I spent many happy hours tinkering with it and trying to find software that was supported on a device that old. It didn't take a lot of power either some 60 watts at full load, so that was a bonus. It was sedate but reliable, and I was happy.
The OS X version was 10.4.7 Tiger, and the architecture was Power PC. Nobody answered, so I placed a last-minute bid, won it, and invested about the same sum of money again in bumping the memory up to 1GB and buying the OS on DVD. 'What have I got to lose, especially at that price?' I asked myself. It was new back in 2005 but had apparently been refurbished. I swore never to 'invest' in an Apple machine again-until I discovered a used Mac Mini PowerPC on eBay that could be had for around $100 in 2012. Whitepaper: Data-intensive intelligent applications in a hybrid cloud blueprint.eBook: Running Kubernetes on your Raspberry Pi.Getting started with Raspberry Pi cheat sheet.Running Kubernetes on your Raspberry Pi.A practical guide to home automation using open source tools.6 open source tools for staying organized.An introduction to programming with Bash.A guide to building a video game with Python.