Apple no longer manufactures or sells PowerMacs. However, they are a common item on eBay. You may also find one for sale in your local Craigslist.
every one can use a computer but if you really want to you can sing (copy me) what can do computer? who can do computer? computer looter looter looter looter! yah computer!
It is computer knowledge or knowledge about computer
Yes, computer engineers teaches computer classes.
BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER.
personal computer
The PowerMac G3 was a Macintosh computer that appeared in 1997 and was discontinued in 1999. The G3 refers to the PPC processor. It was subsequently followed by the G4, G5 and then the Intel processor based Macs. It would have limited use today being unable to run the latest versions of Mac OS X.
Yes, Apple did manufacture liquid-cooled computers. Some configurations of the PowerMac G5 computer (notably, the quad-core systems) were liquid-cooled.
You can find it in the metal box inside the computer labeled 'G5.' If you have a dual processor machine you will likely have two of these.
The G4 iMacs, with the screen on the swivelling arm, were a stand alone computer with all its workings in the domed base. It does not need anything else to work.
No the architecture is completely different on the bus.
Yes, it can, if it has Mac OS X running
40:1 is the fuel mixture per the manual
From the Apple menu (top left corner) select About This Mac. From the About This Mac window that appears click the More info... button. In the Hardware section you can find the Model Identifier (eg PowerMac 6,4) in the Hardware Overview.
The fastest PowerPC CPU used in a mass market computer was the 2.7 GHz G5 processor used in the PowerMac G5 around 2004-2005There are other variants of the PowerPC architecture at a variety of speeds.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PowerPC/Types
Steve Jobs was Chairman and CEO of Apple Inc. when the iPad, iPhone and iPod were introduced. He was not the inventor. He had input into and guided the team of developers and designers that created these products. He was one of the founding members of Apple along with Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne. During his time with Apple, the company developed: Apple I computer Apple II computer Apple IIe computer Apple IIc computer Apple IIgs computer Apple III computer Apple Macintosh (about 40 models of these) Apple iBook Apple iMac (about 15 models of these) Apple PowerBook Apple PowerMac Apple Writer and a bunch of other hardware.
A PowerMac G3 case first started life as a biege box shape, with no usb or firewire, but with scsi and ethernet ports. Later after the introduction of the iMac G3, the PowerMac G3 case was completely redesigned to match. This introduced the 'sculpted' tower in Ice Blue & White with the corners looking like handles. This case design introduced firewire 400 and usb 1 for the first time. A few years later with the vastly more powerfull G4 processors came the new Graphite coloured but with same shape, more I/O. Later case revisions include the Quicksilver G4 and the Mirrored CD/DVD trat doored versions. Check out Apples support section on the webstie for more details.
well here's the thing...ITS NOT. the hardware is very basic. I think one of them is the old powermac. The only reason why the graphics on it "looks" so good is because it has amazing software acceleration.