Powerbook G4 Games

1.33 GHz PowerBook G4. In April 2004, the 12″ PowerBook got another speed bump, this time to 1.33 GHz, and came standard with AirPort Extreme 54 Mbps 802.11g preinstalled, Nvidia GeForce FX Go 5200 graphics with 64 MB of VRAM, and a larger (60 GB) hard drive. The baby ‘Book continued with a 12.1″ 1024 x 768 display. 1.5 GHz PowerBook G4. The PowerPC G4 (74xx) is a brand name that was used by Apple Computer for 4th generation microprocessors from the PowerPC line that were developed by the AIM alliance, which included Apple, IBM, and Motorola. The G4 processors were marketed as powering the first 'desktop supercomputers', which included the Power Mac G4 (and G4 Cube), PowerBook G4, iMac G4, iBook G4, and eMac.

Internet Clients & Plugins

Flash Player 10.1 r102 (Adobe Systems Inc.)
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File Size: 7.6 MB
The Adobe Flash Player is software for viewing multimedia, Rich Internet Applications and streaming video and audio, on a computer web browser or on supported mobile devices.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.4 or later (?)
Firefox 3.6.28 (Mozilla Foundation)
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File Size: 18.8 MB
Firefox empowers you to accomplish your online activities faster, more safely and efficiently than any other browser, period. Built with Tab browsing, popup blocking and a number of other seamless innovations, Firefox stands out ahead. (links are for English US distribution)
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.4 or later
Thunderbird 3.1.20 (Mozilla Foundation)
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File Size: 20.7 MB
Software made to make email easier. Thunderbird is a free email application that's easy to set up and customize - and it's loaded with great features!
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.4 or later
Powerbook G4 Games
Fetch 5.6 (Fetch Softworks)
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File Size: 17.4 MB
Fetch is a reliable, full-featured file transfer client for the Apple Macintosh whose user interface emphasizes simplicity and ease of use. Fetch supports FTP and SFTP, the most popular file transfer protocols on the Internet.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.4 or later
TeamViewer 7.0.11991 (TeamViewer GmbH)
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File Size: 20.3 MB
NEW! TeamViewer provides easy, fast and secure remote access to Windows, Mac and Linux systems. Like VNC, but without complicated firewall configuration.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.? or later
Transmission 2.22 — 1.54 — 0.6.1 (Transmission Project)
Download Links
Mirror (Tiger 1.54)

File Size: Various
Transmission is an open source, volunteer-based project. Unlike some BitTorrent clients, Transmission doesn't play games with its users to make money:
  • Transmission doesn't bundle toolbars, pop-up ads, flash ads, twitter tools, or anything else.
  • It doesn't hold some feaures back for a payware version.
  • Its source code is available for anyone to review.
  • We don't track our users, and our website and forums have no third-party ads or analytics.

UPDATE 11/18/2017: Official links are dead and have been removed.
System Requirements: 2.22: Mac OS X 10.5 — 1.54: Mac OS X 10.4.11 — 0.6.1: Mac OS X 10.3

Forklift 1.7.8 (BinaryNights)
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File Size: 4.9 MB
ForkLift is designed to be the fastest, most powerful file manager for the Mac. Connect to FTP or SFTP servers, manage your Amazon S3 account or your mobile devices over Bluetooth. All these features are beautifully integrated into a sophisticated, yet easy to use Cocoa based interface.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.5 or later, PowerPC G4 or G5
Spotify 0.6.6.10 (Spotify Ltd)
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File Size: 10 MB
Spotify is a new way to listen to music. Millions of tracks, any time you like. Just search for it in Spotify, then play it. Just help yourself to whatever you want, whenever you want it.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.4 or later, PowerPC G4 or G5
Adium 1.4.5 — 1.3.10 (Adium Team)
Download Links
Official (Tiger 1.3.10)
Mirror (Tiger 1.3.10)

File Size: Various
Adium is a free and open source instant messaging application for Mac OS X, written using Mac OS X's Cocoa API, released under the GNU GPL and developed by the Adium team.
System Requirements: 1.4.5: Mac OS X 10.5.8 Leopard — 1.3.10: Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger
SHOUTcast DNAS 1.9.8 (Nullsoft, Inc.)
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File Size: 62 KB
With the FREE SHOUTcast broadcasting tools you too can start your own SHOUTcast Radio station and become part of one of the largest directory of radio stations on the web.

UPDATE 7/27/2015: Official link is dead and has been removed.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.3(?) or later

Tweetie 1.2.8 (Twitter)
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File Size: 1.7 MB
This is the last Universal version of a Twitter client that was later purchased by the company and promptly made Intel only.

UPDATE 11/18/2017: MacUpdate mirror is dead and has been removed. MacUpdate has been known to insert advertising into their downloads, and will no longer be a trusted mirror source.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.5 or later

Powerbook G4 Gamestop

NEW! Wireshark 1.9.2 (Wireshark Foundation)
Download Links

File Size: 24.9 MB
Wireshark is the world's foremost and widely-used network protocol analyzer. It lets you see what's happening on your network at a microscopic level and is the de facto (and often de jure) standard across many commercial and non-profit enterprises, government agencies, and educational institutions.

Note: Official link requires HTTPS.
System Requirements: Mac OS X 10.5.5 or later

Imagine a slideshow of images of every portable Mac Apple has made, displayed in chronological order. Spss latest version free. It starts with the Macintosh Portable and ends with two M1 MacBooks.

For a while, the slides are of chunky plastic laptops in light gray, dark gray, and black. The G3 iBook appears briefly to provide some needed color.

