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  2. Macintosh External Disk Drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh_External_Disk_Drive

    The last Mac it could be used with was the Classic II and was discontinued shortly thereafter. The drive was fitted in every desktop Mac from its introduction and was eliminated with the introduction of the iMac in 1998. PowerPC Macs dropped the original auto-eject Sony drives and went to a manual eject mechanism.

  3. SuperDrive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SuperDrive

    An external CD/DVD SuperDrive. SuperDrive is the product name for a floppy disk drive and later an optical disc drive made and marketed by Apple Inc. The name was initially used for what Apple called their high-density floppy disk drive, and later for the internal CD and DVD drive integrated with Apple computers.

  4. Disk Utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_Utility

    Mounting, unmounting and ejecting disk volumes (including both hard disks, removable media, and disk volume images) Enabling or disabling journaling Verifying a disk's integrity , and repairing it if the disk is damaged (this will work for both Mac compatible format partitions and for FAT32 partitions with Microsoft Windows installed)

  5. Apple Disk Image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Disk_Image

    Apple [1] Disk Image is a disk image format commonly used by the macOS operating system. When opened, an Apple Disk Image is mounted as a volume within the Finder.. An Apple Disk Image can be structured according to one of several proprietary disk image formats, including the Universal Disk Image Format (UDIF) from Mac OS X and the New Disk Image Format (NDIF) from Mac OS 9.

  6. Hard Disk 20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_Disk_20

    The Macintosh Hard Disk 20 is the first hard drive developed by Apple Computer specifically for use with the Macintosh 512K. Introduced on September 17, 1985, it was part of Apple's solution toward completing the Macintosh Office (a suite of integrated business hardware & software) announced in January 1985.

  7. Power Macintosh G3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Macintosh_G3

    Removable storage: The ATAPI/IDE CD-ROM drive can also be replaced with a CD-RW, DVD-ROM or DVD-RW drive, although care must be taken while purchasing the upgrade as the Mac is incompatible with some drives and may refuse to boot at all if an incompatible drive is installed. Also, many third-party optical drives cannot be used as boot devices ...

  8. Macintosh 128K - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh_128K

    The system software (Mac OS) was disk-based from the beginning, as RAM had to be conserved, but this "Startup Disk" could still be temporarily ejected. (Ejecting the root filesystem remained an unusual feature of the classic Mac OS until System 7.) One floppy disk was sufficient to store the System Software, an application and the data files ...

  9. Power Mac G4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Mac_G4

    The Power Mac G4 is a series of personal computers designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer from 1999 to 2004 as part of the Power Macintosh line. Built around the PowerPC G4 series of microprocessors, the Power Mac G4 was marketed by Apple as the first "personal supercomputers", [1] reaching speeds of 4 to 20 gigaFLOPS.