Macintosh LC
The Macintosh LC (meaning low-cost color) is Apple Computer's product family of low-end consumer Macintosh personal computers in the early 1990s. The original Macintosh LC was released in October 1990 and was the first affordable color-capable Macintosh. Due to its affordability and Apple II compatibility the LC was adopted primarily in the education and home markets. Together with the Mac IIsi, it introduced built-in audio input on the Mac. The "LC" name was subsequently used for a line of low-end Macintosh computers for several years and spanned the 68k to PowerPC transition.
History
After Apple co-founder Steve Jobs left Apple in 1985, product development was handed to Jean-Louis Gassée, formerly manager of Apple France. Gassée consistently pushed the Apple product line in two directions, towards more "openness" in terms of expandability and interoperability, and towards higher price. Gassée long argued that Apple should not market their computers towards the low end of the market, where profits were thin, but instead concentrate on the high end and higher profit margins. He illustrated the concept using a graph showing the price/performance ratio of computers with low-power, low-cost machines in the lower left and high-power high-cost machines in the upper right. The "high-right" goal became a mantra among the upper management, who said "fifty-five or die", referring to Gassée's goal of a 55 percent profit margin.[1]
This policy led to a series of ever more expensive computers. This was in spite of strenuous objections within the company, and when a group at Claris started a low-end Mac project called "Drama", Gassée actively killed it. By 1990, with sales slumping, arguments broke out over whether or not the high-right goal should be maintained. In the end, Gassée was forced from the company and Michael Spindler was given his position, with the job of producing a low-cost series of machines. The result was the Macintosh Classic, Macintosh IIsi, and the LC.
The original LC was an attempt at an affordable, modular, color-capable Macintosh. As such, when compared with earlier Macs Apple cut some corners on performance and features in order to keep the price down. Apart from expandability, the LC's system specifications nearly duplicated those of the 3 year old Macintosh II. Nevertheless, with the pent-up demand for a low-cost color Macintosh, it was a strong seller. In 1992, the original Macintosh LC was succeeded by the LC II, which replaced the LC's Motorola 68020 processor with a 68030 and increased the soldered memory to 4MB to make it more suitable for System 7. It retained the original LC's 16-bit system bus and 10MB RAM limit however (if 4MB SIMMs was used, the extra 2MB of RAM would be inaccessible), making its performance roughly the same as the earlier model. The main benefit of the 030 processor in the LC II was the ability to use System 7's virtual memory feature. In spite of this, the new model sold even better than the LC. In early 1993, Apple introduced the LCIII, which used a 25 MHz version of the 68030 and had a higher memory limit of 36MB, instead of the 10MB of the LC and LC II.
The LC II spawned a whole series of LC models, most of which later were sold both with the LC name to the education world and to consumers via traditional Apple dealers, and as Performa to the consumer market via electronics stores, and department stores such as Sears. (For example, the LC 475 was also known as the Performa 475.) The last official "LC" was the Power Macintosh 5300/100 LC, which was released in August 1995 and discontinued in April 1996. The LC 580 was notable for being the last desktop 680x0-based Macintosh.
Features
The LC used a very small "pizza box" case with a PDS (processor direct slot) but no NuBus slots. It had a 16 MHz 68020 microprocessor which lacked a floating-point coprocessor (although one could be added via the PDS). The LC had a 16-bit data bus, which was a major bottleneck as the 68020 was a 32-bit CPU. The LC's memory management chipset placed a limit of 10MB RAM no matter how much was installed.
The LC shipped with 256KB of VRAM, only supporting a display resolution of 512x384 pixels at 8-bit color. The VRAM was upgradeable to 512KB though, supporting a display resolution of 512x384 pixels at 16-bit color or 640x480 pixels at 8-bit color. Most LCs were purchased with an Apple 12" RGB monitor which had a fixed resolution of 512x384 pixels and a form factor exactly matching the width of the LC chassis, giving the two together a near all-in-one appearance. An Apple 13" 640x480 Trinitron display was also available, but at a list price of $999, it cost almost as much as the LC itself.[2] Until the introduction of the LC, the lowest resolution supported on color Macs had been 640x480. Many programs assumed this as a minimum, and some were unusable at the lower resolution. For several years software developers had to add support for this smaller screen resolution in order to guarantee that their software would run on LCs.
Overall, general performance of the machine was disappointing due to the crippling data bus bottleneck, making it run far slower than it should have (e.g. the 16 MHz 68020 based Macintosh II from 1987, with an identical processor, ran almost twice as fast as the Macintosh LC). One difference between the Mac II and the Mac LC is the latter had no socket for a 68851 MMU, therefore it could not take advantage of System 7's virtual memory features.
