Apple II and external
DAA The first Apple II computers went on sale on June 10, 1977 with a
MOS Technology 6502 (later
Synertek) microprocessor running at 1.023
MHz, 4 KB of
RAM, an
audio cassette interface for loading programs and storing data, and the
Integer BASIC programming language built into the
ROMs. The video controller displayed 40 columns by 24 lines of monochrome, upper-case-only (the original character set matches
ASCII characters 0x20 to 0x5F) text on the screen, with
NTSC composite video output suitable for display on a TV monitor, or on a regular TV set by way of a separate
RF modulator. The original retail price of the computer was with 4 KB of RAM and with the maximum 48 KB of RAM. To reflect the computer's
color graphics capability, the Apple logo on the casing was represented using rainbow stripes, which remained a part of Apple's corporate logo until early 1998. The earliest Apple IIs were assembled in
Silicon Valley, and later in Texas;
printed circuit boards were manufactured in Ireland and
Singapore. An external -inch
floppy disk drive, the
Disk II, attached via a controller card that plugged into one of the computer's expansion slots (usually slot 6), was used for data storage and retrieval to replace cassettes. The Disk II interface, created by
Steve Wozniak, was regarded as an engineering masterpiece for its economy of electronic components. Rather than having a dedicated sound-synthesis chip, the Apple II had a toggle circuit that could only emit a click through a built-in speaker; all other sounds (including two, three and, eventually, four-voice music and playback of audio samples and speech synthesis) were generated entirely by software that clicked the speaker at just the right times. The Apple II's multiple expansion slots permitted a wide variety of third-party devices, including
Apple II peripheral cards such as
serial controllers, display controllers, memory boards, hard disks, networking components, and
real-time clocks. There were plug-in
expansion cards – such as the
Z-80 SoftCard The original Apple II was discontinued at the start of 1981; it was superseded by the
Apple II+.
Apple II Plus The Apple II Plus, introduced in June 1979, included the
Applesoft BASIC programming language in
ROM. This
Microsoft-authored dialect of BASIC, which was previously available as an upgrade, supported floating-point arithmetic, and became the standard BASIC dialect on the Apple II series (though it ran at a noticeably slower speed than Steve Wozniak's Integer BASIC). Except for improved graphics and disk-booting support in the ROM, and the removal of the 2k 6502 assembler to make room for the floating point BASIC, the II+ was otherwise identical to the original II in terms of electronic functionality. There were small differences in the physical appearance and keyboard. RAM prices fell during 1980–81 and all II+ machines came from the factory with a full 48 KB of memory already installed.
Apple II Europlus and J-Plus After the success of the first Apple II in the United States, Apple expanded its market to include Europe, the Middle East, Australia and the Far East in 1979, with the
Apple II Europlus (Europe, Australia) and the
Apple II J-Plus (Japan). In these models, Apple made the necessary hardware, software and
firmware changes in order to comply to standards outside of the US.
Apple IIe The Apple II Plus was followed in 1983 by the Apple IIe, a cost-reduced yet more powerful machine that used newer chips to reduce the component count and add new features, such as the display of upper and lowercase letters and a standard 64 KB of RAM. The IIe RAM was configured as if it were a 48 KB Apple II Plus with a language card. The machine had no slot 0, but instead had an auxiliary slot that could accept a 1 KB memory card to enable the 80-column display. This card contained only RAM; the hardware and firmware for the 80-column display was built into the Apple IIe. An "extended 80-column card" with more memory increased the machine's RAM to 128 KB. The Apple IIe was the most popular machine in the Apple II series. It has the distinction of being the longest-lived Apple computer of all time—it was manufactured and sold with only minor changes for nearly 11 years. The IIe was the last Apple II model to be sold, and was discontinued in November 1993. During its lifespan two variations were introduced: the
Apple IIe Enhanced (four replacement chips to give it some of the features of the later model
Apple IIc) and the
Apple IIe Platinum (a modernized case color to match other Apple products of the era, along with the addition of a
numeric keypad). Some of the features of the IIe were carried over from the less successful
Apple III, among them the
ProDOS operating system.
