Begging Apple to let another company make Macs for the first time since the '90s.
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It's also called 'fingertip grip', but I think claw grip is the technical term.The ”toy car” come from that it is how you hold a toy car when driving it - held between thumb on one side of the mouse and two fingers on the other. Sounds like ”claw grip” is the same thing.
Seems like what was posted was a rendering, not an actual build. (Not that that's an issue, by itself.) But it leaves me wondering if the poster used only actual available Lego pieces or if they had to custom model some pieces. I guess that's all leading up to the actual question: could you buy the necessary pieces from Lego (sans graphics) and build this model?
Citation needed. Did they really? One place I worked at used a security company named “Apple Security”. No problem.You mean would he company who once went after a place that sells apple fritters because they used the word apple and a somewhat similar logo go after lego?
No. Thats a real product from a company selling the Mac, a PlayStation, a Walkman, a ghetto blaster, and some other classical products for less than £7 each. Photo taken at my home. You can pull the front off and it is filled with “electronics” inside. Half the size of Lego bricks. Buy quickly before Trump adds 100% or 200% tariffs.That wasn't the Ebay ad: Classic Mac, working condition, $500
was it?
To be fair ... the only person that stopped 3rd party "Macs" from being produced has come and gone.Begging Apple to let another company make Macs for the first time since the '90s.
Well, yes and no.With its personality-forward aesthetics and Jony Ive-led design, the original iMac was the first step down the path that led to blockbuster products like the iPod and iPhone.
I'm still looking for the reference to that one.Citation needed. Did they really? One place I worked at used a security company named “Apple Security”. No problem.
What’s your start point? Set announcement? Instruction availability? Or shipment?If this ever ships, how many minutes before someone has made a drop in screen + raspberry Pi + MacintoshPi emulator mod?
The irony of which is all the legal trouble Apple Computer ran into because of the similarity of their name and trademark logo to Apple Corps/Apple Records (the music company set up by The Beatles), and subsequently breach of contract when Apple launched the iTunes store. (It all got resolved eventually.)I'm still looking for the reference to that one.
They do have a history of going after anyone with an apple for a logo, even when it's not an apple.
They also went after a company with a pear as a logo because "people could get confused". They also went after Swiss farmers because their decades old logo was an apple. A small movie theater company called Apple Cinemas was told to stop using "Apple" in their name (they originated in the Apple Valley Mall, hence the name).
I kind of like the idea... but also, that is A LOT of custom Lego pieces, which I'm not a huge fan of.
In other news, Trump take Lego - custom brick orders no more available to US/Canada.
https://www.404media.co/lego-stops-shipping-individual-bricks-to-united-states-after-trumps-tariffs/
Neither are Lego. That's why it probably won't even get off the starting blocks. They had to rationalise their entire catalog of brick types at one point because it got utterly crazy and was driving them to bankruptcy.
That's not true at all - Apple is perfectly willing to look back at design highlightsApple absolutely hates looking back into its past so it is unlikely they'll approve it.
(For sale in an official Lego product, I mean.)
Please explain why Apple would have a cease and desist letter ready. Do you think customers might confuse this model with a real Mac?The creator of this would make more money, if all of us that want one of these would pay him $3 for a part list and assembly instructions, than he would ever make if LEGO did make this kit (which they won’t both because there isn’t enough demand and because Apple probably has a cease and desist letter ready to print).
Seriously, tech readers really have to take 5 minutes and learn about trademark law.Please explain why Apple would have a cease and desist letter ready. Do you think customers might confuse this model with a real Mac?
It’s probably due to ending the “de minimis” exemption that did it. Good riddance, though, considering the exemption was originally made for the convenience of Americans buying occasional mail order items from abroad, where the total lost tariff revenue was also de minimis, and it recently turned into a way for multi-billion-dollar foreign retailers to sell stuff to Americans in bulk while avoiding the the tariffs that retailers who fulfill orders from domestic locations have to pay.In other news, Trump take Lego - custom brick orders no more available to US/Canada.
https://www.404media.co/lego-stops-shipping-individual-bricks-to-united-states-after-trumps-tariffs/
Xerox and Kleenex were avoiding the terms becoming generic. Is someone using the term “Apple” for the name of a movie theater really creating a danger of the term Apple becoming the generic term for a computing device?Seriously, tech readers really have to take 5 minutes and learn about trademark law.
That is an industrial design - which is part of trademark (and copyright) law. Under trademark law, a company that owns a trademark has a legal obligation to defend their trademarks. If they don't they can (and do) lose ownership of said trademark. That's why Xerox worked so hard to get people to stop calling photocopying "xeroxing" and Proctor-Gamble worked to get us to stop referring to tissues as "Kleenex".