And then, 12 years into Apple’s portable Mac journey, you see it. You might want to pause the slides for a moment, because the computer on the screen is undeniably a modern Apple laptop. It’s thin (at least for the time) and boxy and sheathed in silvery metal instead of plastic.

When you resume the slide show, silver metallic laptops will alternate with cheaper plastic models for a little while, but during the final decade of slides, they’ll all settle on this one basic design.

It all started with the Titanium PowerBook G4. But Apple still had a lot to learn.

Fundamental principles

With Steve Jobs firmly in charge at Apple and Jonathan Ive and his team of designers rethinking every single one of the company’s products in turn, it was time for Apple to go back to first principles when it came to its prestige laptops.

First, they had to get the PowerBook line stabilized. The introduction of the “Wall Street” PowerBook G3 in 1998 brought a curvy black plastic case that was far more appealing than the drab plastic of the previous model. It had matte and shiny elements, including an enormous white Apple “crystal” on the top cover. (That logo, which seemed awfully aggressive at the time, is another defining characteristic of Apple laptops that hasn’t abated in two decades.)

But the PowerBook G3 was a dressed-up and stylish version of the old Apple laptop design philosophy. With the arrival of the first laptop with a next-generation G4 processor, Apple wanted to redefine the look of Apple laptops, too.

They started with a commitment to making the laptop as thin and light as possible. Two decades of Apple striving to push thinness and lightness make that seem like a given, but at the time Apple was lagging behind laptops like the Sony Vaio, which was the archetypal ultra-portable computer of the early 2000s.

Clearly, Jobs wanted Apple to beat the Vaio at its own game. In his introduction of the Titanium PowerBook G4, he continually compared the new laptop to Sony’s. (He also repeatedly refers to Sony’s laptop as having “the sex,” and says that Apple’s laptops have offered “the power, but not the sex.” I’m deeply uncomfortable with using sexual metaphors to describe technology of any kind, and Jobs’s repeated use of the phrase “the sex” seems beyond weird today.) Sony’s laptops offered a level of visceral appeal that Apple’s just didn’t match. They were powerful, but big and heavy.

The other big move was the one away from plastic, at least on premium laptops. (Keep in mind, every single Apple product in 2001 was completely wrapped in plastic, from the Power Macs to PowerBook to iMac to iBook.) Eventually, Apple would migrate every Mac to a metallic design, and this is where the move started.

Ive and his design lab had been experimenting with interesting materials for a while now. The obsession with translucent plastic originally evinced in the eMate and some late-model beige Power Macs led to the iMac and Blue and White Power Mac G3. But there were other materials in the mix. The Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh had an aluminum stand and leather wrist rests, and even its plastic body had a metallic sparkle.

So the decision was made: The new PowerBook G4 would prioritize thinness and lightness, and would be sheathed in metal, not plastic. And Apple chose to use a very light metal— titanium—to build it. “It’s stronger than steel, yet lighter than aluminum,” Jobs said on stage when introducing the laptop. “Like they build airplanes out of.”

Powerbook G4 Games For Girls

It was a mistake.

Learning experience

The Titanium PowerBook G4 was a mind-blowing product when it was announced. It looked great, offered enormous power for a laptop, and everyone wanted one. But it turned out to also be a great teacher for Apple.

Titanium is light, but it also proved to be brittle. The PowerBook’s hinges had an unfortunate tendency to snap. My daughter, who was a toddler at the time, grabbed the top of my Titanium PowerBook G4 one day and snapped it clean off.

And to get the two-toned look that Apple wanted, the computer was painted silver and white. Titanium is not that great at holding paint or resisting scratches, so the surface of the laptop eventually became marred by scratches and flaked-off paint. Companies began selling color-matched Titanium PowerBook paint for touch-up jobs.

Having learned its lesson, Apple shifted gears a couple of years later and released a PowerBook G4 sheathed in aluminum. Over time, Apple would become one of the world’s most expert companies in working with aluminum, and every Mac would get an aluminum shell. At the time, the choice of using aluminum probably came down to its strength and lightness. It was also possible to anodize it, creating a nearly impervious surface coating that doesn’t require any paint. Color can even be added as part of the anodization process, a feature that Apple would use across several generations of the iPod mini and nano later in the decade.

Mission accomplished?

Though it was hampered by quality issues that would emerge over time, the Titanium PowerBook G4 was an immediate hit, showing Apple that it was on the right track. Though a laptop that’s an inch thick and weighs 5.4 pounds seems ridiculously chunky today, in 2001 terms it was shockingly thin and light. (The PowerBook G3 it replaced was 1.7 inches thick, and about half a pound heavier.)

It also feels like a trailblazer in terms of the display itself. It was Apple’s first real widescreen laptop, and the bezels around the display are small even by today’s standards. The screen is also impressively thin, even viewed from 2020.

Powerbook G4 Games.com

Finally, in another example of style over substance, the Titanium PowerBook G4 was the first Apple laptop to reorient the Apple logo on the back of the display so that it was upright when opened. At the time, the orientation of the Apple logo on laptops was heavily debated. Some people felt it was too weird to have the Apple logo upside-down when you were using it, while others took the view that it was weird to have the logo upside-down when you were reaching to open it up.

Guess which one looked better on television and in movies during product placement, as well as in cafes full of potential laptop buyers. Who knows how many products that glowing Apple logo1 on the back of a laptop sold over the years?

Games

Today, Apple’s laptops are still silvery and metallic and are constantly striving to be thinner and lighter. And while the Titanium PowerBook G4 is clearly a product from a company that hadn’t quite figured out what it was doing, it was the first step along a path that Apple has continued on for two decades.

I’ll be back next week with number four.

  1. Alas, no longer glowing on modern Macs. Bring it back, Apple! ↩

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