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APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004. For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. Over the next few months, Apple was forced to lay off a fifth of its work APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IMAC (MID 2007) The 24" model weighed 25.4 pounds, consumed 280 watts of power, and had the following dimensions: 20.5" H x 22.4" W x 8.1" D. Under the hood, the iMac (Mid 2007) was just a speed-bump of the iMac (Late 2006), but it also included a full case redesign. Announced in August 2007, The iMac (Mid 2007) featured a striking new aluminum case design APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM In January 1987 Apple introduced the "Platinum //e". Changes were mostly cosmetic and superficial, with the biggest difference being that the case color was changed from beige to the then standard platinum/grey color. Also different was a numeric keypad was built-in and the main keyboard had the same layout as the Apple //gs andMacintosh SE.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //C & //C+ Introduced in April of 1984, the Apple //c was the first compact model in the Apple lineup. It came in a small off-white case, and was built around an enhanced 65C02 processor, running at 1.4 MHz. It had 128 kB RAM, (expandable to 1 MB) a built-in 5.25" floppy drive on the side, and could be used with a mouse. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 Dimensions: 5.44" H x 2.64" W x 0.27" D. Weight: 0.28 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the larger iPhone 6 plus, the iPhone 6 represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the iPhone 3GS APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 150 Dimensions: 2.25" H x 11.25" W x 9.3" D. Introduced in July 1994, the PowerBook 150 was Apple's first truly affordable PowerBook. While people grumbled about its lack of an ADB port (It had only serial and SCSI ports) and fuzzy passive matrix screen, the 150 was an excellent value at $1,300. It was discontinued in October 1995. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 Introduced in October 1991, The PowerBook 140 was a 68030 (16 MHz) counterpart to the PowerBook 100. It also included an internal floppy drive, a feature that the 100 lacked. Despite the problems inherent in the passive matrix screen, the PowerBook 140 was a remarkably viable machine. It sold for $2,000, and was discontinued in August 1992 APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (13-INCH, MID 2009) Introduced in June 2009, the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) replaced the MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008). Apple chose to "upgrade" the name to include Pro because of several key improvements, felt to be professional-level features. These included a FireWire800 port, an SD card slot (an Apple first), an improved LED-backlit screen, and a APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE Power: 5 Watts. Dimensions: 4.05" H x 15.25" W x 14.83" D. Weight: 15.8 lbs. Announced in September 1989, The Mac Portable was Apple's first attempt at a more easily portable Macintosh. It had a bay for a 3.5" half-height drive, and could support up to two Super Drives. Reaction to the Portable was poor. It was clunky, slow, had noexpansion
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004. For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. Over the next few months, Apple was forced to lay off a fifth of its work APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IMAC (MID 2007) The 24" model weighed 25.4 pounds, consumed 280 watts of power, and had the following dimensions: 20.5" H x 22.4" W x 8.1" D. Under the hood, the iMac (Mid 2007) was just a speed-bump of the iMac (Late 2006), but it also included a full case redesign. Announced in August 2007, The iMac (Mid 2007) featured a striking new aluminum case design APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM In January 1987 Apple introduced the "Platinum //e". Changes were mostly cosmetic and superficial, with the biggest difference being that the case color was changed from beige to the then standard platinum/grey color. Also different was a numeric keypad was built-in and the main keyboard had the same layout as the Apple //gs andMacintosh SE.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //C & //C+ Introduced in April of 1984, the Apple //c was the first compact model in the Apple lineup. It came in a small off-white case, and was built around an enhanced 65C02 processor, running at 1.4 MHz. It had 128 kB RAM, (expandable to 1 MB) a built-in 5.25" floppy drive on the side, and could be used with a mouse. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 Dimensions: 5.44" H x 2.64" W x 0.27" D. Weight: 0.28 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the larger iPhone 6 plus, the iPhone 6 represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the iPhone 3GS APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 150 Dimensions: 2.25" H x 11.25" W x 9.3" D. Introduced in July 1994, the PowerBook 150 was Apple's first truly affordable PowerBook. While people grumbled about its lack of an ADB port (It had only serial and SCSI ports) and fuzzy passive matrix screen, the 150 was an excellent value at $1,300. It was discontinued in October 1995. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 Introduced in October 1991, The PowerBook 140 was a 68030 (16 MHz) counterpart to the PowerBook 100. It also included an internal floppy drive, a feature that the 100 lacked. Despite the problems inherent in the passive matrix screen, the PowerBook 140 was a remarkably viable machine. It sold for $2,000, and was discontinued in August 1992 APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (13-INCH, MID 2009) Introduced in June 2009, the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) replaced the MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008). Apple chose to "upgrade" the name to include Pro because of several key improvements, felt to be professional-level features. These included a FireWire800 port, an SD card slot (an Apple first), an improved LED-backlit screen, and a APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1983-1985 Directed by Ridley Scott, the Orwellian scene depicted the IBM world being shattered by a new machine. Initially, the Mac sold very well, but by Christmas of 1984, people were becoming fed up with its small amount of RAM, and lack of hard drive connectivity. It was around the beginning of 1985 that Jobs and Sculley began to argue. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / SPECS FOR EVERY APPLE COMPUTER Recent Changes Thursday, 16 July 2015. Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation).Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 2000-2004 Apple cemented its position with the January 2004 release of the iPod mini, which while smaller in capacity than the original iPod, was smaller than many cellphones. In the first year alone, the iTunes Music Store sold more than 70 million songs, and by July APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //C & //C+ Introduced in April of 1984, the Apple //c was the first compact model in the Apple lineup. It came in a small off-white case, and was built around an enhanced 65C02 processor, running at 1.4 MHz. It had 128 kB RAM, (expandable to 1 MB) a built-in 5.25" floppy drive on the side, and could be used with a mouse. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 Dimensions: 5.44" H x 2.64" W x 0.27" D. Weight: 0.28 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the larger iPhone 6 plus, the iPhone 6 represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the iPhone 3GS APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 150 Dimensions: 2.25" H x 11.25" W x 9.3" D. Introduced in July 1994, the PowerBook 150 was Apple's first truly affordable PowerBook. While people grumbled about its lack of an ADB port (It had only serial and SCSI ports) and fuzzy passive matrix screen, the 150 was an excellent value at $1,300. It was discontinued in October 1995. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 4 (CDMA) Audio 40 hrs. Dimensions: 4.5" H x 2.31" W x 0.37" D. Weight: 0.3 lbs. Announced in January 2010, the iPhone 4 (CDMA) finally brought the iPhone to Verizon in the US. Aside from the radio chipset, it was identical to the iPhone 4, and kept the same price-points: a black 16 GB model for $199, and white or black 32 GB models for $299, includinga
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (15-INCH, LATE 2011) Build-to-order options included a 2.5GHz quad-core Intel Core i7 processor with 8MB shared L3 cache, a 1680x1050 glossy or anti-glare display, up to 8 GB of RAM, and 128, 256, or 512 GB SSDs. The MacBook Pro (15-inch, Late 2011) was replaced in June 2012 by the MacBook Pro (15-inch, Mid 2012) Picture Credits: Apple, Inc. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 PLUS Audio 80 hrs. Dimensions: 6.22" H x 3.06" W x .28" D. Weight: 0.38 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the smaller iPhone 6, the iPhone 6 plus represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the APPLE-HISTORY.COM / SPECS FOR EVERY APPLE COMPUTERIPOD TOUCH (6TH GENERATION)APPLE TVIPAD (RETINA)11-INCHSINGLE CPUDUAL CPU Thursday, 16 July 2015. Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation). Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. I'll probalby save theWatch for last.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE Power: 5 Watts. Dimensions: 4.05" H x 15.25" W x 14.83" D. Weight: 15.8 lbs. Announced in September 1989, The Mac Portable was Apple's first attempt at a more easily portable Macintosh. It had a bay for a 3.5" half-height drive, and could support up to two Super Drives. Reaction to the Portable was poor. It was clunky, slow, had noexpansion
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 2000-2004 Apple cemented its position with the January 2004 release of the iPod mini, which while smaller in capacity than the original iPod, was smaller than many cellphones. In the first year alone, the iTunes Music Store sold more than 70 million songs, and by July APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 150 Dimensions: 2.25" H x 11.25" W x 9.3" D. Introduced in July 1994, the PowerBook 150 was Apple's first truly affordable PowerBook. While people grumbled about its lack of an ADB port (It had only serial and SCSI ports) and fuzzy passive matrix screen, the 150 was an excellent value at $1,300. It was discontinued in October 1995. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM In January 1987 Apple introduced the "Platinum //e". Changes were mostly cosmetic and superficial, with the biggest difference being that the case color was changed from beige to the then standard platinum/grey color. Also different was a numeric keypad was built-in and the main keyboard had the same layout as the Apple //gs andMacintosh SE.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 Introduced in October 1991, The PowerBook 140 was a 68030 (16 MHz) counterpart to the PowerBook 100. It also included an internal floppy drive, a feature that the 100 lacked. Despite the problems inherent in the passive matrix screen, the PowerBook 140 was a remarkably viable machine. It sold for $2,000, and was discontinued in August 1992 APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 4 (CDMA) Audio 40 hrs. Dimensions: 4.5" H x 2.31" W x 0.37" D. Weight: 0.3 lbs. Announced in January 2010, the iPhone 4 (CDMA) finally brought the iPhone to Verizon in the US. Aside from the radio chipset, it was identical to the iPhone 4, and kept the same price-points: a black 16 GB model for $199, and white or black 32 GB models for $299, includinga
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (13-INCH, MID 2009) Introduced in June 2009, the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) replaced the MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008). Apple chose to "upgrade" the name to include Pro because of several key improvements, felt to be professional-level features. These included a FireWire800 port, an SD card slot (an Apple first), an improved LED-backlit screen, and a APPLE-HISTORY.COM / SPECS FOR EVERY APPLE COMPUTERIPOD TOUCH (6TH GENERATION)APPLE TVIPAD (RETINA)11-INCHSINGLE CPUDUAL CPU Thursday, 16 July 2015. Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation). Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. I'll probalby save theWatch for last.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE Power: 5 Watts. Dimensions: 4.05" H x 15.25" W x 14.83" D. Weight: 15.8 lbs. Announced in September 1989, The Mac Portable was Apple's first attempt at a more easily portable Macintosh. It had a bay for a 3.5" half-height drive, and could support up to two Super Drives. Reaction to the Portable was poor. It was clunky, slow, had noexpansion
