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RIP G4 PowerMac 187

A user writes "An a not entirely surprising move, Apple has taken the PowerMac G4 out of production (see the last few paragraphs of this interesting article in Mac Central about the new G5s.) The PowerMac G4 had continued to be in production largely for users of Mac OS 9, and it had been speculated it might be kept as a lower-end headless entry-level Mac. You can still buy them from the Apple Store, while stocks last. On a seperate note, it looks like the 3GHz G5 is a while away, and G5 PowerBooks are no nearer production."
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RIP G4 PowerMac

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @06:31PM (#9382354)
    An a not entirely surprising move

    That this post is on Apple doesn't mean that 'I' should be kicked out and replaced with an 'A'.
  • by Anonvmous Coward ( 589068 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @06:31PM (#9382362)
    "RIP G4 PowerMac"

    Apple is taking an obsolete machine out of the market, that means they're dying!!!!

    • Apple is taking an obsolete machine out of the market, that means they're dying!!!!


      Apple is taking away the only lifeline for people who use QPS (try every Gannet paper in the world). QPS only runs under OS9 because in classic mode you get sporadic corruption.

      Not that Apple should support OS9 forever, but basically they've just end-of-lifed a majority of newspaper's CMSs. This is a very big deal.
      • by Have Blue ( 616 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @09:16PM (#9383332) Homepage
        It's just as much the fault of the makers of QPS, for failing to port their product to OS X for the entire 5 years that Apple has been saying that OS 9 is a dead end.
        • by lawnboy5-O ( 772026 ) on Saturday June 12, 2004 @09:57PM (#9410095)
          QPS is OS X native as of this month. As with most of the Globe, it is the industry for workflow. Many contenders will try possibly take a little, but never achives what has been done by Quark. It great for a reason... and getting only better. You should have been at their summit this past first week of June. Other dont stand a chance; if you value the ROI on your workflow that is. They have re-invented workflow, again.
      • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Thursday June 10, 2004 @05:28AM (#9385228) Journal
        It could also mean that Tiger will have an improved Classic layer, which will be able to run QPS without problems (yes, I know it's unlikely...)
      • by b1t r0t ( 216468 ) on Thursday June 10, 2004 @11:57AM (#9388036)
        Apple has always said that they would continue to produce these machines in response to demand for them. That they've stopped producing them means that demand has dropped sufficiently for them to rely on existing stocks. So clearly, the "lifeline" isn't so important any more.
  • by ProfessionalCookie ( 673314 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @06:35PM (#9382383) Journal
    It still lives on Slashdot- actually it's the Quicksilver G4 that still exists as the Apple Desktops [slashdot.org] topic icon.

    Now that we're into the second generation of G5's I think an icon update is in order.
  • by ezraekman ( 650090 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @06:42PM (#9382435) Homepage

    When I first got my 17" Powerbook, I was dreading my inability to boot into OS 9. After the first couple of months, I stopped missing my OS 9 apps, having found better OS X replacements. Every once in a while, I'd accidentally launch a Classic app, but that was rarely an issue. The only problems I see with OS X now is that it's slightly less secure (though much more stable and powerful), and power users such as myself may run into a lack of available applications for specific tasks. (Rasterizing NOAA vector maps, for example.)

    I imagine we'll hear a few people here and there complain about needing to migrate to OS X, but I think the pros for dropping G4s from the line outweigh the cons. Besides, I have a feeling that, unless they require very specific compatibiliy with a legacy app that's no longer available, they're going to be fine. Now we're going to see price drops increase on these suckers dramatically, and suddenly a bunch of students and other low-income folks be able to afford a machine that they didn't think possible for their budget. I'll bet DealMac [dealmac.com] will be listing some price slashing within a couple of days.

    • The only thing keeping my OS 9 system folder around is my MUD client.

      The best MUD client ever written for Macintosh is Rapscallion. It hasn't been updated in like 6 years, but it still has twice the features of newer clients. (The website is at www.rapscallion.co.uk ... he's been promising to open-source the project so someone else can port it to OS X, but that message has been there over a year now and no source code in sight.)

