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Mac history echoes in current Mac operating systems

145 points| classichasclass | 7 months ago |tenfourfox.blogspot.com

64 comments

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[+] ejdyksen|7 months ago|reply
> Why are all these things still in the macOS?

The Finder shows these icons for network volumes.

How does the Finder determine the model of the remote host? This is metadata in the _device-info._tcp Bonjour service record that is the server advertises. My Synology helpfully shows up as an Xserve, in fact:

  $ dns-sd -L "synology" _device-info._tcp local
  Lookup synology._device-info._tcp.local
  DATE: ---Thu 07 Aug 2025---
  0:24:28.117  ...STARTING...
  0:24:28.378  synology._device-info._tcp.local. can be reached at synology.local.:0 (interface 14)
  model=Xserve
[+] asimovDev|7 months ago|reply
The AFP server in our old office often showed up as a Xserve that quickly helped identify it

While the normal file server showed up as a CRT with the legally distinct windows blue screen

[+] plorg|7 months ago|reply
I encountered this when setting up a Time Machine volume for my wife. In samba shares you can set that value in smb.conf by adding

  fruit:model=ModelX,Y
MacOS will accept plenty of device names that perhaps don't make sense for file servers (I have mine set to Watch6,18), but it makes sense realizing that Bonjour is used for a lot more than just network volumes.
[+] pdntspa|7 months ago|reply
Not sure why this is so remarkable. You can find similar assets on Windows buried in explorer.exe or shell32.dll. Hell just poking around my win10 install and I see winhlp32.exe and write.exe sporting their original Windows 3.x icons (though the programs themselves do not function)

My guess is that it's cheapest and lowest-risk to leave them in. It's not like most users are going to encounter them anyway.

[+] philistine|7 months ago|reply
The thing is you're comparing the king of backward compatibility with macOS, who is famous for shedding its past at a regular pace.
[+] nxobject|7 months ago|reply
Re: Apple Symbols – the symbols aren't _too_ anachronistic: the font dates from Panther (10.3), which ran on all New World Macs (IIRC) – and indeed the B&W Power Mac G3 did have ADB (the "branch" icon at location (2, 2)), external SCSI (the icon at (10, 2)); while the "Lombard" PowerBook G3 had a reset interrupt switch (icon at (6, 7).

That being said, if you know why there are icons for the "programmer's switch" icon (6, 6) and LocalTalk (at (2, 8)), which died out with the Old World Macs, send answers on a postcard...

[+] Cyan488|7 months ago|reply
Was waiting to see all different colors of iMac G3 in the high resolution device icons, but alas.

I believe those icons are used in Network places if a device with a known model is on the local network. The BSOD device would represent Windows PCs with network shares, of course! I also recall seeing the Xserve icon for a qnap NAS on our network.

[+] stephen_g|7 months ago|reply
Yes, Samba's vfs_fruit module (which has options for better interoperability with Mac OS) has the fruit:model setting lets you select which icon it will show up as. You can make it look like any Mac model or Apple TV or iPhones etc.

Setting it to the string RackMac or Xserve should get that icon.

Somebody pulled all the icons and their codes out here: https://callumgare.github.io/macos-device-icons/

[+] ink_13|7 months ago|reply
I believe these images are also used in the "About This Mac" window, although of course most highlighted in the article are long obsolete by now.
[+] pimlottc|7 months ago|reply
That would be wild if you could see what color a network-connected computer was...
[+] whoopdedo|7 months ago|reply
The real echo of history is that Return/Enter is still rename and open/launch is Cmd-O.
[+] volemo|7 months ago|reply
For me open/launch is Cmd-Down and it fits in my head perfectly together with Cmd-Down and Cmd-Up to navigate directories.
[+] Geof25|7 months ago|reply
And the worst part is that you can't even change it as far as I know
[+] eadmund|7 months ago|reply
> a server

I used Macs from the 1980s up to 2000 or so, and I was very familiar with that icon of a hand with a tray and some files, but it wasn’t until today that I realised that it was a pun on ‘server’ used to mean what my dialect of English terms a ‘waiter.’