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 2000-2004 Apple cemented its position with the January 2004 release of the iPod mini, which while smaller in capacity than the original iPod, was smaller than many cellphones. In the first year alone, the iTunes Music Store sold more than 70 million songs, and by July APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 150 Dimensions: 2.25" H x 11.25" W x 9.3" D. Introduced in July 1994, the PowerBook 150 was Apple's first truly affordable PowerBook. While people grumbled about its lack of an ADB port (It had only serial and SCSI ports) and fuzzy passive matrix screen, the 150 was an excellent value at $1,300. It was discontinued in October 1995. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM In January 1987 Apple introduced the "Platinum //e". Changes were mostly cosmetic and superficial, with the biggest difference being that the case color was changed from beige to the then standard platinum/grey color. Also different was a numeric keypad was built-in and the main keyboard had the same layout as the Apple //gs andMacintosh SE.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 Introduced in October 1991, The PowerBook 140 was a 68030 (16 MHz) counterpart to the PowerBook 100. It also included an internal floppy drive, a feature that the 100 lacked. Despite the problems inherent in the passive matrix screen, the PowerBook 140 was a remarkably viable machine. It sold for $2,000, and was discontinued in August 1992 APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 4 (CDMA) Audio 40 hrs. Dimensions: 4.5" H x 2.31" W x 0.37" D. Weight: 0.3 lbs. Announced in January 2010, the iPhone 4 (CDMA) finally brought the iPhone to Verizon in the US. Aside from the radio chipset, it was identical to the iPhone 4, and kept the same price-points: a black 16 GB model for $199, and white or black 32 GB models for $299, includinga
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (13-INCH, MID 2009) Introduced in June 2009, the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) replaced the MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008). Apple chose to "upgrade" the name to include Pro because of several key improvements, felt to be professional-level features. These included a FireWire800 port, an SD card slot (an Apple first), an improved LED-backlit screen, and a APPLE-HISTORY.COM / SPECS FOR EVERY APPLE COMPUTER Recent Changes Thursday, 16 July 2015. Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation).Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1983-1985 Directed by Ridley Scott, the Orwellian scene depicted the IBM world being shattered by a new machine. Initially, the Mac sold very well, but by Christmas of 1984, people were becoming fed up with its small amount of RAM, and lack of hard drive connectivity. It was around the beginning of 1985 that Jobs and Sculley began to argue. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //C & //C+ Introduced in April of 1984, the Apple //c was the first compact model in the Apple lineup. It came in a small off-white case, and was built around an enhanced 65C02 processor, running at 1.4 MHz. It had 128 kB RAM, (expandable to 1 MB) a built-in 5.25" floppy drive APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1993-1996 Company History: 1993-1996. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Spindler, by all accounts, was the wrong man for the job. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 Dimensions: 5.44" H x 2.64" W x 0.27" D. Weight: 0.28 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the larger iPhone 6 plus, the iPhone 6 represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the iPhone 3GS APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 3G Dimensions: 4.5" H x 2.4" W x 0.48" D. Weight: 0.29 lbs. Released in June 2008, the iPhone 3G had been widely anticipated for nearly the entire lifespan of its predecessor, the wildly successful iPhone. The iPhone 3G included two prominent features that had been distinctly absent from the original iPhone—3G networking and built-in GPS. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //GS The //gs was the first computer to include a Large Scale Integration (LSI) chip, designed by Steve Wozniak, and called the IWM (Integrated Woz Machine). The //gs was later offered with 1 MB of RAM, and 256 kB of ROM. It could also hold a SCSI adapter card, APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK DUODOCK Miscellaneous. Power: 87 Watts. Dimensions: 4.8" H x 12.3" W x 16.3" D. Weight: 13.1 lbs. The DuoDock allowed any Duo to immediately expand its features. The DuoDock included a larger hard drive, more VRAM, and more input and output ports. The DuoDock, and its successors, allowed the Duo product line to become office desktop models. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 PLUS Audio 80 hrs. Dimensions: 6.22" H x 3.06" W x .28" D. Weight: 0.38 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the smaller iPhone 6, the iPhone 6 plus represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the APPLE-HISTORY.COM / SPECS FOR EVERY APPLE COMPUTERIPOD TOUCH (6TH GENERATION)APPLE TVIPAD (RETINA)11-INCHSINGLE CPUDUAL CPU Recent Changes Thursday, 16 July 2015. Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation).Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004. For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. Over the next few months, Apple was forced to lay off a fifth of its work APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE Power: 5 Watts. Dimensions: 4.05" H x 15.25" W x 14.83" D. Weight: 15.8 lbs. Announced in September 1989, The Mac Portable was Apple's first attempt at a more easily portable Macintosh. It had a bay for a 3.5" half-height drive, and could support up to two Super Drives. Reaction to the Portable was poor. It was clunky, slow, had noexpansion
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 2000-2004 Apple cemented its position with the January 2004 release of the iPod mini, which while smaller in capacity than the original iPod, was smaller than many cellphones. In the first year alone, the iTunes Music Store sold more than 70 million songs, and by July APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 150 Dimensions: 2.25" H x 11.25" W x 9.3" D. Introduced in July 1994, the PowerBook 150 was Apple's first truly affordable PowerBook. While people grumbled about its lack of an ADB port (It had only serial and SCSI ports) and fuzzy passive matrix screen, the 150 was an excellent value at $1,300. It was discontinued in October 1995. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM In January 1987 Apple introduced the "Platinum //e". Changes were mostly cosmetic and superficial, with the biggest difference being that the case color was changed from beige to the then standard platinum/grey color. Also different was a numeric keypad was built-in and the main keyboard had the same layout as the Apple //gs andMacintosh SE.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 Introduced in October 1991, The PowerBook 140 was a 68030 (16 MHz) counterpart to the PowerBook 100. It also included an internal floppy drive, a feature that the 100 lacked. Despite the problems inherent in the passive matrix screen, the PowerBook 140 was a remarkably viable machine. It sold for $2,000, and was discontinued in August 1992 APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 4 (CDMA) Audio 40 hrs. Dimensions: 4.5" H x 2.31" W x 0.37" D. Weight: 0.3 lbs. Announced in January 2010, the iPhone 4 (CDMA) finally brought the iPhone to Verizon in the US. Aside from the radio chipset, it was identical to the iPhone 4, and kept the same price-points: a black 16 GB model for $199, and white or black 32 GB models for $299, includinga
