The Macintosh II is a
personal computer
A personal computer, commonly referred to as PC or computer, is a computer designed for individual use. It is typically used for tasks such as Word processor, word processing, web browser, internet browsing, email, multimedia playback, and PC ...
designed, manufactured, and sold by
Apple Computer from March 1987 to January 1990. Based on the
Motorola 68020 32-bit CPU, it is the first
Macintosh
Mac is a brand of personal computers designed and marketed by Apple Inc., Apple since 1984. The name is short for Macintosh (its official name until 1999), a reference to the McIntosh (apple), McIntosh apple. The current product lineup inclu ...
supporting color graphics. When introduced, a basic system with monitor and 20 MB hard drive cost . With a 13-inch color monitor and 8-bit display card, the price was about .
This placed it in competition with
workstation
A workstation is a special computer designed for technical or computational science, scientific applications. Intended primarily to be used by a single user, they are commonly connected to a local area network and run multi-user operating syste ...
s from
Silicon Graphics
Silicon Graphics, Inc. (stylized as SiliconGraphics before 1999, later rebranded SGI, historically known as Silicon Graphics Computer Systems or SGCS) was an American high-performance computing manufacturer, producing computer hardware and soft ...
,
Sun Microsystems
Sun Microsystems, Inc., often known as Sun for short, was an American technology company that existed from 1982 to 2010 which developed and sold computers, computer components, software, and information technology services. Sun contributed sig ...
, and
Hewlett-Packard
The Hewlett-Packard Company, commonly shortened to Hewlett-Packard ( ) or HP, was an American multinational information technology company. It was founded by Bill Hewlett and David Packard in 1939 in a one-car garage in Palo Alto, California ...
.
The Macintosh II was the first computer in the Macintosh line without a built-in display; a monitor rested on top of the case like the
IBM Personal Computer and
Amiga 1000. It was designed by
hardware engineers Michael Dhuey (computer) and Brian Berkeley (monitor) and
industrial designer Hartmut Esslinger
Hartmut Esslinger (born 5 June 1944) is a German-American industrial designer and inventor. He is best known for founding the design consultancy Frog Design, frog, and his work for Apple Computer in the early 1980s.
Life and career
Esslinge ...
(case).
Eighteen months after its introduction, the Macintosh II was updated with a more powerful CPU and sold as the
Macintosh IIx. In early 1989, the more compact
Macintosh IIcx
The Macintosh IIcx is a personal computer designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Inc., Apple Computer, Inc. from March 1989 to March 1991. Introduced six months after the Macintosh IIx, the IIcx resembles the IIx and provides the same perform ...
was introduced at a price similar to the original Macintosh II, and by the beginning of 1990 sales stopped altogether. Motherboard upgrades to turn a Macintosh II into a IIx or
Macintosh IIfx were offered by Apple.
Development
Two common criticisms of the original Macintosh, starting from its introduction in 1984, were the closed architecture and lack of color; rumors of a potential color Macintosh began almost immediately.
The Macintosh II project was begun by Dhuey and Berkeley during 1985 without the knowledge of Apple co-founder and Macintosh division head
Steve Jobs, who opposed
expansion slot
Expansion may refer to:
Arts, entertainment and media
* ''L'Expansion'', a French monthly business magazine
* Expansion (album), ''Expansion'' (album), by American jazz pianist Dave Burrell, released in 2004
* Expansions (McCoy Tyner album), ''Ex ...
s and color, on the basis that expansion slots complicated the user experience and that color did not conform to
WYSIWYG, as color printers were not common. Jobs instead wanted higher-resolution monochrome displays
such as the ones chosen for his own "
BigMac" project begun in 1984 to develop a Macintosh successor.
Initially referred to as "Little Big Mac", the Macintosh II was codenamed "
Milwaukee
Milwaukee is the List of cities in Wisconsin, most populous city in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. Located on the western shore of Lake Michigan, it is the List of United States cities by population, 31st-most populous city in the United States ...
" after Dhuey's hometown, and it later went through a series of new names. After Jobs was ousted by Apple in September 1985, the Milwaukee project could proceed openly (while Jobs' own BigMac project was cancelled).
The Macintosh II was introduced at the AppleWorld 1987 conference in
Los Angeles
Los Angeles, often referred to by its initials L.A., is the List of municipalities in California, most populous city in the U.S. state of California, and the commercial, Financial District, Los Angeles, financial, and Culture of Los Angeles, ...
