Skip to main content
6 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Feb 28 at 16:32 comment added Stefan Skoglund By that time of the Xserve, Sun's Solaris was available on the x86 and as OpenSolaris other vendors was able to with their own extensions/modifications support their customers.
Feb 27 at 18:11 comment added bjb It's funny to compare Apple hardware as "spendy" in relation to Sun or VAX kit. I adored my Sun machines back in the day, but their price tags were definitely in the high end before the low cost Ultra 5/10 came out.
Feb 27 at 16:35 vote accept Neil Meyer
Feb 26 at 19:17 comment added Adam Hyland Apple documentation has referred to it colloquially as the Blue and White G3 (support.apple.com/kb/sp133?locale=tr_TR) and websites like Cultofmac refer to the nickname (cultofmac.com/461089/…). I've never owned one but the name was familiar to me.
Feb 26 at 17:13 comment added Greenonline For those who don't know, a "Blue and White" is a Power Macintosh G3. I have had one since it was released (and still have it) and I've never heard it called that... until today.
Feb 26 at 17:11 history answered John Doty CC BY-SA 4.0