Fans have made paper models of just about every Macintosh computer ever built, dozens in all
Published:
6 January 2002 y., Sunday
Last year, Mike Burgess ordered a PowerMac G4 Cube from Apple's website. But he was so impatient for it to be delivered, he made a cardboard replica while he waited for the real one to arrive.
"I am so excited about the new Cube that I had to see what it would look like in person!" he wrote in a note to MacAddict, where he posted plans for his cardboard Cube so that others could do the same.
Burgess made his cardboard machine from a 3-D model of the computer he found on Apple's website. Apple posted the 3-D model in QuickTimeVR format to allow potential buyers to spin the Cube around in three dimensions and see it from all angles.
Working with the 3-D model, Burgess extracted a detailed photograph of each side of the machine. He printed them out one by one on card stock and glued them together. The results were impressive: an accurate facsimile of the silvery Cube, which he placed on his desk.
Burgess wasn't the first person to make a detailed paper model of his beloved Macintosh. In fact, making paper models of Macintosh computers is almost as old as the Macintosh itself. The first Mac was launched in 1984; paper models of the machines appeared only a year or two later.
Since then, making faux Macs from paper has flourished into a hobby all its own. Fans have made paper models of just about every Macintosh computer ever built, dozens in all. The models range from Apple's earliest machines –-Apple IIs and all-in-ones such as the Mac SE, Plus and Color Classic –- to the latest G4 desktops and iMacs. Fans have even created a model of the Pippin, Apple's doomed foray into Internet appliances.
Šaltinis:
wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Indian memory trainer, Neerja Roy Chaudhry, has taken cutting edge innovation to a new level.
more »
Nobody knows why Ralph the penguin had such a bad hair day. But when all his feathers vanished in one go his keepers had to act quickly.
more »
This is the first time these tiny young cubs have met the outside world. They are extremely rare baby Asian lions and the first to be born in the London Zoo in ten years.
more »
Jitendra is about to start a long uncomfortable ride on a motorbike up a ladder and all in a name of earning himself a world record.
more »
No one provides more aid to developing countries than the EU – 60% of all global aid in 2008.
more »
The results of Michael Jackson's autopsy are are scheduled to be released this week, according to law enforcement sources.
more »
Lunar dust, star charts, and the astronauts' checklist -- it's moonwalk memorabilia for sale at Bonham's auction house in New York, marking the 40th anniversary of man's first steps on the moon.
more »
India's oldest practising advocate - 99 years old Lawyer Shivram Abhyankar - has been honoured at a ceremony this week in the Indian city of Pune.
more »
Day One of Spain's famous San Fermin festival was over in two-and-a-half minutes.
more »
First missiles, then nuclear tests, now North Korea is proud to present its very own - beer. Communist North Korea's latest launch is sure to cause much frothing.
more »