this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2024
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Asklemmy
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I find this hard to believe. I feel 3.11 and 95 crashed pretty often. They generally recovered on a restart though so was it more that the macs crashed in a way that needed support more often?
I suspect they just didn't like being on a network. Often, killing off the startup extensions (or whatever they were called) would improve their stability. It was 28 years ago...
I just remember it seemed like more often than not I would come to a windows machine in the lab and it would be in a bad state and I would restart it and it was fine and much less often I would encounter a mac in a bad state but a reboot would not bring it back and I would have to bring it to the attention of the support person on shift.
Could be.
I think what I didn't like was they often simply froze. There was no error message, so you had to just try different things to see if you could get it stable.
were the windows error messages that useful. I mean im thinking of the blue screen garbage.
If it implicated a driver or file, at least you had a clue to the cause and could search for it online.
i lived this same experience. it just seemed like the windows stuff was more resilient not to mention modular. early apple/mac OS felt very monolithic