The 1977 Apple II, shown here with twin floppy disk drives and a monitor. The Apple II featured an integrated keyboard, sound, a plastic case, and eight internal expansion slots.
"Compact Macintosh" or "Classic Macintosh" are informal terms that refer to the direct descendants of the original Macintosh personal computer case design by Apple Computer, Inc. All of them are all-in-one. Desktop computer A desktop computer is a personal computer in a form intended for regular use at a single location, as opposed to a mobile laptop or portable computer desktop computer designs with the display integrated in the computer case, but not the keyboard. These terms are only used for the models using the case style of the original Macintosh.
Macintosh 128K
The Macintosh is the original Apple Inc. Macintosh personal computer. Its beige case contains a 9-inch monitor and comes with a keyboard and mouse sold between 1984 and the mid-90s - later, larger all-in-one models like the Macintosh LC 500 series. Macintosh LC 500 series
The Macintosh LC 500 series is a series of personal computers that is a part of Apple Computer's Macintosh LC line of Apple Macintosh computers, the Macintosh Performa Macintosh Performa
The Macintosh Performa series was Apple Computer's consumer product family of Apple Macintosh personal computers from 1992 until 1997, when the introduction of the Power Macintosh 5x00 series ended this product line 5xxx series or the iMac
IMAC iMac is a line of Apple Macintosh computers.IMAC or Imac may also refer to: Necmettin Imac, Netherlands footballer Isochronous media access controller, a method of transferring data that must not be interrupted are not usually called "Compact" and definitely not "Classic". The
Apple Lisa
Apple Lisa
The Apple Lisa was a personal computer designed at Apple Computer, Inc. during the early 1980s.The Lisa project was started at Apple in 1978 and evolved into a project to design a powerful personal computer with a graphical user interface that would be targeted toward business customers - derived Macintosh XL
Macintosh XL
Macintosh XL was a modified version of the Apple Lisa personal computer made by Apple Computer, Inc. In the Macintosh XL configuration, the computer shipped with MacWorks XL, a Lisa program that allowed 64K Apple Macintosh ROM emulation is a borderline case, and is included by Apple in their "Classic" spec page, but not counted among the Compact range by others. Apple divides these models into five form factors: The Macintosh 128K and the very similar Macintosh SE.
Macintosh SE
The Macintosh SE was a personal computer manufactured by Apple Inc. between March 1987 and October 1990. This computer marked a significant improvement on the Macintosh Plus design and was introduced by Apple at the same time as the Macintosh II. the also similar but already "retro" Macintosh Classic
Macintosh Classic
The Macintosh Classic was a personal computer manufactured by Apple Inc. Introduced on October 15, 1990, it was the first Apple Macintosh to sell for less than US$1,000. all of them with a 9" black and white screen), the modernized Macintosh Color Classic
Macintosh 128K
The Macintosh is the original Apple Inc. Macintosh personal computer. Its beige case contains a 9-inch monitor and comes with a keyboard and mouse sold between 1984 and the mid-90s - later, larger all-in-one models like the Macintosh LC 500 series. Macintosh LC 500 series
The Macintosh LC 500 series is a series of personal computers that is a part of Apple Computer's Macintosh LC line of Apple Macintosh computers, the Macintosh Performa Macintosh Performa
The Macintosh Performa series was Apple Computer's consumer product family of Apple Macintosh personal computers from 1992 until 1997, when the introduction of the Power Macintosh 5x00 series ended this product line 5xxx series or the iMac
IMAC iMac is a line of Apple Macintosh computers.IMAC or Imac may also refer to: Necmettin Imac, Netherlands footballer Isochronous media access controller, a method of transferring data that must not be interrupted are not usually called "Compact" and definitely not "Classic". The
Apple Lisa
Apple Lisa
The Apple Lisa was a personal computer designed at Apple Computer, Inc. during the early 1980s.The Lisa project was started at Apple in 1978 and evolved into a project to design a powerful personal computer with a graphical user interface that would be targeted toward business customers - derived Macintosh XL
Macintosh XL
Macintosh XL was a modified version of the Apple Lisa personal computer made by Apple Computer, Inc. In the Macintosh XL configuration, the computer shipped with MacWorks XL, a Lisa program that allowed 64K Apple Macintosh ROM emulation is a borderline case, and is included by Apple in their "Classic" spec page, but not counted among the Compact range by others. Apple divides these models into five form factors: The Macintosh 128K and the very similar Macintosh SE.
Macintosh SE
The Macintosh SE was a personal computer manufactured by Apple Inc. between March 1987 and October 1990. This computer marked a significant improvement on the Macintosh Plus design and was introduced by Apple at the same time as the Macintosh II. the also similar but already "retro" Macintosh Classic
Macintosh Classic
The Macintosh Classic was a personal computer manufactured by Apple Inc. Introduced on October 15, 1990, it was the first Apple Macintosh to sell for less than US$1,000. all of them with a 9" black and white screen), the modernized Macintosh Color Classic
Macintosh Color Classic
The Macintosh Color Classic was the first color Compact Macintosh Apple Macintosh computer. It was essentially a Macintosh LC with an integrated 10" Sony Trinitron color display with the same 512?384 pixel resolution as an LC II with the Macintosh 12? RGB monitor with a 10" color screen and the very different Macintosh XL.
On August 12, 1981, IBM tried to correct the previous mistake with the release of micro computers are less expensive than previous computer, called the IBM PC 5150. 5150 IBM PC computer equipped with the Intel 8088 microprocessor with a speed of 4:47 MHz and 40.963 bytes ROM memory (40K) and 16.384 bytes of RAM memory (16K). Because the DOS operating system, the IBM PC equipped with two (Model 176) or one (Model 166) floppy disk 5 ¼-inch drive that can store only 160K per disk, and a color monitor screen as an optional choice. For input devices, IBM uses a keyboard made by IBM itself with the number 83 button-fruit. And with the release of the IBM PC, IBM PC became the de facto standard in the microcomputer industry and further dominate the market microcomputer operating systems.
Developer Apple Computer
Type Personal computer
Release date July 1976
CPU MOS 6502 @ 1 MHz
Memory 4 KB standard
expandable to 8 KB or 48 KB using expansion cards
Graphics 40×24 characters, hardware-implemented scrolling
Type Personal computer
Release date July 1976
CPU MOS 6502 @ 1 MHz
Memory 4 KB standard
expandable to 8 KB or 48 KB using expansion cards
Graphics 40×24 characters, hardware-implemented scrolling
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