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Apple's manufacture history of CRT displays began in 1980, starting with the Monitor /// that was introduced alongside and matched the Apple III business computer. It was a 12″ monochrome (green) screen that could display 80×24 text characters and any type of graphics, however it suffered from a very slow phosphor refresh that resulted in a "ghosting" video effect.
A monochrome monitor is a type of computer monitor in which computer text and images are displayed in varying tones of only one color, as opposed to a color monitor that can display text and images in multiple colors. They were very common in the early days of computing, from the 1960s through the 1980s, before color monitors became widely ...
Apple High-Resolution Monochrome Display: Displays: February 1, 1991 ... Apple Color Plus 14" Display: Display: August 7, 1995 1994 ... iPhone: September 5, 2007
The Apple II video output is really a monochrome display based upon the bit patterns in the video memory (or pixels). These pixels are combined in quadrature with the colorburst signal to be interpreted as color by a composite video display. This results in a 16-color composite video palette, based on the YIQ color space used by the NTSC color ...
This list of monochrome and RGB palettes includes generic repertoires of colors (color palettes) to produce black-and-white and RGB color pictures by a computer's display hardware. RGB is the most common method to produce colors for displays; so these complete RGB color repertoires have every possible combination of R-G-B triplets within any ...
The resulting composite video display with "artifacted" colors is sometimes described as a 160 × 200 / 16-color "mode", though technically it was a technique using a standard mode. The low resolution of this composite color artifacting method led to it being used almost exclusively in games.
The Apple Monitor II is a CRT-based green monochrome 12-inch monitor manufactured by Sanyo [2] for Apple Computer; for the Apple II. Apple introduced the monitor halfway through the lifespan of the II series. The business-oriented Apple III has the Apple Monitor III, released long before. Many home users of Apple II computers used televisions ...
This chart shows the most common display resolutions, with the color of each resolution type indicating the display ratio (e.g., red indicates a 4:3 ratio). This article lists computer monitor, television, digital film, and other graphics display resolutions that are in common use. Most of them use certain preferred numbers.