I don't see why. There are always hicks that come up with dumb ideas. See the custom miniitx case sites. There are those people that think that screwing a few parts together constitutes "building" a computer.
But still, is practically sacrilidge to consider spray painting an iMac. Or any Mac for that matter.
Is it possible to anodize plastic? I don't think so... you have to have an aluminum/metal surface to do that, which explains why the aluminum part of the iMac in the pic is still silver colored.
Sorry -- I should have stated that I was referring specifically to their colored Powerbooks.
You could strip one and anodize it if you so desired. I looked into it a while back ,and it's not too ridiculously expensive. I wanted to anodize some iPod Minis, but determined that removing the click-wheel wasn't worth the effort.
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Originally posted by JeffDM
I don't see why. There are always hicks that come up with dumb ideas. See the custom miniitx case sites. There are those people that think that screwing a few parts together constitutes "building" a computer.
But still, is practically sacrilidge to consider spray painting an iMac. Or any Mac for that matter.
Originally posted by flinch13
Is it possible to anodize plastic? I don't think so... you have to have an aluminum/metal surface to do that, which explains why the aluminum part of the iMac in the pic is still silver colored.
Sorry -- I should have stated that I was referring specifically to their colored Powerbooks.
You could strip one and anodize it if you so desired. I looked into it a while back ,and it's not too ridiculously expensive. I wanted to anodize some iPod Minis, but determined that removing the click-wheel wasn't worth the effort.