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (13-INCH, MID 2009) Introduced in June 2009, the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) replaced the MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008). Apple chose to "upgrade" the name to include Pro because of several key improvements, felt to be professional-level features. These included a FireWire800 port, an SD card slot (an Apple first), an improved LED-backlit screen, and a APPLE-HISTORY.COM / SPECS FOR EVERY APPLE COMPUTERIPOD TOUCH (6TH GENERATION)APPLE TVIPAD (RETINA)11-INCHSINGLE CPUDUAL CPU Recent Changes Thursday, 16 July 2015. Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation).Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004. For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. Over the next few months, Apple was forced to lay off a fifth of its work APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE Power: 5 Watts. Dimensions: 4.05" H x 15.25" W x 14.83" D. Weight: 15.8 lbs. Announced in September 1989, The Mac Portable was Apple's first attempt at a more easily portable Macintosh. It had a bay for a 3.5" half-height drive, and could support up to two Super Drives. Reaction to the Portable was poor. It was clunky, slow, had noexpansion
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 2000-2004 Apple cemented its position with the January 2004 release of the iPod mini, which while smaller in capacity than the original iPod, was smaller than many cellphones. In the first year alone, the iTunes Music Store sold more than 70 million songs, and by July APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 150 Dimensions: 2.25" H x 11.25" W x 9.3" D. Introduced in July 1994, the PowerBook 150 was Apple's first truly affordable PowerBook. While people grumbled about its lack of an ADB port (It had only serial and SCSI ports) and fuzzy passive matrix screen, the 150 was an excellent value at $1,300. It was discontinued in October 1995. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM In January 1987 Apple introduced the "Platinum //e". Changes were mostly cosmetic and superficial, with the biggest difference being that the case color was changed from beige to the then standard platinum/grey color. Also different was a numeric keypad was built-in and the main keyboard had the same layout as the Apple //gs andMacintosh SE.
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 Introduced in October 1991, The PowerBook 140 was a 68030 (16 MHz) counterpart to the PowerBook 100. It also included an internal floppy drive, a feature that the 100 lacked. Despite the problems inherent in the passive matrix screen, the PowerBook 140 was a remarkably viable machine. It sold for $2,000, and was discontinued in August 1992 APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 4 (CDMA) Audio 40 hrs. Dimensions: 4.5" H x 2.31" W x 0.37" D. Weight: 0.3 lbs. Announced in January 2010, the iPhone 4 (CDMA) finally brought the iPhone to Verizon in the US. Aside from the radio chipset, it was identical to the iPhone 4, and kept the same price-points: a black 16 GB model for $199, and white or black 32 GB models for $299, includinga
APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (13-INCH, MID 2009) Introduced in June 2009, the MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) replaced the MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008). Apple chose to "upgrade" the name to include Pro because of several key improvements, felt to be professional-level features. These included a FireWire800 port, an SD card slot (an Apple first), an improved LED-backlit screen, and a APPLE-HISTORY.COM / SPECS FOR EVERY APPLE COMPUTER Recent Changes Thursday, 16 July 2015. Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation).Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1983-1985 Directed by Ridley Scott, the Orwellian scene depicted the IBM world being shattered by a new machine. Initially, the Mac sold very well, but by Christmas of 1984, people were becoming fed up with its small amount of RAM, and lack of hard drive connectivity. It was around the beginning of 1985 that Jobs and Sculley began to argue. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //C & //C+ Introduced in April of 1984, the Apple //c was the first compact model in the Apple lineup. It came in a small off-white case, and was built around an enhanced 65C02 processor, running at 1.4 MHz. It had 128 kB RAM, (expandable to 1 MB) a built-in 5.25" floppy drive APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1993-1996 Company History: 1993-1996. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Spindler, by all accounts, was the wrong man for the job. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1996-1997 Company History: 1996-1997. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Amelio made a strong effort to bring Apple back to profitability, but his efforts would prove to be largely unsuccessful. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 Dimensions: 5.44" H x 2.64" W x 0.27" D. Weight: 0.28 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the larger iPhone 6 plus, the iPhone 6 represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the iPhone 3GS APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 3G Dimensions: 4.5" H x 2.4" W x 0.48" D. Weight: 0.29 lbs. Released in June 2008, the iPhone 3G had been widely anticipated for nearly the entire lifespan of its predecessor, the wildly successful iPhone. The iPhone 3G included two prominent features that had been distinctly absent from the original iPhone—3G networking and built-in GPS. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //GS The //gs was the first computer to include a Large Scale Integration (LSI) chip, designed by Steve Wozniak, and called the IWM (Integrated Woz Machine). The //gs was later offered with 1 MB of RAM, and 256 kB of ROM. It could also hold a SCSI adapter card, APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK DUODOCK Miscellaneous. Power: 87 Watts. Dimensions: 4.8" H x 12.3" W x 16.3" D. Weight: 13.1 lbs. The DuoDock allowed any Duo to immediately expand its features. The DuoDock included a larger hard drive, more VRAM, and more input and output ports. The DuoDock, and its successors, allowed the Duo product line to become office desktop models. