- Macintosh II
Mac_specs|
Introduced=March 2 1987 |MSRP=5500|CPU=Motorola 68020
CPUspeed=16 MHz|OS="4.0"– 6.0.8, 7.0-7.5.5 or with 68030 32-bit upgrade Mac OS 7.6.1|RAM=1MB , expandable to 20 MB (68 MB via FDHD upgrade kit)|RAMtype=120 ns 30-pinSIMM
Discontinued=January 15 ,1990 The Apple Macintosh II was the first personal computer model of theMacintosh II series in theApple Macintosh line. (Not to be confused with theApple II family of non-Macintosh computers.)Retailing for US$3,898 base price (for the CPU unit only), the Macintosh II was the first "modular" Macintosh model, so called because it came in a horizontal desktop case like many PCs of the time. All previous Macintosh computers used an all-in-one design with a built-in black-and-white monitor.
The primary improvement in the Mac II was Color
QuickDraw in ROM, a color version of the graphics language which was the heart of the machine. Among the many innovations in Color QuickDraw were an ability to handle any display size, any color depth, and multiple monitors. Because the Color QuickDraw language was in ROM, earlier Macintoshes could not display color, and many early adopters felt betrayed by Apple. After a year or two, Apple changed direction and began shipping Color QuickDraw in the operating system, allowing earlier computers to run color programs with 1-bit color.The Macintosh II was designed by hardware engineers
Michael Dhuey (computer) andBrian Berkeley (monitor). A basic system with 20 Mb drive and monitor cost about $5200, A complete color-capable system could cost as much as $10,000 once the cost of the color monitor, video card, hard disk and RAM were added. This price point placed it in competition withworkstation s fromSilicon Graphics ,Sun andHewlett-Packard .Introduced in 1987, the Mac II featured a
Motorola 68020 processor operating at 16MHz teamed with aMotorola 68881 floating point unit . The machine shipped with a socket for an MMU, but an Apple chip was installed that did not implement virtual memory (the software for virtual memory would not be released until 1990.) Standard memory was 1megabyte , expandable to 68 MB, though not without the special FDHD upgrade kit; otherwise, 20 MB was the maximum. RAM could be maxed out to 128 MB, however, if the ROMs were upgraded to those used in the IIx (or ifMODE32 was used), as the Mac II'smemory controller supported higher-density memory modules than did the stock ROM. The Mac II had eight 30-pin SIMMs, and memory was installed in groups of four. A 5.25-inch 40 MB internalSCSI hard disk was optional, as was a second internal 800 kilobyte 3.5-inch floppy disk drive. SixNuBus slots were available for expansion (at least one of which had to be used for agraphics card , as the Mac II had no onboard graphics).The Macintosh II was followed by a series of related models including the
Macintosh IIx andMacintosh IIfx , all of which used theMotorola 68030 processor. It was possible to upgrade a Macintosh II to a Macintosh IIx or IIfx with a motherboard swap. The Macintosh II was the first Macintosh to have theChimes of Death accompany theSad Mac logo whenever a serious hardware error occurred.ee also
*
List of display interfaces
*Macintosh XL
*Macintosh Plus
*Macintosh SE References
* [http://www.apple-history.com apple-history.com]
* [http://www.lowendmac.com/ii/macintosh-ii.html Mac II profile] on Low End Mac
* [http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=112168 Macintosh II technical specifications] at apple.comNavbox with columns
name = Navbox with columns/doc
state = uncollapsed
title = Apple Model Navigationcolstyle = text-align:center;background:silver;
colwidth = 25%col1header = Current Model
col2header = Successorcol1 =
Macintosh II
col2 =Macintosh IIx Macintosh IIcx col1footer =
March 2 ,1987
col2footer = Following Family ModelII
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.