Apple IIc The Apple IIc was released in April 1984, billed as a portable Apple II because it could be easily carried due to its size and carrying handle, which could be flipped down to prop the machine up into a typing position. Unlike modern
portables, it lacked a built-in display and battery. It was the first of three Apple II models to be made in the
Snow White design language, and the only one that used its unique creamy off-white color. The Apple IIc was the first Apple II to use the
65C02 low-power variant of the 6502 processor, and featured a built-in 5.25-inch floppy drive and 128 KB RAM, with a built-in disk controller that could control external drives, composite video (NTSC or PAL), serial interfaces for modem and printer, and a port usable by either a joystick or mouse. Unlike previous Apple II models, the IIc had no internal expansion slots at all. Two different monochrome
LC displays were sold for use with the IIc's video expansion port, although both were short-lived due to high cost and poor legibility. The IIc had an external power supply that converted AC power to 15 V DC, though the IIc itself will accept between 12 V and 17 V DC, allowing third parties to offer battery packs and automobile power adapters that connected in place of the supplied AC adapter.
Apple IIGS The Apple IIGS, released on September 15, 1986, is the penultimate and most advanced model in the Apple II series, and a radical departure from prior models. It uses a
16-bit microprocessor, the
65C816 operating at 2.8 MHz with 24-bit addressing, allowing expansion up to 8 MB of RAM. The graphics are significantly improved, with 4096 colors and new modes with resolutions of 320×200 and 640×400. The audio capabilities are vastly improved, with a built-in music synthesizer that far exceeded any other home computer. The Apple IIGS evolved the platform while still maintaining near-complete backward compatibility. Its
Mega II chip contains the functional equivalent of an entire Apple IIe computer (sans processor). This, combined with the 65816's ability to execute 65C02 code directly, provides full support for legacy software, while also supporting 16-bit software running under a new OS. The OS eventually included a Macintosh-like graphical
Finder for managing disks and files and opening documents and applications, along with
desk accessories. Later, the IIGS gained the ability to read and write Macintosh disks and, through third-party software, a multitasking
Unix-like shell and
TrueType font support. The GS includes a 32-voice Ensoniq 5503 DOC
sample-based sound synthesizer chip with 64 KB dedicated RAM, 256 KB (or later 1.125 MB) of standard RAM, built-in peripheral ports (switchable between IIe-style card slots and IIc-style onboard controllers for disk drives, mouse, RGB video, and serial devices), and built-in
AppleTalk networking.
Apple IIc Plus The final Apple II model was the Apple IIc Plus introduced in 1988. It was the same size and shape as the IIc that came before it, but the 5.25-inch floppy drive had been replaced with a -inch drive, the power supply was moved inside the case, and the processor was a fast 4 MHz 65C02 processor that actually ran 8-bit Apple II software faster than the IIGS. The IIc Plus also featured a new keyboard layout that matched the Platinum IIe and IIGS. Unlike the IIe IIc and IIGS, the IIc Plus came only in one version (American) and was not officially sold anywhere outside the US. The Apple IIc Plus ceased production in 1990, with its two-year production run being the shortest of all the Apple II computers.
Apple IIe Card Although not an extension of the Apple II line, in 1990 the Apple IIe Card, an expansion card for the
Macintosh LC, was released. Essentially a miniaturized Apple IIe computer on a card (using the Mega II chip from the Apple IIGS), it allowed the Macintosh to run 8-bit Apple IIe software through
hardware emulation, with an option to run at roughly double the speed of the original IIe (about 1.8 MHz). However, the video output was emulated in software, and, depending on how much of the screen the currently running program was trying to update in a single frame, performance could be much slower compared to a real IIe. This is due to the fact that writes from the 65C02 on the IIe Card to video memory were caught by the additional hardware on the card, so the video emulation software running on the Macintosh side could process that write and update the video display. But, while the Macintosh was processing video updates, execution of Apple II code would be temporarily halted. With a breakout cable which connected to the back of the card, the user could attach up to two
UniDisk or Apple 5.25 Drives, up to one
UniDisk 3.5 drive, and a DE-9 Apple II joystick. Many of the LC's built-in Macintosh peripherals could also be "borrowed" by the card when in Apple II mode, including extra RAM, the Mac's internal 3.5-inch floppy drives, AppleTalk networking, any ProDOS-formatted hard disk partitions, the serial ports, mouse, and real-time clock. The IIe card could not, however, run software intended for the 16-bit Apple IIGS. ==Advertising, marketing, and packaging==