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 PLUS Audio 80 hrs. Dimensions: 6.22" H x 3.06" W x .28" D. Weight: 0.38 lbs. Introduced in September 2014 alongside the smaller iPhone 6, the iPhone 6 plus represented the most radical change to the industrial design of the iPhone since the iPhone 4; it shifted away from the hard edges of the previous four years back to the rounded corners of the APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH LC II A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK (13-INCH, ALUMINUM, LATE 2008) A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MAC PRO (EARLY 2009, SINGLE CPU) A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH 512KE Date: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:14:35 -0800 From: DS Subject: Macintosh 512K/800 (512ke Variant) You may want to note this one on the 512Ke page. Like the Macintosh ED, the 512Ke was also sold as the "Macintosh 512K/800" outside of the USA. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (15-INCH, LATE 2011) A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1985-1993 Company History: 1985-1993. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Sculley became the de facto head of Apple in May 1985. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH LC II A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //E ENHANCED/PLATINUM A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK (13-INCH, ALUMINUM, LATE 2008) A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 140 A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MAC PRO (EARLY 2009, SINGLE CPU) A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH 512KE Date: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:14:35 -0800 From: DS Subject: Macintosh 512K/800 (512ke Variant) You may want to note this one on the 512Ke page. Like the Macintosh ED, the 512Ke was also sold as the "Macintosh 512K/800" outside of the USA. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACBOOK PRO (15-INCH, LATE 2011) A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH PORTABLE A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / APPLE //C & //C+ A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / XSERVE A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / COMPANY HISTORY: 1993-1996 Company History: 1993-1996. NOTE: The Company History section is no longer actively maintained, though it is accurate through 2004.For a more detailed (and current) history of the company, can be found at Wikipedia. Spindler, by all accounts, was the wrong man for the job. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / IPHONE 6 A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK DUODOCK A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH LC 550 A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH 512KE Date: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:14:35 -0800 From: DS Subject: Macintosh 512K/800 (512ke Variant) You may want to note this one on the 512Ke page. Like the Macintosh ED, the 512Ke was also sold as the "Macintosh 512K/800" outside of the USA. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / POWERBOOK 1400C/CS A brief history of the company that changed the computing world forever. Includes specifications, a description and pictures of every Apple computer ever made. APPLE-HISTORY.COM / MACINTOSH COLOR CLASSIC II Date: Thu, 02 Sep 1999 00:09:00 -0700 From: Andrew Ludate Subject: Color Classic info NB: some of the extra information comes from www.lowendmac.com. The Color Classic II (sold in Canada, Europe and Japan) used the same compact case as the Color Classic, but apple-HISTORY / specs for EVERY apple computer, established 1996RECENT CHANGES
THURSDAY, 16 JULY 2015 Continuing with checkpoint releases, this update brings all MacBook Pro models up to date, and adds the just-announced iPod touch (6th Generation) . Next up is the new MacBook and older MacBook Airs, then Desktop models. I'll probalby save the Watch forlast. Happy July!
TUESDAY, 30 JUNE 2015 Seeing as I was more than 30 models behind, I decided to update the site in batches, to checkpoint my progress. This is the first of those checkpoints, bringing all iPhone/iPod/iPad models up to date. I hope to make other checkpoint releases over the course of the summer.Enjoy!
TUESDAY, 5 MAY 2015
Another year, another semi-update. This update brings Max OS values up to date, and includes a few small corrections. Rather than trying to make some giant monolithic update to add the 36 (!) missing models, I'm going to work to bring the site up to date over the course of the rest of the spring and summer. Once we're up to date, I have a redesign in the works to make the site more mobile-friendly. Thanksfor your patience!
FRIDAY, 29 AUGUST 2014 More of a pre-update; I made a few corrections (keep 'em coming!) and updated the Max OS for recent hardware to be 10.10 and iOS 8.0. I hope to get the site caught up over the course of the next couple of months, rather than as a single monolythic update. Thanks to everyone for their continued support! SUNDAY, 26 AUGUST 2012 Oops! I forgot to properly sunset the various Macs capable of running OS X Lion but not OS X Mountain Lion. Thanks to Joshua Longfor pointing it out
!
TUESDAY, 21 AUGUST 2012 I added the Apple TV , iPad (Retina) , new MacBook Airs (11-inch , 13-inch ), new MacBook Pros (13-inch , 15-inch , Retina ), (ahem) newish Mac
Pros (Single CPU , Dual CPU ), and a couple of missing iMac education-only models. Made a few minor under-the-hood improvements. This may be the only update until early 2013, though I'll try to be timely adding the new iPhone and whatever else gets announced in September. TUESDAY, 3 JANUARY 2012 Welcome to the new apple-history! I've been slowly building the new UI over the past year, making slow but steady progress toward what you now see here. The frames-based site was nearly nine years old, and long overdue for a major rework, and I finally had time to finish it up during the holidays. I hope you love (or can at least tolerate) the new site! Here are some highlights of the new design: * COMPLETE RE-SKIN! My goal was a clean, simple site that didn't feel completely foreign. The core layout of each page should still look familiar. I've made an attempt to test this on as many browsers as I can, but there will inevitability be some kinks to iron out.Please be patient!
