It is interesting that there's no references to Inside Macintosh.
Apple did not "give away" that documentation, you had to buy it. It was published by Addison-Wesley.
I was piled into a pickup truck with five other folks, as we went up to the bay area for an early (perhaps first) incarnation of MacWorld, where we saw all sorts of wonders. But one of them, hot off the presses, one the Inside Macintosh Vol 1-3 book.
It was $80 ($250 in today's dollars), I think, and I snatched one up. Mind, it was not easy to just plonk down $80, but that the zany stuff we did back then. Boy, were computers expensive!
Hard bound, paper sleeve, beautiful text and diagrams. Very nice.
Outside of that, I really like the Macintosh Revealed books they have here.
It would be nice to see a stack of MacTech archive issues as well.
Concur. I was a young programmer and could only afford the first book. (or maybe it was volumes 1-3 together?) In any case, there were features I left out of my programs simply because I didn’t have the documentation. It really was a different world!
Ooof, I still have entirely too many of those on paper. OTOH, when you need obsolete computer reference to do some bug fixes, they can be hard to find...
I own TOI and it was interesting because Bruce was post-Apple and could tell some tales about certain things. And he was flush with Sun Microsystems cash to try some new stuff. My copy of the book came with a VHS copy of the Starfire concept video. Some interesting predictions that finally came true, 20-30 years later.
Meta MPK still has bits of Sun Microsystems logos here and there: back of the main entrance sign and some of the (repurposed) interior office window glazing.
</old-man-story>I used to care and feed a SPARCstation 2 and 4 at a nuclear engineering consultancy in the 90's. They had 128k ISDN internet access and one had expansion with commodity PC SCSI HDDs metadisked (risky like RAID0) with the existing drives.</old-man-story>
Apple's own documentation really seems to have rotted. Of course it might help if Apple cared more about compatibility so that apps wouldn't break every year...
Apple did not "give away" that documentation, you had to buy it. It was published by Addison-Wesley.
I was piled into a pickup truck with five other folks, as we went up to the bay area for an early (perhaps first) incarnation of MacWorld, where we saw all sorts of wonders. But one of them, hot off the presses, one the Inside Macintosh Vol 1-3 book.
It was $80 ($250 in today's dollars), I think, and I snatched one up. Mind, it was not easy to just plonk down $80, but that the zany stuff we did back then. Boy, were computers expensive!
Hard bound, paper sleeve, beautiful text and diagrams. Very nice.
Outside of that, I really like the Macintosh Revealed books they have here.
It would be nice to see a stack of MacTech archive issues as well.