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Mac ii emulator computer museum
Mac ii emulator computer museum









  1. MAC II EMULATOR COMPUTER MUSEUM SERIAL
  2. MAC II EMULATOR COMPUTER MUSEUM PC
  3. MAC II EMULATOR COMPUTER MUSEUM WINDOWS

And CGA and EGA used TTL, rather than analog, and I don't recall VGA cards being able to drive their monitors (being analog was the big selling point to VGA, even). VGA only supported 16 colors at 640x480, and its color selection was 18-bit, not 24-bit.

MAC II EMULATOR COMPUTER MUSEUM SERIAL

We still have the Mac in my parents' basement and AFAIK it still works.I spent many hours with a homebrew serial cable getting old files off though most need file extensions re-added.

MAC II EMULATOR COMPUTER MUSEUM WINDOWS

I'm amazed when I walk into a school and find Apple HW in the hands of all of the students and MS hardware in the hands of admin and (most) faculty.įrom what I recall, Elementary school (up to 5th grade) had all Apple machines, and Middle school on (from 6th grade up) was all PCs.ĮDIT: We had a Mac Centris 610 until around Y2K when we got a PIII Dell with Windows Me on it.the Mac was just too outdated for the newer file formats that school and work demanded. Each seems fairly entrenched in those sectors and there seems to be little cross-fertilization. Apple courted education sector and MS courted government sector. In middle school we had a few Macs for learning desktop publishing.

mac ii emulator computer museum

My grade school had Apple IIe computers for us kids, one in each room and a "computer room" with about 2 dozen of them. If a school wanted to move over to using Apple in the classroom they could speak to the Apple Distinguished Educators to do that. The group would go to trade shows and speak at conferences, Greaves says. Tom Greaves, an education consultant in California, says Apple created a group of evangelists called "Apple Distinguished Educators." The company spread the word through a savvy marketing campaign that cemented the loyalty of teachers. And it could be used with a monitor that also supported the older EGA and CGA resolutions.Īt first, Apple dominated the education marketplace. These were the same specs as the VGA adapter introduced the same year, which also wasn't "fuzzy".

MAC II EMULATOR COMPUTER MUSEUM PC

The display was so crisp and clear compared to fuzzy PC monitors - 640x480 non-interlaced - 256 color palette with 24-bit RGB palette entries. When you saw it in real life in 1987 however, it was unbelievably awesome.

mac ii emulator computer museum

When the average museum visitor sees a working Mac II or a good emulator thereof, they're going to think "Meh, who cares? Looks ancient." I almost wonder if it's not better to have the machines non functional. You'd get the same effect, without ruining the museum displays. You could build a VM into a standard modern desktop and run a dozen VM's on the same machine, one for each version (MAC, MAC II, MAC III, Etc.).

mac ii emulator computer museum

On the off chance it did work, it would be destroyed in no time if people used it.Ī better way to do it would be to build an emulator program that simulated the original hardware/software. Museum quality equipment is not Functional Hardware. How cool would it be to play a quick game on the Apple II or even just use the interface and hardware performance for a bit? That's the kind of stuff i find most fascinating about old tech, the looks are secondary (except for that 20th anniversary piece). While this is a cool museum for sure, I would really enjoy this fully if at least some of the exhibits were interactive.











Mac ii emulator computer museum