* NO MORE FRAMES! I struggled for a long time with how to make every page of the site easily accessible from every other page, and for a long time frames was the best answer I had. After years of experimentation, I think I've found a reasonable solution in the new navigation column you see to your left. It should "remember" its state from screen to screen, and default to a reasonable state when pages are loaded from links or bookmarks. It uses very simple javascript and css, and should degrade nicely to a simple bulleted list for simple browsers. Removing frames has the added benefit of making bookmarkingmuch easier.
* SHORT URLS! As you click around the site, you'll notice that the URLs are much shorter. The old-style URLs should all still work fine, but will redirect to the new shorter ones, which should get picked up by the search engines over the next few weeks. * TWEET/+1 BUTTONS ON EVER PAGE! I added tweet buttons to the old site a few months ago, but I think the integration is a little cleaner now. There's also a follow button up top so you can get a tweet whenever I manage to update the site. * MODEL COMPARISON IMPROVEMENTS! The comparison tables are a little better integrated with the rest of the site visually. The pull-down menu is still there, but has been augmented to also behave as an auto-complete search field. I find this makes comparing models prettyeasy.
I've also added the iPhone 4S, the late '11 MacBook Pros, and fixed a few small specs errata. I believe I've worked out all of the major bugs in the new site, but there's still a lot to do, which I hope to get to over the course of the next year. The standard caveat still applies, though: I work a busy, full time job, and updates to the site may still be several months removed from one another. Thanks forvisiting!
SATURDAY, 24 SEPTEMBER 2011 Holy Moly! I could list all the models I'm adding, but it's basically 2010 and 2011. My newish-job at Twitter keeps me pretty busy, but I've been hacking away as time allows, and am finally up to date, with a number of small corrections as well. Thanks to all the folks who have emailed to check in and make sure I'm still here. I intend to keep the site up, running, and mostly current for the forceable future, though I'll probably continue to be a few months behind most of the time. I've also been working on a larger structural update to the site, which didn't make the cut for this release, but I hope to get out by the end of the year (along with whatever new machines get released in the interim). I've added a follow button to the site navigation forthe @apple_history
future.
WEDNESDAY, 9 JUNE 2010 Added the new MacBook and MacBook Pro models, added the iPhone 4.Fixed a few typos.
MONDAY, 8 FEBRUARY 2010 fixed a typo and the price list for the iMac (Late 2009), and added the Mac mini (Late 2009), which I had mostly added already. SATURDAY, 6 FEBRUARY 2010 Happy (one month after) New Year! Added the Late 2009 models and the iPad. Made more smallish, not all that apparent under-the-hoodchanges.
TUESDAY, 29 SEPTEMBER 2009 Within hours of launching the comparison feature I managed to break it in attempt to fix bookmarking (which had been broken for comparison pages). Both work now. Thanks Matthias! Click here for all changes* ▼ site
* Recent Changes
* Bibliography
* Mirrors
* Downloads
* FAQ
* Contact
* ▼ history
* 1976-1981
* 1981-1983
* 1983-1985
* 1985-1993
* 1993-1996
* 1996-1997
* 1997-2000
* 2000-2004
* ▼ by year
* ▼ 1976
* Apple I
* ▼ 1977
* Apple ][e
* Apple //c & //c+
* Apple //e Enhanced/Platinum* Apple //gs
* ▼ 68000
* Lisa/Lisa 2/Mac XL* Macintosh 128k
* Macintosh 512K
* Macintosh Plus
* Macintosh Plus ED
* Macintosh 512Ke
* Macintosh ED
* Macintosh SE
* Macintosh SE FDHD
* Macintosh Portable* Macintosh Classic
* PowerBook 100
* ▼ 68020
* Macintosh II
* Macintosh LC
* ▼ 68030
* Macintosh IIx
* Macintosh SE/30
* Macintosh IIcx
* Macintosh IIci
* Macintosh IIfx
* Macintosh IIsi
* Macintosh Classic II* Performa 200
* PowerBook 140
* PowerBook 170
* Macintosh LC II
* PowerBook 145
* Performa 600/600CD* Macintosh IIvi
* Macintosh IIvx
* PowerBook 160
* PowerBook 180
* PowerBook Duo 210
* PowerBook Duo 230
* PowerBook Duo 270c * Macintosh Color Classic* Macintosh LC III
* Performa 250
* PowerBook 165c
* Performa 450
* Macintosh LC 520
* PowerBook 180c
* PowerBook 145B
* PowerBook 165
* Performa 400
* Performa 405
* Performa 410
* Performa 430
* Macintosh Color Classic II* Macintosh LC III+
* Macintosh TV
* Performa 275
* Performa 460
