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Use PowerPC for a week?

tanuki65

Well-known member
Wondering if I could challenge myself to use only PowerPC for a week?

Things I do:

  • Watch YouTube (I'm thinking MacTubes/YouView)
  • Browse the Web
  • Edit video and upload it to YouTube (1080p HD)
Could I? If so, what computers (PowerBook G4 might be good)

 

CC_333

Well-known member
With the latest PPC Flash player (modified to report the latest version number of its Intel counterpart) and TenFourFox, my 1.33 GHz 12" PBG4 running Leopard was quite competent, if not somewhat pokey.

I used Safari to play normal YouTube (because TTF won't), and it worked surprisingly well (with the quality settings at minimum, of course), and VLC to play everything else (which did well except for some really big HD720 stuff).

While I'd rather not use it for daily stuff, I probably could if I had no other choice, since it does pretty much 95% of what I'd want a computer to do.

The only big thing I'd miss is the inability to run Pro Tools or any other high-end, relatively current DAW software. I suppose I could find an old version of PT for PPC, though, but it's not worth the bother for me (for now).

c

 

TheWhiteFalcon

Well-known member
TFF plays YT in HTML5. Not amazing but it plays.

Well, audio plays. Video is about 5FPS. That's on an anemic 867MHz 12" PowerBook though.

 

Schmoburger

Well-known member
The stomping of the various YT frontends was a direct result of the API changeover, yes... a month ago, they all still worked. I hate Youtube a whole lot, not gonna lie.

But anyway, pertaining to the original subject matter, whilst not wanting to detract from the intent, this isnt as much of a challenge as it might seem. Any new-world G3/4/5 machine can be used fairly functionally still if it has the resources to run 10.4 or if you are willing to run OS9 or programs in Classic mode.

Due to the number of die-hard PPC advocates, there are a lot of open-source solutions around still being developed particularly for the G5 world where the abrupt Intel switch and subsequent rapid deprecation of support by Apple and third party vendors hit hardest. Indeed the G5 is still a quick machine 10 years later and I use a 2.0 Dual-Core  daily, with the only problem I face (aside from the small, and in my applications irrelevant, issue of security risks) is that I can't use Skype, and that really isnt a problem either as I stopped using it around 7 years ago anyway. As far as video-editing, Youtube playback, browsing etc goes, it's a walk in the park, and many other things are just as much a breeze with a multi-core or multi-CPU G5-based machine. So whilst this would be your best bet for pure functionality, as far as being a challenge goes, it really is a bit of a non-event.

Any faster G4-based machine set up right can still be fairly comfortably used as they will run 10.4 fairly well and therefore it is still fairly easy to find relatively current or still-maintained software in the open-source spaces, You can still do most things, although Youtube will likely be a bit of a dog on the slower end of the quick G4 machines... other than that though it still will be not overly challenging with fairly basic needs in mind, simply a little slower than you are used to. Slower G4-based machines or the quicker G3 machines are a bit more borderline, simply by virtue of 10.4 runs terribly on slower machines particularly those with modest graphics performance. That being said, I only recently retired my Yikes G4 to secondary duties as it still performed well until the web got so fat that I needed TFF or Clasilla to browse it, which required 10.4, which is quite a poor experience even with a  500Mhz Sonnet upgrade and RAM maxed to 1Gb. Add to that, TFF was unstable at the time, and Classic mode is messy in my eyes, as is dual-booting, I simply opted to replace it rather than get Classilla. That being said, if it werent for that personal hang upI would still probably have kept it in service. As for video-editing, well... that's what I used it and my B+W tower for and they did the job well and still would now within reason, given enough hard drive and RAM to do so.

If you wanted a particularly challenging challenge that is still , I would suggest either using a 600Mhz G3 iMac or icebook as they give you a reasonable (by G3 standards) level of performance, and are bootable from OS9 to OS X10.4 meaning you have a fair scope of versatility with which to taylor the machine to meet your desired outcome, whilst still running within some fairly restrictive and largely insurmountable  hardware limitations that will test your ability to set the machine up efficiently and also test your patience during the usage period.

That being said, as I said there are lots of options available to keep some very old machines viable so whilst not wanting to play down your intentions, it isnt so much the actual use of the machine that would be the challenge, but more setting it up to acheive the desired outcomes with reasonable efficieny and reliability. For what it is worth my 17 year old Powermac 9600 is still a fast and sturdy machine for daily use with some well-selected upgrades and software and has the ability to do most things I do with the G5 on a daily basis (not Youtube just yet)... even to edit video if I really please. Hell, I used a 7600 for exactly that task many years ago. :) Nowadays, the use of the machine is really not a challenging experience as under OS9 it is nearly as fast as the G5, and I actually use the 9600 regularly. However setting it up to be a functional secondary daily driven machine would have been the challenging part if I had to do it all from scratch (which luckily I didnt entirely have to), as even the simplest of upgrades that make this machine a weapon (like say finding 512Mb of RAM for a beige Powermac are hard to get.

That being said, if you were to use a PM6360 for say a month for your daily computing without chucking it out the window, I'm sure I would not be the only person here whom would be suitably impressed. :)

ANyway.... there is some dreary 7am sentiment to chew on anyway. :)

 

TheWhiteFalcon

Well-known member
Really, PPC wasn't dumped after 10.5 because it was incapable, but because Apple wanted to push forward, and as much as it hurts, Snow Leopard would not have turned out as well as it did if they'd kept it PPC compatible.

 
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tanuki65

Well-known member
Would a Titanium PowerBook G4 work? 867 MHz/1 GHz. Can boot every Mac OS from 9 to 10.5!

 
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TheWhiteFalcon

Well-known member
10.4 and 10.5 won't be amazing on it since that GPU doesn't support CoreImage and it's capped at 1GB ram, but it would probably be a fairly good challenge. ;)

 

tanuki65

Well-known member
What about http://www.gainsaver.com/catalog/Detail.aspx?&CCode=1015^Apple&CCode=3398^Mac+Laptops&ACode=G4&CCode=3407^PowerBooks&cICode=43669 (US$100), then upgrade with http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Other%20World%20Computing/133SO512328L/ (US$16) and a Seagate 100GB 5400RPM ATA/IDE drive for US$25 on eBay. US$141. Sell the old iBook G3 (700MHz, Opaque 16 VRAM) that I have and make US$70, and the cost drops to US$71!

Then I'll challenge myself to do everything I do (including video editing!) on this 13-year-old machine!

Edit: And I can always sell it if I want to upgrade!

Edit #2: Oh, and I'll sell the 30GB hard drive it comes with. Another US$15-20, bringing the cost down to US$55-ish.

 
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tanuki65

Well-known member
Well I paid US$70-80 for it, like 10 months ago!

Edit: When did you buy yours?

 
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CC_333

Well-known member
I used my 1 GHz TiBook for awhile, but it got rather frustrating, because it kept kernel panicking if I did anything intensive (which brought up the temperatures, making me think it's a BGA solder issue).

When it worked, it was decent (and it played SD video rather well).

c

 

SuperToaster

Well-known member
when i use my 1.42 Ghz iBook G4 with maxed out RAM the machine does ok with youtube sometimes its a little strange though

 

rafthe030

Active member
My main machine is an upgraded Quicksilver G4, which I am using right now. With a 1.6ghz 7447A, a SATA card( with 10000rpm WD's), a Radeon 9000 and an usb card, it can handle youtube very well by using ClickToPlugin's HTML5 player in up to 480p, handle facebook and manage my ipod 4. It satisfies me  :b&w: .

 
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