• "Death in Paradise" TV shows changes OS on classic Mac

    From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to comp.sys.mac.misc, comp.sys.mac.vintage, comp.sys.mac.system on Sat Mar 21 18:35:14 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.vintage


    We watched a new episode of the UK crime drama "Death in Paradise" last
    night (season 15, episode 4). There were two glaring computer mistakes
    in the show.

    The two uniformed police officers visited the victims house to look for evidence in the case and found an old computer "one called it a "time machine") which was an old classic Apple Macintosh.

    1. Incorrect operating system
    The second officer started the computer up which made the normal
    Macintosh 'bong' boot sound. The camera moves to view the screen
    with the officer saying "It seems to be working", yet it shows
    lines of text appearing, not the 'smiley Mac' startup image.
    <https://i.imgur.com/uCfBiWP.jpeg>

    A couple of minutes later she is looking at an old Microsoft
    Windows programme on the screen.
    <https://i.imgur.com/AhbT3YD.jpeg>

    Technically you dould retro-fit a Raspberry Pi or similar running
    an old version of Windows into a classic Macintosh case, but it
    would not have the 'bong' startup sound.

    2. Check the search history
    She says she will check the search history, but although you
    could connect such an old computer (Macintosh or Windows) to the
    internet, there are few normal websites that would work properly
    in its browser these days, so would be unlikely be for the victim
    to have found any useful information.

    :-\



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  • From Chris Schram@chrispam1@me.com to comp.sys.mac.misc,comp.sys.mac.vintage on Sat Mar 21 09:42:01 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.vintage

    On 2026-03-21, Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com> wrote:

    The two uniformed police officers visited the victims house to look for evidence in the case and found an old computer "one called it a "time machine") which was an old classic Apple Macintosh.

    It is a Mac SE/30, introduced in 1989. I think its startup sound was a
    chord, rather than the original "bing.""

    1. Incorrect operating system
    The second officer started the computer up which made the normal
    Macintosh 'bong' boot sound. The camera moves to view the screen
    with the officer saying "It seems to be working", yet it shows
    lines of text appearing, not the 'smiley Mac' startup image.
    <https://i.imgur.com/uCfBiWP.jpeg>

    Once upon a time I inherited one of the original 1984 Macs, into which I
    poured too much money in order to make it into something mostly useful
    (ie: much more RAM, 800K floppy, SCSI interface).

    At some point I came across an installer for MacBSD which, like UNIX
    operating systems of the day, scrolled through many lines of text,
    eventually arriving at a command prompt.

    A couple of minutes later she is looking at an old Microsoft
    Windows programme on the screen.
    <https://i.imgur.com/AhbT3YD.jpeg>

    You got me there. MacBSD had no graphics capability al all.

    Technically you dould retro-fit a Raspberry Pi or similar running
    an old version of Windows into a classic Macintosh case, but it
    would not have the 'bong' startup sound.

    I wanted to put a Raspberry Pi into one of my "Classic" Mac enclosures.
    Many others have done just that, but I could never find a monitor even
    close to the right size. It was also way above my pay grade to rewire
    the classic keyboard and mouse for USB. If I am in need for a nostalgia
    trip, I think both vMac and SheepShaver still run under Tahoe on my
    iMac.
    --
    chrispam1@me.com is an infrequently monitored address. Email may get lost.

    Google doesn't test their software!
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  • From liz@liz@poppyrecords.invalid.invalid (Liz Tuddenham) to comp.sys.mac.misc,comp.sys.mac.vintage,comp.sys.mac.system on Sat Mar 21 12:47:58 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.vintage

    Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com> wrote:

    [...]
    Technically you dould retro-fit a Raspberry Pi or similar running
    an old version of Windows into a classic Macintosh case, but it
    would not have the 'bong' startup sound.

    Did you know that the Mac startup 'boing' is the same chord as the first
    note of "By the Sleepy Canal" from "Miss Hook of Holland" by Paul A.
    Reubens?
    --
    ~ Liz Tuddenham ~
    (Remove the ".invalid"s and add ".co.uk" to reply)
    www.poppyrecords.co.uk
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