History of video games/Platforms/Apple II - Wikibooks, open books for an open world
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]
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The old garage of Steve Jobs in Los Altos, California.
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An Apple II running a game.
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Mystery House running on an Apple II.
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An 1977 advertisement for the Apple II encourages not only playing games with the system, but also creating them.
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The Apple II owned by John Romero.
- ↑ "Apple II Personal Computer". National Museum of American History. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- ↑ 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.
- ↑ "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.
- ↑ "Today in Apple history: The final Apple II model arrives". Cult of Mac. 15 September 2018. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- ↑ a b c "Apple II advertisement". Retrieved 28 November 2020.