Happy 40th Anniversary, Mac!

[This is an updated repost from the 25th and 30th anniversaries.]

It’s the 40th anniversary of the introduction of the first Macintosh.

I first used a Mac back in high school in New Zealand, where I volunteered as head student librarian. The school had mostly Apple IIe computers, but bought one of the newfangled Macintosh computers in 1984. It was an original 128K Mac, with a single internal floppy drive. Back then, the OS, an application, and data fit on a single 400K disk. We used MacWrite for letters and other documents, MacPaint for occasional graphics, and the OverVUE database for some records… though not a full book catalog.

I bought my first Mac four years later while at university, in 1988. It was a Macintosh Plus, one of the new platinum-colored models. And I even had a second 800K floppy drive:

Mac Plus

Later, I added an external hard drive (I think it was 10 MB, though I could be wrong), a modem, and a mageno-optical drive:

Mac Plus

Those were the days… working on a 9-inch 512 x 342 pixel monochrome display… which is actually not much more than the original iPhone screen resolution, to give some perspective.

Later I bought a Macintosh II, which I subsequently upgraded internally to be a Macintosh IIx. Then I used a number of other models provided by a Dejal client.

When my wife and I got married, Apple gave us a PowerBook 150 as a wedding present, since we had met while using Macs with the fledgling internet. Our wedding was covered on local TV news and newspapers. Yep, meeting over the internet was a novel concept back then:

PowerBook 150 and other Mac

Just before we moved to the US, we bought a clamshell iBook G3, then later an iMac G4:

iBook G3 and iMac G4

Over time, I had a PowerMac G5, a 17″ MacBook Pro, and a 27” iMac, and others. I’m currently using an M1 Pro-powered MacBook Pro.

All in all, it’s been a great 40 years. I’ve enjoyed using and owning the various Macs over this time, and developing software for them since 1988, and supporting myself as a Mac developer since 1991. I look forward to many more years. Happy birthday, Mac!

Time Out is 20 years old

I just noticed that I missed a major milestone a few months ago: my most popular app, Time Out, a break reminder tool for macOS, turned twenty years old on July 10! Its first beta release was on July 10, 2003, with the first general release on August 18.

(If you’re curious, you can see the release notes for those initial versions, and every one since then.)

To (belatedly) mark the occasion, here are some screenshots of the initial version of the app.

Firstly, the original app icon was simply a photo of my hands forming a T shape:

Time Out

Here’s a rendition of the app web page at the time; you can explore it yourself via the Internet Archive Wayback Machine (though the archived copy won’t look exactly like this):

Time Out website

And yes, the exclamation point (!) was initially part of the app name.

When you downloaded the app, it’d appear in the Finder as a disk image; the most popular distribution method at the time:

Time Out

On installing the app, you’d see the “lickable” Aqua-style General Preferences window:

Time Out

Unlike now when you can have many breaks, there were just the two that are defaults now, the Normal and Micro breaks, each with very few options:

Time Out

Time Out

When you started a break, it’d fade the screen much as now, but without customizable themes or buttons:

Time Out

These screenshots may look somewhat familiar; you can see the roots of the current app even in the first version. But the modern app has a lot more options, enabling you to customize it to suit your needs.

Happy birthday, Time Out! Going strong after 20 years — here’s to another 20!