- LaserWriter
Infobox Computer Hardware Printer
name = LaserWriter
caption =
introduced = March 1, 1985
discontinued = February 1, 1988
cost = $6,995
processor =Motorola 68000
frequency = 12 MHz
minimum = 1.5 MB
maximum = 1.5 MB
slot = 1
rom = 512 kB
ports = Serial,LocalTalk
type = Laser
color = 1
dpi = 300
speed = 8 Pages Per Minute
language =PostScript Diablo 630
power = 760 Watts
weight = 77 lb
dimensions = (H x W x D) 11.5 x 18.5 x 16.2 inThe Apple LaserWriter was one of the first
laser printer s available to the mass market. The combination of the LaserWriter printer with its built-inPostScript interpreter, publishing softwareAldus PageMaker, and the GUI-based Macintosh, was an industry-standard configuration at the beginning of thedesktop publishing (DTP) revolution. [http://books.google.com/books?id=mXnw5tM8QRwC&pg=PA54&lpg=PA54&dq=laserwriter+history&source=web&ots=PwEuaZ3lYI&sig=AQuk7Mvv5Nmgrii1Wo26YOALYlw&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=9&ct=result#PRA2-PA759,M1] [http://books.google.com/books?id=mXnw5tM8QRwC&pg=PA54&lpg=PA54&dq=laserwriter+history&source=web&ots=PwEuaZ3lYI&sig=AQuk7Mvv5Nmgrii1Wo26YOALYlw&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=9&ct=result#PRA2-PA759,M1]History
When it was announced in January 1985, the LaserWriter printer was the first laser printer for the Macintosh and an integral part of the newly announced
Macintosh Office . With a printer resolution of 300 dpi and printing speed of 8ppm, the LaserWriter printer may have seemed like just another ordinary printer. But at the heart of the LaserWriter printer'sraster image processor lay theAdobe PostScript interpreter, a feature that would ultimately transform the landscape of computer desktop publishing. [http://www.creativepro.com/article/inside-publishing-revolution-how-laserwriter-and-photoshop-changed-world]The original LaserWriter printer used a Canon LBP-CX print engine [http://www.fixyourownprinter.com/reference/pcr/engine/1311] , which was used by many printer manufacturers at the time. The print engine is responsible for feeding paper, image transfer, and fusing the image. Parts from early LaserWriter and HP LaserJet printers are sometimes interchangeable, as they are based on the same print engine, except for the interface board and formatter and casing.
Unlike HP's PCL and other early printer control languages, PostScript was a complete interpreted
page description language . PostScript described fonts in outline form, an attribute allowing arbitrary size, rotation, and position. PostScript handled bitmap graphics andvector graphics equally well, allowing any mixture of fonts, bitmaps, and drawing primitives on a single page (limited by the PostScript interpreter's available RAM). While competing printers offered some of these capabilities, they were limited in their ability to reproduce free-form layouts (as a desktop publishing application might produce).The use of PostScript did not come cheap. At an introductory price of US$6,995, the LaserWriter was more expensive than PC laser printers of comparable print speed and quality. The LaserWriter's high cost was largely due to the extra processing power needed to run the PostScript interpreter. As it was a complete
programming language , PostScript came saddled with the overhead of a complex software rasterizer program (running inside the printer). Powering the LaserWriter was aMotorola 68000 CPU running at 12 MHz, 512KB of workspaceRAM , and a 1 MB framebuffer. At introduction, the LaserWriter had the most processing power in Apple's product line — more than an 8 MHz Macintosh.The PostScript interpreter in the LaserWriter printer can be used interactively: one can actually connect a serial terminal to the printer and, by typing "executive", communicate with the printer's computer. The printer will also display diagnostic error messages on this link (RS-232, 19200
baud , 8bit s, noparity bit , 1stop bit ).Since the price of a single LaserWriter cost many times that of a dot-matrix impact printer, some means to share the printer with several Macs was desired. LANs were not yet widespread, being both complex and expensive, so Apple developed its own networking scheme,
LocalTalk . Based on theAppleTalk protocol stack , LocalTalk connected the LaserWriter to the Mac over anRS-422 serial port. At 250 kbit/s, LocalTalk was slower than the Centronics PC parallel interface, but offered the advantage of sharing a single LaserWriter over multiple Macs.The built-in ability to function in workgroups greatly enhanced the LaserWriter's value proposition. PostScript enabled the LaserWriter to print complex pages containing high-resolution bitmap graphics,
outline font s, and vector illustrations. Compared to the HPLaserjet and other PCL printers, the LaserWriter could print more complex layouts. Paired with the program Aldus PageMaker, the LaserWriter gave the layout editor an exact replica of the printed page. For high-volume publications, the LaserWriter offered the perfectPOV-statement|date=July 2008 proofing tool. For the low-volume desktop publisher, the LaserWriter could serve as the master copy. The Mac platform quickly gained the favor of the emerging desktop-publishing industry, both low and high, a niche area the Mac retains importance to this day.Fact|date=July 2008Millions of LaserWriter units were eventually sold, and it is often creditedWho|date=July 2008 as having saved the Macintosh platform and the Apple company. Building on the success of the original LaserWriter, Apple developed many successive models. Later LaserWriters offered faster printing, higher resolutions,
Ethernet connectivity, and eventually, color output. To compete, many other laser printer manufacturers licensed Adobe PostScript for inclusion into their own models.Eventually, the standardization on Ethernet and PostScript as a means for connecting to and controlling laser printers rendered Apple's printers superfluous. The Mac platform functioned equally well with any non-Apple Postscript printer. After the
LaserWriter 8500 , Apple discontinued the LaserWriter product line.Design
The Laser Printer was the first major printer designed by Apple to use the new
Snow White design language created byFrogdesign . It also continued a departure from the beige color that characterized the Apple & Macintosh products to that time by using the same brighter, creamy off-white color first introduced with theApple IIc andApple Scribe Printer 8 months earlier. In that regard it and its successors stood out among all of Apple's Macintosh product offerings until 1987, when Apple adopted a unifying warm gray color they called "Platinum" across its entire product line, which was to last for over a decade. The innovative look of the LaserWriter made it a distinctive departure from other office equipment of the time and eventually helped to make Apple products instantly recognizable throughout the world.POV-statement|date=July 2008 More importantly it marked a turning point inindustrial design where the zero draft design incorporated into the case, allowed the stylish lines to form-fit around the interior mechanisms, keeping it small and sleek enough for any-sized office space.It was also the first peripheral to use the
LocalTalk connector and Apple's unifiedAppleTalk Connector Family design, created byBrad Bissell ofFrogdesign usingRick Meadows 'Apple Icon Family designs. The connector's design would be used on all of Apple's peripherals and cable connectors for the next 15 years, as well as influencing the connectors used throughout the industry as a whole.External links
* [http://www.download.com/Apple-LaserWriter-Software-Update/3000-2296_4-906679.html Driver for Mac OS 8.6.1]
* [http://www.linuxprinting.org/printer_list.cgi?make=Apple Driver for Linux]
* [http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=112474 Technical Specifications on Apple.com]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.