      Anyway, when I find a MUD client as good as Rapscallion I'll delete my Class
    • ...with OS X now is that it's slightly less secure, ...

      OS-X is less secure then OS-9???
      • OS-X has preemptive multitasking, OS-9 got cooperative
      • OS-X has memory protection, OS-9 doesnt
      • OS-X has an encrypted file system, OS-9 doesnt
      • OS-9 has to be used as super-user (delete the system!), OS-X hasnt
      • etc. ...
      forget about it, OS-X is far more secure then OS-9.
      • I'm not referring to the usability of the system; I'm referring to the number of security holes found in OS X vs. the number found in OS 9. Only one of the examples you gave has anything to do with security, and that one only applies once someone has gained access to the machine in question. I'm referring to the ability to access and/or run code on a box with a basic system left to its defaults.

        I'm not aware of a method for remotely executing malicious code in OS 9 unless the user/administrator opens up

        • I'm not referring to the usability of the system; I'm referring to the number of security holes found in OS X vs. the number found in OS 9

          You can't find holes in something that doesn't exist. OS 9 had no security, hence no security holes.

      • by Anonymous Coward
        Dammit, why did I just use my last mod point modding up my friends? That'll teach me.

        Fucking dumbass, what the hell does multitasking have to do with security? Not a damn fucking thing!

        I believe what the original poster refers to is the fact that OS 9 is much more secure on the network. This is a FACT. It doesn't support telnet, ssh, etc - there's no way to get a remote shell of any sort on OS 9 to run malicious applications. You can't 0wn an OS 9 box remotely. In that sense alone, OS 9 is much more sec
        • Fucking dumbass, what the hell does multitasking have to do with security? Not a damn fucking thing!

          On OS9, because there is no preemptive multitasking, and no protected memory, *any* program can:

          • Take full control of the machine. Since the multitasking is cooperative (i.e. each program has to voluntarily give up time to other processes)
          • Read and write to other processes memory. It is trivial for any program to change another program's in-memory code, or to read sensitive information from another progra
          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by b1t r0t ( 216468 ) on Thursday June 10, 2004 @12:21PM (#9388334)
        Only because 1) there's no shell to take easy control of the system with, and 2) there's no memory protection, so buffer overflows have no way of knowing what address a given programs stack is located at.

        The system will crash rather than be taken over. So while it's more "secure" from being taken over, it would be much easier to DoS into crashing.

    • by Teancom ( 13486 ) <david&gnuconsulting,com> on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @07:11PM (#9382627) Homepage
      The biggest problem I have (and why I'm staying on OS9, at least on one machine) is the gigantic stack of kids games, all written in the mid to late '90s, that my kids love. Things like Putt Putt, Dora, Legos, Farmhouse, Math Rabbit, etc. On the other hand, even the 450Mhz G3 iMac that they're using is grossly over-powered for their needs. If it ever dies I'll just get a $100 used POS and be right back up again...

      But this is the same problem that MS faces, trying to get people off of Win98 (and 95!). You can talk about making a break with backwards compatability all you want, but in reality, stuff sticks around for *decades* after you thought it would...
      • Basilisk II (Score:3, Informative)

        by mccalli ( 323026 )
        The biggest problem I have (and why I'm staying on OS9, at least on one machine) is the gigantic stack of kids games, all written in the mid to late '90s, that my kids love.

        You might want to look at the Basilisk II [bigpond.com] port for OS X. It will emulate an old machine, and you can run up to System 8 I believe (never ran System 8 myself - I ducked out of Macs at 7.5.5 and came back in at Jaguar).

        Cheers,
        Ian

    • I had for a long time used Classic apps (from 1989-2003), but switched over to OS X when I got my new G5 in December. I didn't realize until LAST WEEK that I do not have Classic installed on my Computer. I just went and got new versions of all my apps that I really use and installed them. I was even able to find replacements for a few old games that my mom played on her home computer when I switched it to 10.3 (one had graphics done in MacPaint). I think that if you have an app that does not run well in
  • Speculation (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Goo.cc ( 687626 ) * on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @06:42PM (#9382437)
    "The PowerMac G4 had continued to be in production largely for users of Mac OS 9"

    I believe that statement is mostly speculation. There are people, like myself, who need a low cost Mac that doesn't saddle them with a built in monitor. I have a single processor 1.25ghz G4 with 2 gigabytes of RAM and I am totally happy with it.

