MAC Clones History: a Tale of Poor Margins and Bad Timing
Posted4 months agoActive4 months ago
tedium.coTechstory
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AppleMAC ClonesSteve Jobs
Key topics
Apple
MAC Clones
Steve Jobs
The article discusses the history of Mac clones, their rise and fall, and the discussion revolves around the impact of Steve Jobs' return to Apple and the licensing decisions on the Mac clone market.
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72-84h
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- 01Story posted
Sep 2, 2025 at 1:40 PM EDT
4 months ago
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Sep 5, 2025 at 9:26 PM EDT
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7 comments in 72-84h
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Sep 8, 2025 at 2:33 PM EDT
4 months ago
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ID: 45106429Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 4:26:23 PM
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Wow, I thought I had been a big Mac, er, addict as a kid and somehow I never heard of these except maybe the Modbook.
Anyway, my dad worked on the machines that built/tested the motherboard for motorola's clones. He'd bring home some of the broken ones that were supposed to be dumped, and he'd fix them up. I had a top-notch StarMax running some ad-hoc fixes and upgrades. Pretty sweet machine until I finally got a job and bought a Windows machine. It still works today, except that the IDE drive. I could buy a new IDE drive (if I could even find one) but the total horsepower of the machine is less than even a raspberry pi these days, and not worth the power consumption.
Do you know why? Sounds like a story everyone would be interested to hear.
When they were kicked off Apple licensing they were allowed to sell their inventory; their last ad had some police officer paraphernalia and the slogan was “We Lost Our License to Speed”.
I wanted hackintosh to work forever. I even ran one, somebody else front loaded the work to get it flying. It was a dog. It was a huge mistake. I'm glad I wound up accepting the apple tax into my life and just buying the mainline product.