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Random Access Memories (1998) – Apple iMac

The original "Bondi Blue" version of the iMac G3

Image: Stephen Hackett via Wikimedia Commons, CC-by-SA

It wasn’t just the iMac. Remember when all techy kit had to have a transparent blue shell?

Bondi blue, thank you. And at the time, this made the iMac, unlike any computer you’d ever seen. Until then, desktop PCs had been boring and beige – even Apple’s. The iMac was different. You wanted to show it off. Geeks could peer at its innards, while normal people would be intrigued by a piece of tech actually designed for real humans. Well, apart from the hockey-puck mouse. Steve Jobs claimed it was “the coolest mouse on the planet”. It wasn’t. It was awful.

But not as awful as the beige PC I later saw with a lump of blue plastic glued to it…

Indeed. Foreshadowing the next 25 years of tech, industry detractors mocked the iMac. No floppy drive! USB!  Unnecessary expensive parts like fast networking, a display that wasn’t terrible, and speakers that actually allowed you to listen to music! And then, when Apple cleaned up, these rivals only saw what was on the surface.  Apple was looking to the future and ditching legacy junk; PC folks merely stuck plastic parts to creaking tech and sat there baffled when that quick fix didn’t lead to sales and awards flooding in.

And it wasn’t just computers – wasn’t there even a transparent blue iron?

Oh, the game was up when home appliances got in on the act. Even Apple took things too far with hideous ‘Blue  Dalmatian’ and ‘Flower Power’ iMac cases in February 2001, before going boring with duller hues later that year. Fortunately, having reimagined the PC once, Apple kept rethinking the iMac – first with a model that looked like a Pixar movie escapee, and most recently with the refined 2021 redesign. And each has stayed true to the original iMac’s ideal: a computer for the rest of us that doesn’t skimp on what matters.

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