Maker’s Raspberry Pi Apple Hack is an Instant Classic


In these days of 4K monitors (opens in new tab) and SSDs (opens in new tab) apparently capable of warp speed, peering at your desktop via a 9 inch mono screen may seem a little… quaint… even if it was endorsed by Steve Jobs. Maker and all-round retro computer enthusiast Dave Luna (opens in new tab), has taken the shell of the iconic Macintosh Classic II (the tiny beige all-in-one from 1991, also sold as the Performa 200) and replaced the insides with a Raspberry Pi to make something that merges the technology of today with that of the past.

Known as the Paper Mac (opens in new tab), and described as an “abomination” by its creator, Luna’s accomplishment uses a Raspberry Pi 3 (opens in new tab) as its brains, and a 16-color grayscale e-ink screen from Waveshare in place of the original 512 x 342 pixel display. Rather than actually booting into Apple’s System 7 on the Pi, which would be news in itself without an emulator (opens in new tab), it uses custom software to display a System-7-like environment (the cleverly named Psuedo7) on which it displays highlights from its owner’s Google Photos stream.





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