CHOCONES Mac OS
There were two eras of Macintosh clones: The unauthorized period, when clones were reverse engineered or built around ROMs or used logic boards removed from existing Macs; and the authorized period, when Apple approved vendors and licensed the Mac OS and hardware designs.
I've been saving this since 1997 from McCall's magazine. Here are the last three recipes. Go to Chicken Soup With Matzo Balls to read more. Here is the last Macaroon recipe. Here is a few other interesting things they had in the artical. A taste of history: The seder plate.Every food. Choosy can prompt you to select from the browsers on your Mac, or just the ones that are running, so you can decide which browser is right for a particular link. Let Choosy pick for you Powerful behaviour rules mean that Choosy can pick the right browser without prompting you. Always want links from your email client to open in Safari? The history of macOS, Apple's current Mac operating system originally named Mac OS X until 2012 and then OS X until 2016, began with the company's project to replace its 'classic' Mac OS.That system, up to and including its final release Mac OS 9, was a direct descendant of the operating system Apple had used in its Macintosh computers since their introduction in 1984.
Apple started to license the Mac in 1994, the first clones arrived in 1995, and they quickly cut into Apple’s profitable high-end market. For an overview of the authorized clone period, see Apple Squeezes Mac Clones Out of the Market.

The Early Mac Clones
- Unitron Mac 512, circa 1985
- McMobile, 1986-89
- Colby WalkMac, 1987-91
- Dynamac and Dynamac EL, 1988-89
- Outbound Laptop, Outbound Notebook, 1989-91
- 68000 Dash 30fx, circa 1990
- Colby Classmate Tablet Computer, 1991
- Dynamac IIsf and IIsf/30, 1991
- NuTek One and Duet, 1993-94
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The Authorized Mac Clones
- DayStar, 1995-97
- Motorola StarMax, 1996-97
- Power Computing, 1996-97
- Radius
- Umax SuperMac, 1996-98
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‘Double’ Clones
These companies used OEM motherboards usually supplied by Motorola or StarMax.
- MaxxBoxx, 1997-98
- Pioneer
- MPC-GX1, apparently uses Power Mac 6100/66 (PDM) motherboard, more info on EveryMac.com
- MPC-GX1 (Limited), apparently uses accelerated Power Mac 6100 motherboard, more info on EveryMac.com
- MPC-LX200, based on Alchemy motherboard, more info on EveryMac.com