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Macintosh and IIsi
In time, these would develop as the Classic, Macintosh LC, and Macintosh IIsi.
Also, the curve of the front bezel was increased to the same radial curve as on the front of both the Macintosh LC and Macintosh IIsi.
Image: Macintosh IIsi 2. jpg | Macintosh IIsi one of the few Macs to use a unique case
The result was the Macintosh Classic, Macintosh IIsi, and the LC.
Macintosh IIsi rear showing ports, including 10base2, 10baseT and optional AUI Ethernet card.
The IIsi was the first Macintosh released with built-in sound-in capabilities.
The Macintosh LC, which was announced at the same time and also had a sound-in port, was released a number of months after the IIsi.
As the IIsi is the only Macintosh to use this case design, these issues were never corrected in a subsequent model.
* Macintosh IIsi technical specification ( or here ) at apple. com
* Macintosh IIsi teardown at ifixit. com
de: Macintosh IIsi
fr: Macintosh IIsi
it: Macintosh IIsi
pl: Macintosh IIsi

Macintosh and was
It was also a less expensive alternative to the Apple Macintosh and IBM PC as a general-purpose business or home computer.
Version 4. 1, in a slightly modified form, was also the standard operating system for the Apple Network Server systems sold by Apple Computer to complement the Macintosh line.
AppleTalk was released for the original Macintosh in 1985, and was the primary protocol used by Apple devices through the 1980s and 90s.
Through this period, Apple was deep in development of the Macintosh computer.
The initial concept was known as AppleBus, envisioning a system controlled by the host Macintosh polling " dumb " devices in a fashion similar to the modern Universal Serial Bus.
By 1987 Ethernet was clearly winning the standards battle over Token Ring, and in the middle of that year Apple introduced EtherTalk 1. 0 for the newly released Macintosh II computer.
It was similar to the Apple Macintosh and its simple design allowed the ST to precede the Commodore Amiga's commercial release by almost two months .< ref name =" amigaos ">
The first BBS using the Apple Macintosh platform was the Austin Arts BBS, which was a dial-up system developed by Bill Hood of the School of Screenprinting in 1983.
A notable example was Phil Katz's PKARC ( and later PKZIP, using the same ". zip " algorithm that WinZip and other popular archivers now use ); also other concepts of software distribution like freeware, postcardware like JPEGview and donationware like Red Ryder for the Macintosh first appeared on BBS sites.
He received his undergraduate degree from the University of California, San Diego, where Apple Macintosh developer Jef Raskin was one of his professors.
Atkinson was part of the Apple Macintosh development team and was the creator of the ground-breaking MacPaint application, among others.
As that history implies, CCL was written for the Macintosh, but Clozure CL now runs on Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Linux, Solaris and Windows.
CCL was previously known as OpenMCL, but that name is no longer used, to avoid confusion with the open source version of Macintosh Common Lisp.
A one button version of the mouse was incorporated into the Apple Macintosh but Steve Jobs decided against incorporating the chorded keyset.
However, the battle was in vain, as neither platform captured a significant share of the world computer market and only the Apple Macintosh would survive the industry-wide shift to Microsoft Windows running on PC clones.
It was the first national DJ-published music magazine, created on the Macintosh computer using extensive music market research and early desktop publishing tools.
For example, Forth was the first resident software on the new Intel 8086 chip in 1978 and MacFORTH was the first resident development system for the first Apple Macintosh in 1984.
Windows 3. 0's user interface was finally a serious competitor to the user interface of the Macintosh computer.
The 1990s, though, were a turbulent time for graphics development, as the computer industry was collapsing, with long-time computer makers such as Tandy / Radio Shack, Atari, and Commodore / Amiga disappearing, and the PC and Macintosh markets were fighting for dominance.
Another early example was Prograph, a dataflow-based system originally developed for the Macintosh.
The program's icon in the Apple Macintosh version was a depiction of Kermit the Frog.

Macintosh and compact
A compact Mac, the Plus had a 9-inch 512 × 384 pixel monochrome display with a resolution of 72 PPI, identical to that of previous Macintosh models.
Apple finally reorganized the compact Macintosh case to accommodate a fan with the release of the Macintosh SE.
It was the fastest and most expandable of the original black-and-white compact Macintosh series.
Apple at the time de-emphasized the compact, all-in-one Macintosh in favor of a more expandable, modular system architecture, as seen in the Macintosh II and Quadra series.
Unlike prior Macintosh models, which were all compact Macintosh designs, the Macintosh II models were " modular " systems which did not include built-in monitors and were expandable.
The Mac II models were the first to support color displays and display resolutions larger than the 512 × 342 of the compact Macintosh design.
Image: Macintosh IIcx. jpg | Macintosh IIcx compact model
Apple Inc. introduced a portable Apple IIc in April 1984, but would not release a Macintosh Portable until 1989, though the original Macintosh was by its compact design, technically a portable.
The 700 was a compact model using the same case dimensions as the Macintosh IIci, with a Processor Direct Slot ( PDS ) expansion slot, while the latter was a newly designed tower case with five NuBus expansion slots and one PDS slot.
* First compact Macintosh with an internal drive bay for a hard disk ( originally 20 MB or 40 MB ) or a second floppy drive.
* First compact Macintosh that featured an expansion slot ( SE stood for " System Expansion ").
The Macintosh Color Classic also introduced a 10 " color Trinitron display to the Classic compact Macintosh, with a slightly enhanced resolution of 512x384 ( 560x384 to accommodate the Apple IIe Card ).
The Macintosh Color Classic ( also in Great Britain front says Macintosh Colour Classic ) was the first color compact Apple Macintosh computer.

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