    Hopefully, Apple will one day offer something like the eMac without a built in monitor.
    • And I've seriously considered getting one due to its internal drive storage capacity (4 hard drives, two optical drives). I've already modded the internals of my B&W G3, externalizing the power switch box, snapping out its back support, and attaching a 4-drive PC bay vertically on the drive tray.

      If I knew I could put my B&W G3's motherboard in one of those G4 cases, I would order a case as a replacement part (if they still sell them).
    • Re:Speculation (Score:4, Interesting)

      by javax ( 598925 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @07:03PM (#9382555)
      I believe there are plenty of Artists and other non-techfreaking users out there who are afraid of OS-X. They stay with what they know and what supports the application they use for years now.
      Nerds like us get the most recent OS version of whatever gets thrown at us. We even buy stuff like the BeBox or the new Amiga, that dont have any real apps.
      • Re:Speculation (Score:3, Insightful)

        by kitzilla ( 266382 )
        I think you're right. Pro graphics programs have a daunting learning curve. Most professional design-types work incredibly hard, and would rather invest their time generating work and money than learning new software.

        A wild concept, huh: people actually use their computers for WORK. ;-)

        The OS X phobes will eventually have to make the move. In the end, they'll appreciate the additional productivity of faster hardware and a more stable OS. But I understand their reluctance to switch gears.

    • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @11:09PM (#9383873)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • "Hopefully, Apple will one day offer something like the eMac without a built in monitor" I agree - an LC style (physically) machine with a 1.5GHz G4, etc would be great. Make a great headless home server and could be very low cost. --Graham
    • Re:Speculation (Score:2, Insightful)

      by beattie ( 594287 )
      Hopefully, Apple will one day offer something like the eMac without a built in monitor.

      They did and it was called "the cube."
  • by sribe ( 304414 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @06:51PM (#9382487)
    Apple's actual quote is:

    The single 1.25 GHz Power Mac G4, with suggested retail price of $1,299 (US), will no longer be in production and is available for purchase while supplies last through the Apple Store (www.apple.com), at Apple's retail stores and Apple Authorized Resellers.


    This is only the low-end of 3 configurations, leaving both dual-processor G4s still in production.
    • I bet that if Apple doesn't sell these, they will label them Limited Editions or something, jack up the price $200 and get people who bought the Virginia Tech G5s to buy these as well...
  • Dualies! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by funkdid ( 780888 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @06:59PM (#9382531)
    Every now and again Apple offers it's Power Mac line in Dual only configs. (Usually when they haven't had a speed boost to offer in awhile). I always thought that, THAT was the way to go. Maybe it's cause I'm a Mac zealot, but there's something hardcore about seeing a model that is only offered in a Dual Processor config.

    I know a lot of people that were hoping dual G4s would come down in price when the G5s came out. I think it would be nice to have a low-end *upgradeable* (not iMac or eMac) tower offering from Apple. Perhaps the G4 could have filled that niche. Dual G4s in a mini tower maybe, plus the G5 powermac. Kind of like the iBook Vs. Powerbook. (Oh yeah there isn't much difference between them now.)

    I know, I know. Apple needs to sell G5s in order for IBM to make faster ones, cheaper ones etc. Still an only dual processor offering from Apple would be neat.

  • Not surprising (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Hythlodaeus ( 411441 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @08:09PM (#9383036)
    Apple has always been certain not to offer any "new world" Macs in a tower case for less than $2000. It seems like a bad move, discouraging people from switiching into Apples, but at least they are consistent. I would have bought an Apple by now if they kept selling a Power Mac a generation or two behind in the $1000 range, but I will never buy the eMac/iMac style computers they offer for that price segment.
  • Whither the iMac? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Zhe Mappel ( 607548 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @08:32PM (#9383155)
    To summarize the main points of the Mac Central piece (from which /.'s factoid is taken):

    The G5 heatsink is too big to put in a laptop

    The G5 heatsink is too big to put in an iMac

    Putting the big G5 heatsink anwhere but inside a Power Mac is a "heck of a challenge," according to an Apple marketing director

    But we have also heard, in the past week, that the G4 iMac is no longer being shipped to Apple stores. So, is Apple just being coy here? Or is the iMac line going into hibernation?