, with low-volume initial shipments starting two months later.
Retailing for US $5,498, the Macintosh II was the first modular Macintosh model, so called because it came in a horizontal desktop case like many
IBM PC compatibles of the time. Previous Macintosh computers use an
all-in-one design with a built-in black-and-white
CRT.
The Macintosh II has
drive bays for an internal hard disk (originally 40 MB or 80 MB) and an optional second floppy disk drive.
It, along with the
Macintosh SE, was the first Macintosh to use the
Apple Desktop Bus (ADB) introduced with the
Apple IIGS
The Apple IIGS (styled as II) is a 16-bit personal computer produced by Apple Inc., Apple Computer beginning in September 1986. It is the fifth and most powerful model of the Apple II family. The "GS" in the name stands for "Graphics and Sound" ...
for keyboard and mouse interface.
The primary improvement in the Macintosh II was Color
QuickDraw
QuickDraw was the 2D graphics library and associated application programming interface (API) which is a core part of classic Mac OS. It was initially written by Bill Atkinson and Andy Hertzfeld. QuickDraw still existed as part of the libraries ...
in
ROM, a color version of the Macintosh graphics routines. Color QuickDraw can handle any display size, up to
8-bit color depth, and multiple monitors. Because Color QuickDraw is included in the Macintosh II's ROM and relies on 68020 instructions, earlier systems could not be upgraded to display color.
In September 1988, shortly before the introduction of the
Macintosh IIx, Apple increased the list price of the Macintosh II by roughly 20%.
AnimEigo notably used the Macintosh II for subtitling their earliest releases, including ''
MADOX-01'', ''
Riding Bean'', and ''
Vampire Princess Miyu'', and
Industrial Light & Magic used the Macintosh II for image processing on films such as ''
The Abyss''.
Hardware
CPU
The Macintosh II is built around the
Motorola 68020 processor operating at 16
MHz
The hertz (symbol: Hz) is the unit of frequency in the International System of Units (SI), often described as being equivalent to one event (or cycle) per second. The hertz is an SI derived unit whose formal expression in terms of SI base u ...
, teamed with a
Motorola 68881 floating-point unit
A floating-point unit (FPU), numeric processing unit (NPU), colloquially math coprocessor, is a part of a computer system specially designed to carry out operations on floating-point numbers. Typical operations are addition, subtraction, multip ...
. The machine shipped with a socket for an optional
Motorola 68851 MMU, but an "Apple HMMU Chip" (VLSI VI475 chip) was installed by default and could not implement
virtual memory
In computing, virtual memory, or virtual storage, is a memory management technique that provides an "idealized abstraction of the storage resources that are actually available on a given machine" which "creates the illusion to users of a ver ...
(instead, it translated 24-bit addresses to 32-bit addresses for the Mac OS, which would not be
32-bit clean until
System 7).
Memory
The standard memory was 1
megabyte, expandable to 8 MB. The Mac II had eight 30-pin
SIMMs, and memory was installed in groups of four (called "Bank A" and "Bank B").
The Macintosh II does not have a
PMMU installed by default. Instead, it relies on the
memory controller hardware to map the installed memory into a contiguous
address space. This hardware has the restriction that the address space dedicated to Bank A must be larger than that of Bank B. Though this memory controller was designed to support 16 Megabyte, 30-pin SIMMs in each available slot (for a total of up to 128 MB of RAM), the original Macintosh II ROMs have problems that limit the amount of RAM that can be installed into each slot to just 8 MB SIMMs. Although the later Macintosh IIx ROMs that shipped with the Macintosh II FDHD upgrade fixes this initial problem, these newer ROMs still do not have a 32-bit memory manager and cannot boot into 32-bit address mode, at least, not without software assistance in the form of "MODE32", thus limiting the ''total'' amount of RAM to a mere 8MB.
MODE32 (originally published by
Connectix
Connectix Corporation was a software and hardware company that released innovative products that were either made obsolete as Apple Computer incorporated the ideas into system software, or were sold to other companies once they became popular. It ...
, and later licensed by Apple) contains a workaround that allows for larger SIMMs to be installed in Bank B if a PMMU is also installed. With this configuration, the Macintosh II boot ROMs will believe that the computer has 8 MB or less of RAM installed. Meanwhile, MODE32 then reprograms the memory controller on the fly to dedicate more address space to Bank A, thus allowing access to the additional memory installed in Bank B. Since this makes the physical address space discontiguous, the PMMU is then used to remap the address space into a contiguous block.
