![]() I should try to replace the capacitors of these machines, but I'm saving that for when I get the Mac fever again. The Mac SE/30 on the right has died by now, the IIci in the middle works but has some problems starting up, while the Classic on the left still works perfectly. Here's three of my machines sitting together in my old room: I got most of them able to connect to the internet, either directly or through a connection with another Mac, and with a couple of ancient browsers you can actually get Google to work. My father still had his old Macintosh LC II lying around, so you can count that one too. In about two years time, I managed to collect a Macintosh ED (512ke for education), a Macintosh Classic, a Macintosh IIci, a Macintosh SE/30 and a Macintosh Plus. ![]() ![]() But once the word was out that I was busy with old Macs, they started popping up around me everywhere and a collection soon became inevitable. I started out just wanting to make back-ups of all the old floppies and applications we used to have back in the day, so I could run them in an emulator. Up until about a year ago I was into classic 68k Mac collecting. ![]()
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