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1 To 500 MhzBelow is a free term papers summary of the paper "1 To 500 Mhz." If you sign up, you can be reading the rest of this term papers in under two minutes. Registered users should login to view this term paper.
Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, two good friends from high school, started a revolution that will never end. They invented the first Apple computer (Slater 3) The Apple I, they called it, ran on one megahertz and had eight thousand bites of memory and only eight bits of pixels on the screen (Levey 5). By today's standards that is absolutely nothing. Much like people of today, the first testers of the computer did not even take it seriously. It wasn't until the Apple II came out in 1977 that people paid attention to the Apple computers. The Apple II was almost exactly like the Apple I, but it was comparatively inexpensive, at $1,298 (Levey 11). From 1977 to 1993 Apple Computer produced and extension to the Apple II series. Based on the MOStek 6502 microprocessor, the first Apple II was the first personal computer with the ability to display color graphics and to come in a stylish plastic housing (Levey 15). From then on, Apple updated the Apple II line further creating the Apple II+ with increased memory, the Apple IIe, which is the only Apple computer to date to have been produced for more than a decade, the Apple IIc, a compact version of the Apple IIe with a faster processor and expanded memory, the Apple IIc+, a later version of the Apple IIc, and the Apple IIgs, the first, last and only 16-bit Apple II, designed to produce enhanced graphics and sound, with a much more powerful microprocessor, and still compatible with the older 8-bit Apple II software (Levey 24). Even the new Apple III could not top the outstanding performance of the Apple II series. Because of it's outrageous price of $4,000 - $7,000, and minimal improvements the Apple III is considered one of the biggest bombs in the history of Apple Computers. The next computer, the "Lisa", which was named after Steve Jobs's daughter, whom he neglected, was a giant leap from the Appl... This is not the end of the termpaper! Register below to see the complete version of this term paper.
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