Click Here to visit our Sponsor
The History of Computing The Magazine Have Fun there ! Buy goodies to support us
  Mistake ? You have mr info ? Click here !Add Info     Search     Click here use the advanced search engine
Browse console museumBrowse pong museum









 

ZX Spectrum T-shirts!

see details
ZX81 T-shirts!

see details
Ready prompt T-shirts!

see details
Atari joystick T-shirts!

see details
Arcade cherry T-shirts!

see details
Spiral program T-shirts!

see details
Battle Zone T-shirts!

see details
Vectrex ship T-shirts!

see details
Competition Pro Joystick T-shirts!

see details
C64 maze generator T-shirts!

see details
Elite spaceship t-shirt T-shirts!

see details
Moon Lander T-shirts!

see details
Atari ST bombs T-shirts!

see details
Pak Pak Monster T-shirts!

see details
BASIC code T-shirts!

see details
Vector ship T-shirts!

see details
Breakout T-shirts!

see details
Pixel adventure T-shirts!

see details





A > APPLE  > APPLE 1   


Apple
APPLE 1

The story of the development of the Apple 1 has became a "legend". Here's how it goes:

Steve Wozniak, was working for Hewlett-Packard at the time, wanted to build his own computer. He couldn't afford the Intel 8080 CPU (this CPU was very popular then, as it was used in the Altair 8800 & IMSAI 8080, but was pretty expensive). He would have used the Motorola 6800 but it was also much too expensive. Finally he decided to build his computer around the MOS 6502 (which was pretty compatible with the Motorola 6800).

The computer was easier to use than the Altair: notably, the Apple 1 had a keyboard connector and could display characters on a TV whereas the Altair used LEDs for display. The display rate was very slow, only 60 characters (!) per second.

Steve Jobs, who programmed the game "Breakout" for Atari (with a little help from "the Woz"), was interested in this computer. Together they created the Apple Computer Company and tried to sell their computer. Paul Terrell, the owner of a computer shop, was interested in this computer, but fully assembled (the Apple 1 was sold "naked", no monitor, no power supply, no keyboard, no tape drive, etc.) and with a cassette interface, which Wozniak designed. He sold it with the Basic he wrote soon after.

They sold about two hundred of these units. This machine was so popular that Jack Tramiel of Commodore (!) offered to buy Apple. Apple was, at the time, a major purchaser of MOS 6502 processors and Commodore owned MOS Technologies. Wozniak wanted $15,000 more than Tramiel offered. Needless to say, the deal fell through.

The nowadays mythic Apple 1 was followed the next year by the Apple ][.

Please consider donating your old computer / videogame system to Old-Computers.com or one of our partners from anywhere in the world (Europe, America, Asia, etc.).


 

All known Apple-1 are listed in the Apple-1 Registry. https://www.apple1registry.com

          
Wednesday 23rd June 2021
Achim (Germany)
https://www.apple1registry.com

The story of Apple and Commodore is a little more nuanced than what you''ve written in this entry. For a more complete account, I suggest you check out Brian Bagnall''s book _Commodore: A Company on the Edge_.

Jack''s (actually, Chuck Peddle''s) interest has nothing to do with this machine''s "popularity".

          
Tuesday 4th November 2014
Joe Cassara (USA)

new

          
Monday 22nd April 2013
GSGeek (Quebec, Canada)

 

NAME  APPLE 1
MANUFACTURER  Apple
TYPE  Home Computer
ORIGIN  U.S.A.
YEAR  April 1976
END OF PRODUCTION  1977
KEYBOARD  No keyboard (sold separately)
CPU  MOS Technology 6502
SPEED  1 MHz
RAM  8 KB
VRAM  1 KB
ROM  256 bytes
TEXT MODES  40 x 24
GRAPHIC MODES  None
COLORS  None
SOUND  None
I/O PORTS  Monitor, Expansion connector, Keyboard connector, Cassette board connector
POWER SUPPLY  PSU built-in
PRICE  $666.66 (USA, 1976)




Please buy a t-shirt to support us !
Ready prompt
ZX Spectrum
ZX81
Arcade cherry
Spiral program
Atari joystick
Battle Zone
Vectrex ship
C64 maze generator
Moon Lander
Competition Pro Joystick
Atari ST bombs
Elite spaceship t-shirt
Commodore 64 prompt
Pak Pak Monster
Pixel Deer
BASIC code
Shooting gallery
3D Cubes
Pixel adventure
Breakout
Vector ship

Related Ebay auctions in real time - click to buy yours



see more Apple  APPLE 1 Ebay auctions !



 
Click here to go to the top of the page   
Contact us | members | about old-computers.com | donate old-systems | FAQ
OLD-COMPUTERS.COM is hosted by - NYI (New York Internet) -