* Performa 466
* Performa 467
* PowerBook Duo 250
* Macintosh LC 550
* Performa 550
* Performa 560
* PowerBook 150
* ▼ 68040
* Macintosh Quadra 700 * Macintosh Quadra 900 * Macintosh Quadra 950 * Macintosh Centris 610 * Macintosh Centris 650 * Macintosh Quadra 800 * Workgroup Server 80 * Workgroup Server 95 * Macintosh Quadra 660av * Macintosh Quadra 840av * Workgroup Server 60 * Macintosh Centris 660av* Macintosh LC 475
* Macintosh Quadra 605 * Macintosh Quadra 610 * Macintosh Quadra 650* Performa 475
* Performa 476
* Macintosh LC 575
* Performa 575
* Performa 576
* Performa 577
* Performa 578
* PowerBook Duo 280
* PowerBook Duo 280c* PowerBook 520
* PowerBook 520c
* PowerBook 540
* PowerBook 540c
* Macintosh LC 630
* Macintosh Quadra 630* Performa 630
* Performa 630CD
* Performa 631CD
* Performa 635CD
* Performa 636
* Performa 636CD
* Performa 637CD
* Performa 638CD
* Performa 640CD
* Performa 580CD
* Performa 588CD
* Macintosh LC 580
* PowerBook 550c
* PowerBook 190
* PowerBook 190cs
* ▼ ARM
* iPod classic
* iPod nano (3rd Generation) * iPod classic (120 GB) * iPod nano (4th Generation) * iPod shuffle (3rd Generation) * iPod classic (Late 2009) * iPod nano (5th Generation) * iPod nano (6th Generation) * iPod shuffle 4th Generation) * iPod nano (7th Generation)* ▼ ARMv3
* Newton Message Pad (OMP) * Newton Message Pad 100 * Newton Message Pad 110 * Newton Message Pad 120 * Newton Message Pad 130* eMate 300
* ▼ ARMv4T
* iPod
* iPod (Dock Connector)* iPod mini
* iPod (Click Wheel) * iPod (U2 Special Edition)* iPod photo
* iPod mini (2nd gen)* iPod (color)
* iPod (color U2 SE)* iPod nano
* iPod (with video)
* iPod (with video, U2 SE) * iPod nano (2nd Generation)* ▼ ARMv6
* iPhone
* iPod touch
* iPhone 3G
* iPod touch (2nd Generation)* ▼ ARMv7-A
* iPhone 3GS
* iPod touch (3rd Generation)* iPad
* iPhone 4
* Apple TV (2nd Generation) * iPod touch (4th Generation)* iPhone 4 (CDMA)
* iPad 2
* iPhone 4S
* Apple TV (3rd Generation) * iPad (3rd Generation)* iPhone 5
* iPod touch (5th Generation) * iPad (4th Generation)* iPad mini
* iPhone 5c
* ▼ ARMv8-A
* iPhone 5s
* iPad Air
* iPad mini 2
* iPhone 6
* iPhone 6 Plus
* iPad Air 2
* iPad mini 3
* iPod touch (6th Generation)* ▼ Core
* iMac (Early 2006)
* MacBook Pro
* Mac mini (Early 2006) * MacBook Pro (17-inch)* MacBook
* iMac (Mid 2006)
* Mac mini (Late 2006)* ▼ Core 2
* iMac (Late 2006)
* MacBook Pro (Late 2006) * MacBook (Late 2006) * MacBook (Mid 2007) * MacBook Pro (Mid 2007)* iMac (Mid 2007)
* Mac mini (Mid 2007) * MacBook (Late 2007)* MacBook Air
* MacBook (Early 2008) * MacBook Pro (Early 2008)* iMac (Early 2008)
* MacBook (13-inch, Aluminum, Late 2008) * MacBook Air (Late 2008) * MacBook Pro (15-inch, Late 2008) * MacBook (Early 2009) * MacBook Pro (17-inch, Early 2009)* iMac (Early 2009)
* Mac mini (Early 2009)* iMac (Mid 2009)
* MacBook (Mid 2009) * MacBook Air (Mid 2009) * MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2009) * MacBook Pro (15-inch, Mid 2009) * MacBook Pro (17-inch, Mid 2009)* iMac (Late 2009)
* MacBook (Late 2009) * Mac mini (Late 2009) * Mac mini (Server, Late 2009) * MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2010) * MacBook (Mid 2010) * Mac mini (Mid 2010) * Mac mini Server (Mid 2010) * MacBook Air (11-inch, Late 2010) * MacBook Air (13-inch, Late 2010)* ▼ Core i3
* iMac (Mid 2010)
* iMac (Late 2011)
* ▼ Core i5
* MacBook Pro (15-inch, Mid 2010) * MacBook Pro (17-inch, Mid 2010) * MacBook Pro (13-inch, Early 2011)* iMac (Mid 2011)
* MacBook Air (11-inch, Mid 2011) * MacBook Air (13-inch, Mid 2011) * Mac mini (Mid 2011) * MacBook Pro (13-inch, Late 2011) * MacBook Air (11-inch, Mid 2012) * MacBook Air (13-inch, Mid 2012) * MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid 2012) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Late 2012) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Early 2013) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Late 2013) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Mid 2014) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Early 2015)* ▼ Core i7
* MacBook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) * MacBook Pro (17-inch, Early 2011) * Mac mini Server (Mid 2011) * MacBook Pro (15-inch, Late 2011) * MacBook Pro (17-inch, Late 2011) * MacBook Pro (15-inch, Mid 2012) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid 2012) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Early 2013) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Late 2013) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid 2014) * MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Mid 2015)* ▼ Pentium
