• AppleWorld 1987 -- when the Mac got color and expandability

    From LundukeJournal@1337:1/100 to All on Tue Mar 8 18:30:04 2022
    AppleWorld 1987 -- when the Mac got color and expandability

    Date:
    Tue, 08 Mar 2022 18:18:53 GMT

    Description:
    Steve Jobs was extremely against color screens and expansion bays, but after he was forced out of Apple... they arrived!

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    In March of 1987, Apple held an event at the Universal Amphitheater in Los Angeles.

    That event, AppleWorld 87, was where Apple announced two of the most critical Macintosh hardware updates in history: The Macintosh II and the Mac SE.

    The Macintosh II, in particularly, was a big move for Apple. For multiple reasons:

    The very first Macintosh without a built-in monitor.

    The very first Macintosh capable of color graphics.

    The first Macintosh (along with the SE) to use the ADB (Apple Desktop Bus)
    for connecting peripherals like keyboards. (ADB was first introduced 6
    months earlier with the Apple IIgs.)

    The first modular Macintosh with multiple drive bays and six NuBus expansion slots (which could drive up to six monitors at once). The Macintosh II was much more PC Clone like than previous Macs. Big, rectangular box filled with expansion slots. With a monitor stacked on top.

    Thats a heck of a lot of firsts.

    Fun historical tidbit : Steve Jobs was opposed to the Macintosh line having color displays. He felt that everything displayed on a Macintosh must be
    able to be printed on a standard printer (he was an avid believer in true WYSIWYG). And, since color printers were rare, Jobs was firmly opposed to a color display on a Macintosh.

    Steve Jobs was also opposed to expansion slots, of any kind, in a Macintosh. Jobs felt strongly that the Macintosh should be a sealed box not user serviceable or upgradeable with no internal expandability, relying solely on serial ports for accessories.

    To get around this the Macintosh II project was started, in 1985, completely without Jobs knowledge. After Jobs was forced out of Apple, later that same year, the project became more prominent.

    The next year, in 1988, Apple would announce the second operating system for the Macintosh II: A/UX.

    A/UX, Apples first release of a UNIX based operating system, was absolutely fascinating. A full, multitasking UNIX running on a Mac II with Macintosh System Software running on top. Which means you could run both UNIX and Mac software, side by side, a full decade before the first release of Mac OS X
    (OS X Server 1.0, in 1999). A/UX being all A/UX-y.

    Want to know something even more crazy ?

    Not only could the Macintosh II run Macintosh System Software and A/UX but there was also a NuBus expansion card called Mac286 that added an entire 286 DOS computer to the Mac II. The two NuBus cards of the Mac286.

    The Mac286 was two big NuBus cards, connected together with a ribbon cable. One card containing the 286 CPU, the second card containing the memory and drive controller. 1 MB of RAM, CGA display, and full access to the Macintosh hard drive (via a D: that provided access to the Mac hard drive).

    Yeah. Thats right. Mac OS, UNIX, and DOS. All on the same rig. Awesome.

    Ok. Back to AppleWorld 1987.

    Below is the keynote from the event, with the new hardware being introduced
    by Jean-Louis Gasse who was, at the time, a Vice President at Apple. I highly recommend watching this keynote in full. It is a gateway into a critical time in computer history.

    One fun Jean-Louis Gasse tidbit:

    During Memorial Day weekend of 1985, John Sculley (who was the CEO of Apple
    at the time), was in travelling China. Steve Jobs, who was feeling super grumpy at Sculley, hatched a plan to remove Sculley from the Company. Well, Jean-Louis Gasse, who was the Director of European Operations for Apple,
    found out about Steve Jobs dastardly plan. What did Gasse do? He told the board of Apple, who were not too pleased with Jobs (to put it mildly). This directly led to Steve Jobs getting the boot from Apple.

    John Sculley then appointed Gasse to be the new head of Macintosh Development Steve Jobs old role . Brutal, right?

    During his time in the role, Gasse would introduce the Mac II, and create the Macintosh laptop line starting with the Macintosh Portable. It could be argued that Gasse had a bigger impact on what the Macintosh would become than even Jobs himself.

    Gasse would later go on to found Be, inc., and create the legendary BeOS.
    The impact he has had on the broader computer industry is nothing short of astounding.

    Fun side note : There was a period of time, during the late 1980s were Apple was producing four distinct operating Systems:

    ProDOS for the Apple II line (including IIgs)

    GS/OS for the Apple IIgs

    Macintosh System Software (before it became known as Mac OS)

    and A/UX (Apples UNIX version)

    During that same time, Steve Jobs was off building NeXTStep which would eventually get tweaked and renamed to MacOS X. But that is a different
    story. Advertisement for Apple IIgs which, in many ways, was directly competing with the Macintosh line (and the color Mac II specifically).

    Lunduke.Substack.com Lunduke.Locals.com Reddit Twitter

    Current subscriber exclusives for The Lunduke Journal:

    eBooks : Lunduke's Dad Jokes About Computers, vol. 1 , Linux for Hank (kids book), Half a Decade of Linux-y Shenanigans, Lunduke Journal Quarterly - Volume 1 , Paper Doll Tux , Road-Sign Hank & the Aliens (comic book), Operating System Not Found (choose your own adventure)

    Games : Linux Tycoon ( Linux, Windows , DOS ), 2299 (Linux, Windows)

    + Exclusive Podcasts , Articles , & 24x7 Telnet BBS Access Subscribe now
    Share





    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://lunduke.substack.com/p/appleworld-1987-when-the-mac-got


    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)