Abstract created by Good Solutions AI
In abstract:
- Macworld explores Apple’s revolutionary first decade (1976-1985), that includes groundbreaking merchandise just like the Apple I, Apple II, Lisa, Macintosh 128K, and LaserWriter that outlined private computing.
- These improvements launched essential applied sciences together with graphical consumer interfaces, desktop publishing with PostScript, and user-friendly design that made computer systems accessible to on a regular basis customers slightly than simply hobbyists.
- Apple’s early merchandise established foundational parts nonetheless current in fashionable macOS and created the blueprint for at this time’s private computing trade requirements.
Apple’s first decade is full of merchandise which might be iconic, not simply inside Apple’s personal historical past, however the historical past of know-how. Apple is usually cited because the originator of private computing, releasing merchandise that empowered generations of customers and set the instance for a way know-how can be utilized by the plenty.
This period noticed three totally different computing platforms come from Apple–that’s how unsure the longer term was. By the top of the last decade, the Macintosh would emerge as the first focus for Apple, which might ultimately type the idea for iOS, watchOS, visionOS, and tvOS. Right here’s how the primary 10 years of Apple, 1976-1985, formed the longer term.
April 1976: Apple I

Foundry
The pc that began all of it didn’t even include a case–the Apple I was only a circuit board, and patrons needed to carry their very own case, which resulted in some distinctive setups that may make Jony Ive cringe. (“Wooden? Bollocks.”) Apple made about 200 computer systems that had a 1.02MHz CMOS Expertise 6502 microprocessor and 4K of RAM, and launched the Apple I at $666.66, which was later lowered to $475.
Due to its rarity and historic affect, the Apple I generally turns into out there via auctions, and the bidding reaches the a whole lot of hundreds of {dollars}. However the worth of the Apple I in tech historical past can’t be measured–whereas different computer systems got here earlier than it, the Apple I sparked the non-public computing revolution and firmly established Apple as a tech firm not only for enterprise individuals however for everybody.
June 1977: Apple II
Apple’s second pc, the Apple II, was its first mass-market success. It was designed to enchantment to on a regular basis of us, not simply the hobbyists who invested in an Apple I. Steve Wozniak made enhancements that heightened its utility, and despite the fact that its $1,298 price ticket was greater than opponents’, the Apple II was a large hit.
How large? The Apple II is usually cited as one of many biggest computer systems of all time, if not the best. Apple continued with the Apple II line for 16 years, and whereas the Macintosh ultimately grew to become the corporate’s foremost platform, the Apple II blazed a path that even at this time’s Macs nonetheless comply with.
January 1983: Apple Lisa

Laptop Historical past Museum
The Apple Lisa (formally Native Built-in Software program Structure ) was the primary private pc with a graphical consumer interface, which used a document-centric strategy and even allowed recordsdata to have the identical title (which was unprecedented in early pc interfaces). Its all-in-one design had a 5MHz Motorola 68000 CPU, assist for as much as 2MB of RAM, and a 12-inch monochrome show. Named after Steve Jobs’ estranged daughter, it was initially priced at $9,995.
Lisa’s legacy is as sophisticated as the connection Jobs had with its namesake, however there’s no denying its significance. In 1980, Steve was kicked off the Lisa venture and latched into the Macintosh group, which borrowed a lot of Lisa’s attributes, specifically its GUI. Bruce Daniels, who performed a significant function on each the Lisa and Macintosh growth groups, as soon as mentioned, “All of the Mac teams had been prepared to say that if there had not been a Lisa, there by no means would have been a Mac.”
December 1983: ImageWriter
Apple had launched printers earlier than 1983, however the ImageWriter was the primary that labored with each the Apple II and Macintosh (which wouldn’t arrive for an additional month). It was one of many first dot-matrix printers, so it may print low-resolution graphics; a number of different printers used daisy-wheel mechanisms that had been meant to provide solely textual content.
It wasn’t till ImageWriter II in 1985 that the venture took off and Apple lastly discontinued it after 11 years. The ImageWriter II had a sleeker, extra refined design, higher velocity and print modes, and will print in shade for those who modified the ribbon. By the mid-Eighties, laser printers had been starting to rework publishing, and the Apple LaserWriter grew to become the trade commonplace.
January 1984: Macintosh 128K

Foundry
The Macintosh 128K set into movement the core of Apple’s enterprise and empowered customers in every single place. However the Macintosh was, at first, thought-about a analysis venture at Apple; the corporate was extra centered on the Apple Lisa. That every one modified when Steve Jobs, decided to “make a dent within the universe,” took over the Macintosh crew.
Right here’s why 1984 wasn’t like 1984: The primary Macintosh arrived with an 8MHz Motorola 6800 CPU, supported as much as 1MB of RAM, and had a built-in 9-inch monochrome show. System 1.0 ran off a 400K floppy disk, and Disk Swapper’s Elbow grew to become a badge of honor that bonded these early customers.
It’s been 40 years since its debut, however the core options of System 1—the Finder, menu bar, and Management Panel—are nonetheless part of at this time’s macOS 26, a testomony to the flexibility of the unique concept.
March 1985: LaserWriter

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Wikipedia
When the Macintosh was launched, it was instantly obvious the way it was constructed for artistic work, however it wanted an inexpensive machine to fulfill professionals who wished high-quality prints or their creations. The Apple LaserWriter did that, and ushered in what Paul Brainerd termed “desktop publishing.”
The LaserWriter launched the world to PostScript, Adobe’s web page description language that enabled printers to breed graphics on the high quality that professionals demand. It was additionally networkable, in order that a number of Macs may hook up with it and print. This networkability helped to offset its $6,995 worth.
That is half one among a five-part collection exploring 50 years of Apple product releases. Keep tuned to Macworld all week as we discover all 5 a long time, persevering with tomorrow with 1986-1995.