    • Re:Whither the iMac? (Score:3, Informative)

      by lethe1001 ( 606836 )
      What are you talking about? When did anyone say that they were no longer shipping the G4 iMac?

      They stopped production of the G4 powermac, but the G4 iMac is still around

    • by Analog Penguin ( 550933 ) on Wednesday June 09, 2004 @11:44PM (#9384021)
      I haven't heard anything about the G4 iMac EOL (link?), but even if it's true, that doesn't necessarily mean G5. They could just be updating the thing with faster G4s, more memory and disk space, etc. Dualie G4 iMacs would be cool, especially given their current slow speed (1.25 Ghz? yuck), but I wouldn't count on G5 iMacs just yet. My brother has a G5, and that thing runs damn hot. I can't imagine putting it into an iMac case without a major redesign, and considering how much trouble they're having keeping up with tower production, it just seems unlikely that we're there yet.

      Consider also that for a while, Apple had "pro" processors and "consumer" processors--G3 iMacs and iBooks, G4 towers and Powerbooks. I doubt we'll be seeing G5s in the iMac before the Powerbook, at the very least.
      • Here's my source for the iMac G4 EOL claim. Granted, it's only a rumor; I should have been more specific about that.

        http://www.appleinsider.com/article.php?id=476

        In short, Apple Insider claims that Apple "has told several resellers not to expect any further shipments of its iMac G4" and that "iMac G4 inventory is nearly depleted, and it appears that manufacturing of the entire line has halted."

        Quite apart from whether that is true, your point about G5 heat is well taken. This leads me to wonder whet

      • slow speed (1.25 Ghz? yuck),

        Perhaps you could enlighten me as to what you do that needs more than 1.25GHz? I do a lot of coding and video editing on my 1.25GHz PowerBook. The incremental build features in XCode means that it spends hardly any time compiling. I sometimes have to wait for a few seconds while it renders large sequences of effects in Final Cut Express, but not very often (most things can be done in realtime).

        This is a serious question. I'd really like to be able to justify buying mysel

  • by erikharrison ( 633719 ) on Thursday June 10, 2004 @12:15AM (#9384152)
    we should say OS 9 is dead. The death of an entire OS is more notable than the change from 32 to 64 bit.
    • by krray ( 605395 ) *
      I not so sure I agree. OS 8, 7 and so forth are all "dead" ... and have been for a while. For me there was little or no interest in OS 9 for about the same reason as my interest level in Windows. Stability. Too many instances (OS 9) where I saw a single application bring the whole house of cards down (reboot).

      OS X is THE reason I use a Mac mixed with my Linux world. That is, perhaps, notable point number one. Have you compared Linux running 64 bit compared to 32? Wow. If you think OS X is nice today, on a
  • by Anonymous Coward
    By discontinuing the G4 before Microsoft has released VirtualPC for the G5, isn't Apple telling a lot of people that it doesn't want their business?

    Anyone who relies on a Windows-only product, and who could previously accommodate that need on a G4 running Virtual PC, will in the future need to buy a Windows PC.

    Unless Apple is about to announce at WWDC its own G4-friendly Windows emulation, this could be a MAJOR step backwards for Apple among cross-platform users who prefer Apple but NEED access to Windows
    • Erm... if they needed to do Windows emulation for so long, wouldn't they already have a G4?

      It's not like the G4s out there are suddenly going to forget how to run VPC, and by the time Apple runs out of G4 stock, the G5 version of VPC may very well be out.

      Honestly, if MS can't be asked to sell a few more Windows licenses for a system they'll never port to, then there's something pretty silly going on. (Remember, for most VPC users, it's a way to run Windows. MS wins.)
  • I hope I can score (Score:3, Interesting)

    by WormholeFiend ( 674934 ) on Friday June 11, 2004 @10:20AM (#9397351)
    a G4 case for cheap... would be great box to mod.

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