These are the same screams as were heard when floppies went away, and serial ports, and SCSI ports.
I knew that statement would make it into this thread at some point, as it is so often use as a weapon against others when something changes and many Mac users voice concerns about the change. But I for one don't buy into that "is the same as the floppy" argument.
Floppies are hardware. Serial and SCSI ports are also hardware. AppleTalk is software. That's a big difference. Yet another difference is that one could effectively argue that floppy drives perhaps were in some way holding back computing technology from taking a big leap forward. But can one honestly say that keeping the "software" AppleTalk protocol alive in Snow Leapord would in any significant way hold back OS X development? My personal feeling is "no." I feel that way because many decisions made at Apple under Jobs are not necessarily rooted in what you and I deem "logic" as they are rooted in what goes on inside the brain of a very talented billionaire CEO in Cupertino. But that "talent" doesn't always mean Steve does everything for the benefit of his existing customer base.
The only time I remember Apple has backed down over user protests was dropping FireWire from the MacBook. Apple responds a lot more quickly to Steve than to its users.
First of all, Apple pretty much is Steve. I say this because, when Apple does something, it's not like Mr. Jobs knows nothing about it or that he had no hand in it. Even during his recovery period and absence from Apple, he very much played at role at Apple and keep the communication with Apple execs and engineers and designers flowing. To deny this is to admit ignorance of the past and the role Mr. Jobs has played in it.
Second, as I previously mentioned in this thread (which apparently few cared very think deeply about), the OS X Beta had some unMaclike UI "features" in it which were conceived by OpenStep engineers, who by the way worked for and were closely directed by Mr. Steve Jobs himself. (Remember that Steve created NeXT after his departure from Apple in the mid-1980's and NeXTStep was the OS for Steve's new hardware there. NeXTStep later became OpenStep, ultimately purchased by Apple for a cool $400 million.) The OpenStep column-style Finder (which is one of the Finder views we still have today) and the functionless Apple logo in the middle of the menu bar were two things in the OS X Beta that caused Mac users to cry out to Apple for change. And guess what, the same engineers (again, under the close direction of the iCEO) who put the OpenStep Finder and functionless Apple logo into OS X, put back a more traditional MacOS Finder and somewhat functional Apple menu into OS X 10.0. This is a historical fact.
So to me, if one wishes to contend that AppleTalk was somehow holding back OS X development, then one should then also be inclined to contend that the legacy "Apple menu" has held back OS X from its full potential -- which would indirectly say that Steve was foolish to bowing to pressure from users in his having restored that functionality in OS 10.0. Oh my!
Steve makes more good design decisions than any other CEO I know of on the planet today. And I am so thankful that he had a hand giving birth to the computing platform we all have come to love so dearly. But that doesn't mean Steve is always right, nor does it mean that we ought to reverence and worship him so deeply that we lose our own sense of reason.
I am realistic in understanding that it is highly unlikely any manner of crying to Apple today is going to restore AppleTalk or AFP 2.x compatibility along the lines of what happened in the transition from OS X Beta to OS X 10.0. (That doesn't mean you should avoid trying though.) Even so, I side with Mac128 and others in feeling that AppleTalk is not a technology that is in any serious way holding back OS X 64-bit development. Truly, "it wasn't hurting anybody." And it is very sad to see it now gone from OS 10.6. And while some of us can avoid that axe by simply not upgrading our OS, at some point we will be forced to upgrade to 10.6 or higher as we will want to purchase a new Mac some day that will only run OS 10.6 or higher. And while we could use an old Mac (like the G4 Cube I am using now to type this post), not all people will enjoy doing that -- it's not a seamless experience and it requires physical desk and power outlet space too. Indeed, I would consider an OS 10.6 compatible emulator solution to AppleTalk to be more seamless and convenient than being forced to have a G4 Mac taking up space in my already tiny office. That is why I look forward to reading more here about what is possible in OS 10.6 via SheepShaver or Mini vMac.
As to SSD in a Cube, we've been chatting about this for quite some time over at CubeOwner:
http://www.cubeowner.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=12717&st=0