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Year Launched Model Family Discontinued Lifespan 1983 January 19, 1983 Lisa [a] Compact: August 1, 1986 3 years, 6 months 1984 January 1, 1984 Lisa 2 [a] Compact: January 1, 1985 1 year January 24, 1984 Macintosh 128K: Compact: September 10, 1984 7 months September 10, 1984 Macintosh 512K: Compact: April 14, 1986 1 year, 7 months Macintosh 128K ...
Model Clock speed (GHz) FSB speed (MT/s) L2 cache (MB) CPUs Cores per CPU Introduced Discontinued Core Duo ("Yonah") iMac (Early 2006) iMac (Mid 2006) 1.83–2.00 667 2 1 2 January 2006 September 2006 MacBook Pro (Early 2006) 1.83–2.16 667 2 1 2 February 2006 October 2006 Mac mini (Early 2006) Mac mini (Late 2006) 1.66–1.83 667 2 1 2 ...
The 2010–2017 base model came with a 13-inch screen and was Apple's thinnest notebook computer until the introduction of the MacBook in March 2015. This MacBook Air model features two USB Type-A 3.0 ports and a Thunderbolt 2 port, as well as an SDXC card slot (only on the 13-inch model). This model of MacBook Air did not have a Retina display.
This timeline of Apple products is a list of all computers, phones, tablets, wearables, and other products made by Apple Inc. This list is ordered by the release date of the products.
The Intel-based MacBook Pro is a discontinued line of Macintosh notebook computers sold by Apple Inc. from 2006 to 2021. It was the higher-end model of the MacBook family, sitting above the low-end plastic MacBook and the ultra-portable MacBook Air, and was sold with 13-inch to 17-inch screens.
The design of the unibody MacBook has stylistic traits of the MacBook Air that were also implemented into the design of the unibody MacBook Pro. This model is thinner than the original polycarbonate MacBooks, and it made use of a unibody aluminum case with tapered edges. The keyboard of the higher-end model included a backlight.
A few years later, in 2020, with the release of macOS Big Sur, the first component of the version number was incremented from 10 to 11, so Big Sur's initial release's version number was 11.0 instead of 10.16, making the version numbers of macOS behave the way the version numbers of Apple's other operating systems do. [37]
On April 24, a MacBook Pro replacement for the 17-inch PowerBook was announced. [38] On May 16, a replacement for the iBook, called MacBook, was announced, thus completing the transition of Apple's laptop line to Intel processors. [39] On July 5, a replacement for the eMac, a special configuration of a 17-inch iMac for use in education, was ...