Graphics
The Macintosh II includes a graphics card that supports a true-color 16.7-million-color palette and was available in two configurations: 4-bit and 8-bit. The 4-bit model supports 16 colors on a 640×480 display and 256 colors (8-bit video) on a 512×384 display, which means that
VRAM was 256 KB. The 8-bit model supports 256-color video on a 640×480 display, which means that VRAM was 512 KB in size. With an optional RAM upgrade (requiring 120
ns DIP chips), the 4-bit version supports 640×480 in 8-bit color. The video card does not include hardware acceleration of drawing operations.
Display: Apple offered a choice of two displays, a 12" black and white unit, and a more expensive 13" high-resolution color display based on Sony's
Trinitron technology. More than one display could be attached to the computer, and objects could be easily dragged from one screen to the next. Third-party displays quickly became available. The
Los Angeles Times
The ''Los Angeles Times'' is an American Newspaper#Daily, daily newspaper that began publishing in Los Angeles, California, in 1881. Based in the Greater Los Angeles city of El Segundo, California, El Segundo since 2018, it is the List of new ...
reviewer called the color "spectacular."
The
operating system
An operating system (OS) is system software that manages computer hardware and software resources, and provides common daemon (computing), services for computer programs.
Time-sharing operating systems scheduler (computing), schedule tasks for ...
user interface
In the industrial design field of human–computer interaction, a user interface (UI) is the space where interactions between humans and machines occur. The goal of this interaction is to allow effective operation and control of the machine fro ...
remained black and white even on color monitors with the exception of the Apple logo, which appeared in rainbow color.
Storage
A 5.25-inch 40 MB internal
SCSI hard disk was optional, as was a second internal 800 kilobyte 3.5-inch floppy disk drive.
Expansion
Six
NuBus slots were available for expansion (at least one of which had to be used for a
graphics card
A graphics card (also called a video card, display card, graphics accelerator, graphics adapter, VGA card/VGA, video adapter, display adapter, or colloquially GPU) is a computer expansion card that generates a feed of graphics output to a displa ...
, as the Mac II had no onboard graphics
chipset and the OS didn't support
headless booting). It is possible to connect as many as six displays to a Macintosh II by filling all of the NuBus slots with graphics cards. Another option for expansion included the
Mac286, which included an
Intel 80286 chip and could be used for
MS-DOS
MS-DOS ( ; acronym for Microsoft Disk Operating System, also known as Microsoft DOS) is an operating system for x86-based personal computers mostly developed by Microsoft. Collectively, MS-DOS, its rebranding as IBM PC DOS, and a few op ...
compatibility.
The original ROMs in the Macintosh II contained a bug that prevented the system from recognizing more than one megabyte of memory address space on a Nubus card. Every Macintosh II manufactured until approximately November 1987 had this defect. This happened because Slot Manager was not 32-bit clean.
Apple offered a well-publicized recall of the faulty ROMs and released a program to test whether a particular Macintosh II had the defect.
Accessories
The Macintosh II and
Macintosh SE were the first Apple computers since the
Apple I to be sold without a keyboard. Instead the customer was offered a choice of the new ADB
Apple Keyboard or the
Apple Extended Keyboard as a separate purchase.
Dealers could bundle a third-party keyboard or attempt to
upsell a customer to the more expensive (and higher-profit) Extended Keyboard.
Audio
The Macintosh II was the first Macintosh to have the
Chimes of Death accompany the
Sad Mac logo whenever a serious hardware error occurred.
The new extensions featured for the Macintosh II at the time were
A/ROSE and Sound Manager.
Models
The Macintosh II was offered in three configurations. All systems included a mouse and a single 800 KB 3.5-inch floppy disk drive; a
Motorola 68851 PMMU was available as an option and required for running
A/UX.
* Macintosh II CPU: 1 MB RAM.
* Macintosh II 1/40 CPU: 1 MB RAM, internal 40-megabyte SCSI HDD.
* Macintosh II 4/40 CPU: 4 MB RAM, internal 40-megabyte SCSI HDD.
Timeline
References
Further reading
*
External links
Mac II profileon Low End Mac
Macintosh II technical specificationsat apple.com
{{Authority control
II
II
II
II
Computer-related introductions in 1987
Products and services discontinued in 1990