Power Macintosh 7300

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A Power Macintosh 7300
Power Macintosh 7300
Manufacturer Apple Computer
Introduced February 17, 1997
Discontinued November 10, 1997
Price US$1700, 2300
CPU PowerPC 604e, 166 - 200 MHz
RAM 16 MB, expandable to 1 GB, 70 ns 168-pin DIMM
OS System 7.5.5-Mac OS 9.1, or with G3 upgrade, Mac OS X 10.2.9

The Power Macintosh 7300 (Codename: "Montana"; also sold with server software as the Apple Workgroup Server 7350) is a personal computer that is a part of Apple Computer's Power Macintosh series of Macintosh computers. It was introduced at a processor speed of 180 or 200 MHz (in Europe and Asia, an additional 166 MHz configuration was available) in February 1997 alongside the Power Macintosh 8600 and the Power Macintosh 9600. It replaced both the Power Macintosh 7200 and the Power Macintosh 7600, and was itself discontinued in favor of the Power Macintosh G3 desktop model in November 1997.

The 7300 uses the same "Outrigger" case as its predecessors, but features an enhanced PowerPC 604e CPU. However, it no longer came with the video in capability the 7600 had, which possibly accounts for the fact that this is the only time that Apple used a lower model number for an upgraded model [1]. Apart from that, the 7300 is more closely related to the 7600 than to the 7200, with features such as a processor daughtercard and interleaved RAM. The 7300/180 model was also available in a "PC compatible" configuration that included a 166 MHz Pentium processor with its own RAM (up to 64 MiB) on a PCI card which also provided a PC game port.

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[edit] References

  1. ^ Power Macintosh 7300 at Low End Mac
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