we have a Mac Ethertalk network with a Minolta ColorPageworks laser printer, an HP Photo printer, a HP 5M monochrome laser printer, two HP 1600 inkjets, and an Epson 1520 that works off a Beige G3 Mac server with a firewire port. We also have a Apple Airport base station that hosts a G3 powerbook (pismo). My working Mac is a Quicksilver G4. My wife uses the PowerBook a lot. My son is into film and video and audio and he uses a G5 1.6 GHz for his requirements.

Four of the older Macs have ethernet cards and can print and access the Internet via our cable modem and belkin router. We have 4 ethernet switches here to handle all the traffic. The four older macs on the network are the G3 All-in-One, The PowerMac 4400 (upgraded to a G3 240MHz), the Mac SE/30 and the Color Classic

I have a Mac LC 575 that I tried to update the color classic with but it starts to boot and bombs. I have to do more investigating. Some of the articles mention the Performa 475 and some the LC 575. Working inside the different Macs and with their different operating systems is good for my mind and my memory. I find it to be fun.

I like to help others and make Mac people out of them. Thanks to the Compact Mac list and the Low End Mac site I keep learning new things. One important thing I learned last year is to never buy batteries at Radio Shack they are way overpriced.

Hope this explains some of my hobby.

Your new found friend,

Don


On 11 Sep 2005, at 7:48 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

I'm impressed. I'm VERY impressed. The second picture shows an electrical box mounted on the wall. Was that installed to meet the demands of your fiends? :-)

I noticed you have a Color Classic. While reading up on the SE30 I noticed a link for a mod where someone upgraded a CC with Performa 475 logic board and related parts. Is that something you do with a few of your compact Mac's?

And finally, I can't help asking why you have so many and how do you use them?

Chuck


Quoting Don Robert House <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:


You are welcome.

Here are two images of my friends...





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