Macintosh Plus: Difference between revisions
Minesweeper (talk | contribs) m dab Windows |
Added trivia referring to scene from Star Trek IV |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
For those of you who are nostalgic, there is a program called [[vMac]] that will [[emulate]] a Mac Plus on a variety of platforms, including [[Unix]], [[Microsoft Windows|Windows]], [[DOS]] and [[Mac OS]]. |
For those of you who are nostalgic, there is a program called [[vMac]] that will [[emulate]] a Mac Plus on a variety of platforms, including [[Unix]], [[Microsoft Windows|Windows]], [[DOS]] and [[Mac OS]]. |
||
==Trivia== |
|||
A Mac Plus made an appearance in the [[1986]] [[science fiction]] movie <i>[[Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home]]</i> as a part of what is perhaps one of the more memorable and humorous moments from the movie for both [[Trekkers]] and Mac fans. |
|||
In the scene, engineer [[Montgomery Scott|"Scotty"]], having time-travelled to the 1980's from the late 23rd century, plans to use the Mac to generate a formula for a material known as [[transparent aluminum]]. However, he is perplexed by the Mac's lack of voice-controlled operation (A common feature in the futuristic <i>Star Trek</i> universe). After failing to receive a reply by speaking normally to it, Scotty is handed the mouse, at which point he holds it up to his mouth like a microphone and cheerfully says, "Hello computer!" He eventually resorts to using the keyboard, but not until after proclaiming "The keyboard...how quaint!" |
|||
[[de:Macintosh Plus]] |
[[de:Macintosh Plus]] |
Revision as of 08:45, 27 March 2004
The Macintosh Plus was introduced two years after the original Macintosh. It originally shipped with a beige case, but during 1987 the case color was changed to the long-lived "platinum" color.
Introduced: | January 16, 1986 |
MSRP: | $2599 |
CPU: | Motorola 68000 |
CPU speed: | 8 MHz |
Shipped with system version: | 1.1 |
RAM: | 1 MB, expandable to 4 MB |
Discontinued: | October 15, 1990 |
It was the first Macintosh model to include a SCSI port, which launched the popularity of external SCSI devices for Macs, including hard disks, tape drives, CD-ROM drives, printers, and even monitors.
It had a new 3.5" 800K floppy drive, offering double the capacity of that of the previous Macs, with backward compatibility. The drive used variable speed GCR, making it incompatible with PC drives.
The Mac Plus was the first of many Macintoshes to use SIMM modules for its memory. It came standard with 1MB of RAM (four 256K SIMMs) and could be upgraded to 4MB of RAM. It had 128K of ROM on the motherboard, which was double the amount of ROM that was in previous Macs; the new System software and ROMs included routines to support SCSI, the new 800K floppy drive, and, importantly, HFS, the Hierarchical File System, which used a true directory structure on disks. (This as opposed to the earlier MFS, Macintosh File System, which was used on 400K disks, in which all files were stored on the root of the disk, and the folders that the user saw were an illusion maintained at great expense by the Finder.) For programmers, the fourth Inside Macintosh volume detailed how to utilize the Mac Plus's new System software.
An all-in-one unit, the Plus had a one-bit, 9" black & white display with a resolution of 72-dpi, which was identical to that of previous Macintosh models. Unlike that of earlier Macs, the Mac Plus's keyboard included a numeric keypad, and, as with previous Macs, it had a one-button mouse and no fan, making it extremely quiet in operation.
The applications MacPaint, MacWrite and HyperCard were bundled with the Mac Plus. Third-party software applications available included MacDraw, Microsoft Word, Excel, and Microsoft PowerPoint, as well as Aldus's PageMaker. This was the introduction of GUI versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint on any PC.
For those of you who are nostalgic, there is a program called vMac that will emulate a Mac Plus on a variety of platforms, including Unix, Windows, DOS and Mac OS.
Trivia
A Mac Plus made an appearance in the 1986 science fiction movie Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home as a part of what is perhaps one of the more memorable and humorous moments from the movie for both Trekkers and Mac fans.
In the scene, engineer "Scotty", having time-travelled to the 1980's from the late 23rd century, plans to use the Mac to generate a formula for a material known as transparent aluminum. However, he is perplexed by the Mac's lack of voice-controlled operation (A common feature in the futuristic Star Trek universe). After failing to receive a reply by speaking normally to it, Scotty is handed the mouse, at which point he holds it up to his mouth like a microphone and cheerfully says, "Hello computer!" He eventually resorts to using the keyboard, but not until after proclaiming "The keyboard...how quaint!"