There’s probably a lesson about i18n in there somewhere!

What’s funny to me is how characterless I thought the half-volleyball iMac was at the time, compared to the classic Bondi blue iMac (and its awesome color variations too), but now when I compare it to Apple’s current offerings it has so very much more character. I miss the days of shape and colour and texture.

[+] LoganDark|7 months ago|reply
That blue-screen icon is used for network shares that happen to be running Windows. I'd imagine a bunch of the other icons are also used for other types of network shares.
[+] pdntspa|7 months ago|reply
My samba server running on Debian shows this icon too
[+] chrisbrandow|7 months ago|reply
Someone posted about a little Easter egg wherein the Next icon was buried somewhere in iPadOs but I’ve never been able to track it down since.
[+] Elosha|7 months ago|reply
The whole NeXT GUI widget set, as well as Rhapsody GUI widget set, and several 80‘s style NeXT tool icons, are still in Mac OS 15 in some assets.car file. And before car files where a thing, it must have been either TIFFs or PDFs.

Here someone even hacked an older version of Mac OS X to actually use the NeXT and Platinum styles: https://mastodon.social/@stroughtonsmith/110708615280659758

[+] reaperducer|7 months ago|reply
I'm not sure why the blogger thinks it's weird that macOS has an icon for the iPhone 3G in it. It's for when I plug my iPhone 3G into my M4 Mac to sync my music, as I did just this past weekend.

I also synced one of my iPod Shuffles over the weekend, and can tell you there's also still icons for all of the Shuffles back to the original gum stick ones, and all of the various colors of the other models, plus all of the regular iPods.

Shuffles are great for listening to music in bed because you don't have to worry about rolling over on them.

[+] erickhill|7 months ago|reply
I'm really nostalgic for the era of Apple computing and overall product design shown in the photos.
[+] shortrounddev2|7 months ago|reply
What, you're not impressed by apple going with the same uninspired brushed aluminum macbook design 15 years in a row? What about the same beveled slab of black glass for the iPhone? Is that not innovative enough for you?
[+] omnibrain|7 months ago|reply
A few years ago, before the great System Settings revamp, I saw a post of system settings dialogs that had a 1:1 lineage back to NeXTStep.
[+] bitwize|7 months ago|reply
Apple devices still autocorrect "Emacs" (text editor) to "eMacs" (more than one early 2000s Apple educational-market all-in-one computer). I see the latter frequently on Hackernews and Reddit.
[+] eviks|7 months ago|reply
> Why are all these things still in the macOS? My guess, modulo the Blue Screen PC, is trademark purposes

Why not the simpler version that they care less about maintenance and cleaning up obscure corners of the OS?

[+] reaperducer|7 months ago|reply
Or the even simpler version that they are still in use.

It's a big world with lots of people doing things other than the median.

[+] pmarreck|7 months ago|reply
I upgraded to Tahoe beta without even realizing I'd lose the standard hard-drive icon(s). :/

I don't suppose someone can stick them up somewhere?

[+] wahnfrieden|7 months ago|reply
There's a desktop wallpaper function that lets you load in images you'd like to see
[+] can16358p|7 months ago|reply
The last one: it always shows in network even today if there's a Windows computer advertising itself on the LAN.
[+] immy|7 months ago|reply
iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS. There was no iPhone 2G.
[+] PlunderBunny|7 months ago|reply
The original iPhone was 2G, but it was just called 'iPhone' I think. The iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS models came after.
[+] quink|7 months ago|reply
> Mac history echoes in current Mac operating systems

Echoes like, if you look really closely, how window management without third-party tools is as garbage in 2025 as it was in 1984. Never change, love you Mac.

[+] rdlts|7 months ago|reply
I used to love all these icons and the easter eggs embedded in them. I would spend hours looking at them when I was a teenager with my iMac 2010
[+] Lare2|7 months ago|reply
Blogger still around O_o