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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 (revised) Compact
The Macintosh LC II is a personal computer designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer from March 1992 to March 1993. The LC II is an update to the original Macintosh LC, replacing its Motorola 68020 processor with a 68030 and increasing the onboard memory to 4 MB.
The Macintosh LC 500 series is a series of personal computers that were a part of Apple Computer's Macintosh LC family of Macintosh computers, designed as a successor to the compact Macintosh family of computers for the mid-1990s mainstream education-market.
It reportedly used forty-eight 300-watt per channel (600 wpc in a bridged monoblock configuration) McIntosh model MC2300 solid state amplifiers for a total of 28,800 watts of continuous power to power a speaker system over 100 feet wide and three stories tall. [30] [31] [23] In October 1977, Gordon Gow became president and CEO when Mr. McIntosh ...
The new model had a miniaturized design with a glossy dark gray cylindrical body and internal components organized around a central cooling system. Tech reviewers praised the 2013 Mac Pro for its power and futuristic design; [ 89 ] [ 90 ] however, it was poorly received by professional users, who criticized its lack of upgradability and the ...
The McIntosh MC-2300 is a solid-state power amplifier which was built by the American high-end audio company McIntosh Laboratory between 1971 and 1980. [1] Jerry Garcia in 1987 with an MC-2300 in the lower-right corner of the picture. McIntosh produced the MC-2105 (with blue meters) and the MC-2100 (without) between 1969 and 1977.
Retailing for US $5,498, [17] the Macintosh II was the first modular Macintosh model, so called because it came in a horizontal desktop case like many IBM PC compatibles of the time. [18] Previous Macintosh computers use an all-in-one design with a built-in black-and-white CRT .
A slightly updated model, the Color Classic II, featuring the Macintosh LC 550 logic board with a 33 MHz processor, was released in Japan, Canada and some international markets in 1993, sometimes as the Performa 275. Both versions of the Color Classic have 256 KB of onboard VRAM, expandable to 512 KB by plugging a 256 KB VRAM SIMM into the ...