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The project was proposed by
Jef Raskin some time before
scuttle the Macintosh project and only joined it later because
he wasn't trusted to manage the
Lisa project.
Mac OS.
The first Macintosh, introduced in January 1984, had a
screen, and one built-in
floppy disk drive with an external
generator. This was all housed in one small plastic case,
including the screen. When more memory was available later in
the year, a 512K Macintosh was nicknamed the "Fat Mac."
printer.
The Mac Plus (January 1986) added expandability by providing
The Mac SE (March 1987) had up to four megabytes of
RAM, an
optional built-in 20 megabyte hard disk and one internal
expansion slot for connecting a third-party device.
in 1999, the
iMac, updated on 2002-01-07. PowerMacs clocked
at over 1GHz were planned for 2002-01-22, to be followed by
dual 1GHz processors and "Superdrive" (combined DVD-ROM,
DVD-RW, CD-ROM, CD-RW).
If "Macintosh" were an acronym, some say it would stand for
"Many Applications Crash, If Not, The Operating System Hangs".
While this was true for pre Mac OS 9 systems, it is less true
for Mac OS 9, and totally incorrect for Mac OS X, which has
protected memory, so even if one application crashes, the
system and other applications are unaffected.
(2002-06-21)