* Apple TV
* ▼ PowerPC 7xx "G3"* PowerBook G3
* Power Macintosh G3 * Macintosh Server G3 * Power Macintosh G3 All-in-one * PowerBook G3 Series* iMac
* PowerBook G3 Series (rev. 2)* iMac (Rev. C)
* Power Macintosh G3 (Blue & White)* iMac (Rev. D)
* PowerBook G3 (Bronze Keyboard)* iBook
* iMac (Slot Loading)* iMac DV/SE
* iBook SE
* PowerBook G3 (FireWire) * iMac (Summer 2000) * iMac DV (Summer 2000)* iMac DV+
* iMac DV SE (Summer 2000) * iBook/iBook SE (FireWire)* iMac (Early 2001)
* iMac SE (early 2001)* iBook (Dual USB)
* iMac (Summer 2001)* iBook (Late 2001)
* iBook (14.1")
* iBook (Mid 2002)
* iBook (Late 2002)
* iBook (Early 2003) * ▼ PowerPC 9xx "G5" * Power Macintosh G5* Xserve G5
* Xserve G5 (Cluster Node) * Power Macintosh G5 (June 2004)* iMac G5
* Power Macintosh G5 (Early 2005) * iMac G5 (Ambient Light Sensor)* iMac G5 (iSight)
* Power Macintosh G5 (Late 2005) * ▼ PowerPC 74xx "G4" * Power Macintosh G4 (AGP Graphics) * Power Macintosh G4 (PCI Graphics) * Power Macintosh G4 (Gigabit Ethernet) * Power Macintosh G4 Cube* PowerBook G4
* Power Macintosh G4 (Digital Audio) * Power Macintosh G4 (Quicksilver) * PowerBook G4 (Gigabit Ethernet)* iMac (Flat Panel)
* Power Macintosh G4 (Quicksilver 2002)* eMac
* PowerBook G4 (DVI)* Xserve
* iMac (17")
* Power Macintosh G4 (Mirrored Drive Doors) * PowerBook G4 (1 GHz/867 MHz) * PowerBook G4 (12.1") * PowerBook G4 (17") * Power Macintosh G4 (FireWire 800)* iMac (Early 2003)
* Xserve (Cluster Node) * Xserve (Slot Load) / Xserve RAID * eMac (ATI Graphics)* iMac (USB 2.0)
* PowerBook G4 (12.1" DVI) * PowerBook G4 (15" FireWire 800) * PowerBook G4 (17" 1.33 GHz)* iBook G4
* eMac (USB 2.0)
* iBook G4 (Early 2004) * PowerBook G4 Family * iBook G4 (Late 2004)* Mac mini
* PowerBook G4 (1.5 - 1.67 GHz)* eMac (2005)
* iBook G4 (Mid 2005) * PowerBook G4 (Dual Layer SD)* ▼ PowerPC 601
* Performa 6110CD
* Performa 6112CD
* Performa 6115CD
* Performa 6116CD
* Performa 6117CD
* Performa 6118CD
* Power Macintosh 6100 * Power Macintosh 7100 * Power Macintosh 8100 * Workgroup Server 6150 * Workgroup Server 8150 * Workgroup Server 9150 * Power Macintosh 7200 * Power Macintosh 7500 * Workgroup Server 7250 * Power Macintosh 8200* ▼ PowerPC 603
* Performa 5200CD
* Performa 5210CD
* Performa 5215CD
* Performa 5220CD
* Power Macintosh 5200 LC* Performa 6200
* Performa 6205CD
* Performa 6210CD
* Performa 6214CD
* Performa 6216CD
* Performa 6218CD
* Performa 6220CD
* Performa 6230CD
* Power Macintosh 6200* Performa 5300CD
* Performa 5320CD
* PowerBook 5300
* PowerBook 5300c
* PowerBook 5300ce
* PowerBook 5300cs
* PowerBook Duo 2300c * Power Macintosh 5300 LC* Performa 6260CD
* Performa 6290CD
* Performa 6300CD
* Performa 6310CD
* Performa 5260CD
* Performa 5270CD
* Performa 5400CD
* Performa 5410CD
* Performa 5420 (black case)* Performa 5420CD
* Performa 5430CD
* Performa 5440CD
* Power Macintosh 5260 LC * Power Macintosh 5400 LC* Performa 6400
* Power Macintosh 6400* Performa 6360
* PowerBook 1400c/cs* Performa 4400
* Power Macintosh 4400 * Power Macintosh 7220* Performa 6320
* Power Macintosh 6300/120* PowerBook 3400
* Power Macintosh 5500 * Power Macintosh 6500 * 20th Anniversary Macintosh* PowerBook 2400
* ▼ PowerPC 604
* Power Macintosh 8500 * Power Macintosh 9500 * Network Server 500/700 * Workgroup Server 8550 * Power Macintosh 7600 * Power Macintosh 7300 * Power Macintosh 8600 * Power Macintosh 9600 * Workgroup Server 7350 * Workgroup Server 9650* ▼ StrongARM
* Newton Message Pad 2000 * Newton Message Pad 2100* ▼ Xeon
* Mac Pro
* Xserve (Late 2006) * Mac Pro (Early 2008) * Xserve (Early 2008) * Mac Pro (Early 2009, Dual CPU) * Mac Pro (Early 2009, Single CPU) * Xserve (Early 2009) * Mac Pro (Mid 2010, Dual CPU) * Mac Pro (Mid 2010, Single CPU) * Mac Pro (Mid 2012, Dual CPU) * Mac Pro (Mid 2012, Single CPU)apple-HISTORY
v.8.4.0-2015-07-15a
DISCLAIMER: While every effort is made to publish correct specifications for all machines listed on this site, errors inevitably exist. If you are here for mission-critical information, it's always best to get a second opinion. No guarantee of accuracy is in any way implied. Your mileage may vary. Copyright © 1996-2020 Glen Sanford , unless otherwise noted. All Rights Reserved. This site is in no way endorsed by or connected with Apple, inc. Use of any text, image, or content without permissionis prohibited.
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