There is a special place in my heart for the SE/30. It packed the power of the Mac IIx (68030 @ 16MHz) into the original Mac form factor. I used one for nine full years, not counting the time it spent as an SE. Still ran Photoshop and Netscape when I retired it. No other machine has ever treated me that well or been useful for as long -- most don't make it half that far.<p>I'm happy the 9600 made it into the list though -- that was a screamer.
"Sporting a 350MHz 604e processor, room for up to 1.5Gb of memory and six PCI slots, the 9600 was a big beige beast on par with any PC system at the time. "<p>Ha! "on par"?! What competition did it have? Pentium MMX-based screamers? Laughable. The 9600 ran rings around any PC you could buy or build.<p>And, BTW, the Lisa was no Alto rip-off. It could be a Star rip-off hadn't Apple perfected so many UI traits that later went into the Mac: files as icons, a menu bar with pull-down menus, floating dialog boxes...<p>And, BTW, the Lisa was never intended to be a home computer. It was also far less expensive than a comparable Xerox Star.<p>And they call themselves "authority"... pfff.
The pic of Lisa <a href="http://backoffice.ajb.com.au/images/features/Applelisa.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://backoffice.ajb.com.au/images/features/Applelisa.jpg</a><p>reminds me of my old cooler O_o