Finding:
Freebase
searching
Factz
searching
Articles
searching
Apple II series
freebase
help| The Apple II (often rendered or written as Apple ][ or Apple //) was the first highly successful mass produced microcomputer product, manufactured by Apple Computer (now Apple Inc.) and introduced in 1977. It was among the first home computers on the market, and became one of the most recognizable and successful. In terms of ease of use, features and expandability the Apple II was a major... Read enhanced Wikipedia article |
-
close
Apple II series
The Apple II (often written as Apple ][ or Apple //) was the first mass produced microcomputer product, manufactured by Apple Computer (now Apple Inc.). It was among the first home computers on the market, and became one of the most recognizable and successful. -
close
Apple IIGS
Wolfenstein 3D, based on the Apple II originated game Castle Wolfenstein, came full circle back to the Apple II series when it was released for the Apple IIgs in 1994. -
close
Apple IIe
The Apple IIe is the third model in the Apple II series of personal computers produced by Apple Computer. -
close
Apple IIc Plus
The reason for this is the vast majority of software for the 8-bit Apple II series shipped on 5.25 disks (often hardcoded for the medium) making the machine of limited use unless an external 5.25 drive is added. -
close
Apple II Plus
The Apple II Plus was the second model of the Apple II series of personal computers produced by Apple Computer, Inc. -
close
Apple III
Originally intended as a direct replacement to the Apple II series, it was designed for backwards-compatibility of Apple II software in order to migrate users over. -
close
Apple II accelerators
Saturn System's Accelerator II was the original accelerator for the Apple II series of computers. -
close
List of BASIC dialects by platform
Available on floppy or cassette on the original-model Apple II; built into ROM on the Apple II Plus, Apple II Europlus, and all later Apple II series computers. -
close
Apple Keyboard
The "open" (white) & separate "closed" (black) Apple logo keys () on the original Apple II series, worked much like the Command key. -
close
Macintosh
The Macintosh II marked the start of a new direction for the Macintosh, as now, for the first time, it had an open architecture, with several expansion slots, support for color graphics, and a modular break-out design similar to that of the IBM PC and inspired by Apple’s other line, the expandable Apple II series.
Explore the following pages on Powerset:
parse:article:Apple\sII\sseries
Apple II series