To make it easier to place the controller on the main board,
Wendell Sander integrated all these components into one single chip—the IWM. The IWM is essentially a disk controller on one IC. It was employed in the
Apple IIc, and later
Apple IIGS, the
Apple Lisa 2/10, and all Mac models up to the Macintosh II. Later, an extended version, known as SWIM (Sander-Wozniak Integrated Machine), was introduced. This new version added the capability of reading and writing
FM- and
MFM-formatted (PC-formatted) floppy disks. In later Mac models, more and more peripheral components were added to the SWIM, until Apple finally phased out floppy drives from the Macs. The floppy controller function stayed in the chipset for a while thereafter, even though the provision of floppy drives for Macs had already ceased. For instance, the first
iMacs still had a floppy drive connector on its
motherboard, allowing a floppy drive to be retrofitted by knowledgeable enthusiasts. ==See also==