If Apple didn't issue a C&D, they would be ceding permission for anyone to use that design, which could end up with them, also losing the "iMac" name and all sorts of other knock-on effects.
It is not that simple. Plus, all Apple would have to do is provide a license agreement that had very little cost to Lego or to e.g. 1-bit rainbow and let them continue.If Apple didn't issue a C&D, they would be ceding permission for anyone to use that design, which could end up with them, also losing the "iMac" name and all sorts of other knock-on effects.
I have most of the LEGO from when I was a kid, which includes roof pieces including peaks, windows and these flat trees whose base will attach to the standard LEGO blocks even though they don't have the standard look to them. There's also a bunch of base plates, that are sizes I don't think they've made in decades.When I was young, there were just bricks, and making stuff up. These days, with the ubiquity of the bespoke kits, custom pieces are (for better or worse) a substantial amount of it all.
Bricklink is becoming part of LEGO. The accounts are merging shortly. I don't know exactly when, but LEGO acquired the company.I'm not in that scene, but I recall there being a fan trading site (Bricklink?) where nearly all the pieces Lego has ever made are available, for a price.
Trademark is also tied specifically to the industry being trademarked. (aka their market) Which is one reason why this exploration will not get a C&D as LEGO bricks are not computers. Also, this is a single rendering and not a marketed product, (Non-commercial use) so there are at least 2 good defenses against a trademark lawsuit right there. (Maybe you need to take that 5 minutes you mentioned since it took less than that for me to look up the wording for the defenses listed here.) If LEGO were to decide they might make this as a kit, they would probably either get buy-in from Apple or not make the product anyway.Seriously, tech readers really have to take 5 minutes and learn about trademark law.
That is an industrial design - which is part of trademark (and copyright) law. Under trademark law, a company that owns a trademark has a legal obligation to defend their trademarks. If they don't they can (and do) lose ownership of said trademark. That's why Xerox worked so hard to get people to stop calling photocopying "xeroxing" and Proctor-Gamble worked to get us to stop referring to tissues as "Kleenex".
If Apple didn't issue a C&D, they would be ceding permission for anyone to use that design, which could end up with them, also losing the "iMac" name and all sorts of other knock-on effects.
You're opening a dangerous door there...Oh boy. WANT.
Now, do the G4 "iLamp" in Lego.
Yep. It's not some random accessory, it's a known, relatively prestigious and high-quality product that gives some marketing shine to Apple with no potential to dilute Apple's first-party products or give users a bad product experience. Hard to see any reason for them not to get on board.I think if Lego were to decide to go for it, Apple would most likely jump on board.
This is pure marketing, promoting Apple as a brand. Not a competing product.
Just like the Harry Potter franchise.
Incidentally, afaik the only permission Lego would require is to put the Apple logo on the box and set.
Fingers crossed.

The biggest sets are getting bigger and there are a few more license deals to account for, but Lego prices per piece have been remarkably consistent over the years. If anything, System and Technic sets are a bit below the long-term inflation-adjusted average.With the way Lego has been pricing things recently, it'd probably be cheaper to buy a functional iMac. Of course if there's one segment of consumers used to being royally ripped-off, it'd be Apple customers.
I hope not. It was an awful business decision. It was based on a fundamental misunderstanding of how the PC market worked.To be fair ... the only person that stopped 3rd party "Macs" from being produced has come and gone.
And the fact that the current leadership is not adhering to that former person's criteria makes a good case for this becoming plausible under the right conditions.
Yeah, I was thinking about that. Microsoft didn't sell PCs, its health came from selling copies of the OS to everyone, so the stronger the ecosystem is, the more money they make.I hope not. It was an awful business decision. It was based on a fundamental misunderstanding of how the PC market worked.
Apple are much better off controlling the whole stack, and I would argue the end user experience is better for it as well.
It's not quite what you want but Lego did recently release the Pixar lamp:Oh boy. WANT.
Now, do the G4 "iLamp" in Lego.
As an AFOL whose living room (much to the annoyance of his wife) is lined with shelves full of Lego, I am acutely aware of how Lego has been priced over the years. And yes, historically, the prices have remained relatively consistent once factored for inflation - until recently.The biggest sets are getting bigger and there are a few more license deals to account for, but Lego prices per piece have been remarkably consistent over the years. If anything, System and Technic sets are a bit below the long-term inflation-adjusted average.