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Among the goodies used for demonstrations at the May 1999
General Meeting were a blue and white Power Macintosh G3/400
and an Apple flat panel Studio Display. (Photo by Lawrence
I. Charters)
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This USB-equipped digital still camera attracted plenty
of attention. (Photo by Lawrence I. Charters)
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Apple demonstrated Final Cut Pro at the May 1999 General
Meeting. This thousand dollar application is reputed to be
as powerful, flexible and useful as dedicated video editing
stations costing a hundred times as much and, based on what
we saw, this could well be true. (Photo by Lawrence I.
Charters)
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Hosting most of the demonstration was this blue-and-white
Power Macintosh G3, and it took almost all of the ports on
the back. In addition to the USB port (used for keyboard and
mouse), Ethernet port (used to demonstrate advanced
networking and QuickTime video streaming), power and video,
the machine also made good use of the FireWire port, used
with a spiffy new FireWire hard drive. Only the Ultra2 SCSI
port at the bottom was ignored. (Photo by Lawrence I.
Charters)
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Though nobody made a big deal out of it, this PowerBook
G3 caused spontaneous drooling. Though a late prototype and
not a release version, this "Bronze" PowerBook proved to be
much, much faster than the machines used by 99% of the
audience, not to mention lighter and more portable. (Photo
by Lawrence I. Charters)
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Apple brought a brand-new (released that week) bright red
and yellow VST FireWire drive. In addition to being very
light, very small, and very fast, the drive also
demonstrated something new. At one point, while playing a
very large QuickTime clip for the audience, the drive was
unplugged. The QuickTime clip paused. The drive was plugged
back in and, after a few seconds, the QuickTime clip
continued. (Photo by Lawrence I. Charters)
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