en.wikibooks.org

History of video games/Platforms/Apple II - Wikibooks, open books for an open world

100% developed

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world

  • An Apple II with 1977 accessories attached, including game pads.

    An Apple II with 1977 accessories attached, including game pads.

The Apple II was launched in April 1977.[1]

The Apple II was discontinued in 1993,[2] having been a critical platform in the Computer market, and by extension the computer gaming market, for well over a decade and a half.

Around 2017 a massive effort was made to preserve as much Apple II software as possible, before media degradation made some software lost to history.[3]

These specs are for the original Apple II. Later models offered enhanced capabilities.[4]

The Apple II is powered by an 6502 processor clocked at 1 megahertz.[5]

The Apple II originally shipped with 4 kilobytes of RAM, and could be expanded to 48 kilobytes.[5]

The Apple II shipped with an 8 kilobyte ROM.[5]

  • The old garage of Steve Jobs in Los Altos, California.

    The old garage of Steve Jobs in Los Altos, California.

  • An Apple II running a game.

    An Apple II running a game.

  • Mystery House running on an Apple II.

    Mystery House running on an Apple II.

  • An 1977 advertisement for the Apple II encourages not only playing games with the system, but also creating them.

    An 1977 advertisement for the Apple II encourages not only playing games with the system, but also creating them.

  • The Apple II owned by John Romero.

    The Apple II owned by John Romero.

  1. "Apple II Personal Computer". National Museum of American History. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  2. Contributor, Minda Zetlin (23 January 2020). "These old Apple computers are worth up to $905,000—and you might have one sitting in your basement". CNBC. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  3. "Programmers Are Racing to Save Apple II Software Before It Goes Extinct" (in en). www.vice.com. https://www.vice.com/en/article/gv39mx/programmers-are-racing-to-save-apple-ii-software-before-it-goes-extinct.
  4. "Today in Apple history: The final Apple II model arrives". Cult of Mac. 15 September 2018. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  5. a b c "Apple II advertisement". Retrieved 28 November 2020.