Sujet : Re: [NEWS] System 7 turns 35
De : enjoyasmithwicks (at) *nospam* myplace.com (Smithwicks)
Groupes : comp.sys.mac.vintage comp.sys.mac.misc comp.sys.mac.systemDate : 19. May 2026, 07:52:57
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <enjoyasmithwicks-862FB4.02525719052026@news.eternal-september.org>
References : 1
User-Agent : MT-NewsWatcher/3.5.3b3 (PPC Mac OS X)
In article <
10u3pci$3ib0u$1@dont-email.me>,
Your Name <
YourName@YourISP.com> wrote:
35 years ago, the Mac got an era-defining upgrade
-------------------------------------------------
System 7 is mostly forgotten today, but we're all still using
many of its innovations.
A lot of Mac users don't remember a time before Mac OS X (or
macOS, or OS X, depending on the era), but before OS X arrived
on the scene, the Mac ran on an entirely different operating
system, the classic Mac OS, which was with us from the Mac's
launch in 1984 through the funeral Steve Jobs held for
Mac OS 9 in 2002.
The original Mac OS evolved a lot across those 18 years. And
perhaps its single most important update, System 7, arrived
35 years ago this month, in May of 1991.
It seems like a footnote now, but so much of what we take for
granted on the Mac today was introduced in System 7. Take it
from someone who was there - I wanted System 7 so badly,
I downloaded a load of floppy disk images across my college
computer network so I could install it. And I wasn't
disappointed by what I got. System 7 really did show the way
to the future of the Mac.
Long article continues at:
<https://www.macworld.com/article/3136937/35-years-ago-system-7-era-defining-u
pgrade.html>
It really can't be understated how pivotal System 7 was to the world of
computing at large. Those major updates along the way, especially when
you have the chance to tinker around with the differences on a retro
piece of hardware via a BlueSCSI or similar, really felt like wholly
different OSes.
System 7 was, by far, the longest supported Macintosh Operating System
(not even just Classic MacOS): 6+ years, with MacOS 8 replacing it for a
relatively short jaunt in the late 90s before MacOS 9 came on the scene
and stole the show.
People love to talk about Snow Leopard as the greatest of the Mac OS
Xes, but to equivocate it with System 7 it would've had to come on the
scene in late 2009 and started being replaced only in 2015! By 2015
Apple had released Lion, Mountain Lion, Mavericks, Yosemite, AND El
Capitan - that's a world of difference for the same length of time.
I think it also says something to the versatility of System 7 that, by
and large, unless you've got a PowerPC Mac capable of running the
(phenomenal) MacOS9Lives! version of 9.2.2... everyone on retro hardware
seems to be running something on the System 7 spectrum (with due honor
and respect to those repping MacOS 8).
-- *~~a blonde may be fair~~**~and a brunette upscale~**~~but as my name hints~~**~~~I prefer a red ale~~~*
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