The standard configuration included a floppy drive and a 40 MB or 80 MB hard drive, but a version was available for the education market which had an Apple II card in the PDS slot, two floppy drives, and no hard drive. The LC was the final Macintosh model to allow for dual floppy drives internally. The LC, as with other Macs of the day, featured built-in networking on the serial port using Localtalk. Ethernet was also available as an option via the single PDS slot. If the single expansion slot was a limitation, multifunction cards were available combining Ethernet functionality with an MMU or FPU socket.
The successor model LC II's 68030 has a built-in MMU. The bus remained 16 bits and the memory limit remained 10 MB. A full 32-bit bus had to wait for the LC III successor a year later, which also added support for 832x624 display resolution (at 8-bit color depth with the standard 512Kb VRAM, 16-bit color was available at this resolution with a 256Kb VRAM upgrade),[3] a 25 MHz processor, optional 68882 FPU chip, and switched to the faster 72-pin RAM SIMM, instead of the older 30-pin RAM SIMMs used in the LC and LC II.[4] Apple also introduced an LC III+ with a different floppy drive, redesigned case lid, and a 33 MHz 68030.[5] By introducing powerful features narrowing the gap between Apple's low end and professional lines, the LC III remained in use into the 21st century, seeing duty on the internet as an email server.[6]
Apple IIe Card
Despite the LC's lack of NuBus slots, it did come with a Processor Direct Slot (PDS). This was primarily intended for the Apple IIe Card, which was offered in a bundle with education models of the LCs. The card allowed the LC to emulate an Apple IIe. The combination of a low-cost color Macintosh with Apple IIe compatibility was intended to encourage the education market to transition from aging Apple II models to the Macintosh platform instead of to the new low-cost IBM PC compatibles. Despite the LC's minimal video specs with a 12" monitor, any LC that supports the card can be switched into 560x384 resolution for better compatibility with the IIe's 280x192 High-Resolution graphics (essentially doubled).
Other cards, such as CPU accelerators, ethernet and video cards were also made available for the LC's PDS slot.
Reception
Computer Gaming World in 1990 criticized the LC as too expensive, stating that consumers would prefer a $2000 IBM PS/1 with VGA graphics to a $3000 LC with color monitor.[7]
Models
"Pizza boxes"
Model | Processor | Bundled Mac OS | Maximum Mac OS | Hard disk | RAM | Expansion | Video RAM | Equivalent | Released/Discontinued |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LC | 16 MHz 68020 | 6.0.6/6.0.7 | 7.5.5 | 30–80 MB | 2 MB (max 10 MB) | LC PDS | 256 KB (max 512 KB) | N/A | October 1990/ March 1992 |
LC II | 16 MHz 68030 | 7.0.1 | 7.6.1 | 4 MB (max 10 MB) | Performa 400–430 | March 1992/ March 1993 | |||
LC III | 25 MHz 68030 | 7.1 | 80–160 MB | 4 MB (max 36 MB) | LC III PDS | 512 KB (max 768 KB) | Performa 450 | February 1993/ February 1994 | |
LC III+ | 33 MHz 68030 | Performa 460–467 | October 1993/ February 1994 | ||||||
LC 475 | 25 MHz 68LC040 | 8.1 | 80–250 MB | 4 MB (max 36 MB) | 0.5-1 MB | Performa 475, Quadra 605 | October 1993/ July 1996 | ||
All-in-one
Model | Processor | Bundled Mac OS | Maximum Mac OS | Hard disk | RAM | Expansion | Video RAM | Equivalent | Released/Discontinued |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LC 520 | 25 MHz 68030 | 7.1 | 7.6.1 | 80–160 MB | 4 MB (max 36 MB) | LC PDS | 512–768 KB | Performa 520 | June 1993/ February 1994 |
LC 550 | 33 MHz 68030 | Performa 550–560 | February 1994/ March 1995 | ||||||
LC 575 | 33 MHz 68LC040 | 8.1 | 160–320 MB | 4 MB (max 68 MB) | LC PDS/Comm slot | 0.5-1 MB | Performa 575–578 | February 1994/ April 1995 | |
LC 580 | 33 MHz 68LC040 | 7.1.2P | 500 MB | 4 MB (max 52 MB) | LC PDS/Comm slot/Video | 1 MB | Performa 580CD-588CD | April 1995/ April 1996 | |
Related Macs
Model | Processor | Bundled Mac OS | Maximum Mac OS | Hard disk | RAM | Expansion | Video RAM | Equivalent | Released/Discontinued |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Color Classic | 16 MHz 68030 | 7.1 | 7.6.1 | 40–160 MB | 4 MB (max 10 MB) | LC PDS | 256–512 KB | Performa 250 | February 1993/ May 1994 |
Color Classic II | 33 MHz 68030 | 80–160 MB | 4 MB (max 36 MB) | 512 KB | Performa 275 | October 1993/ February 1994 | |||
TV | 32 MHz 68030 | 160 MB | 4 MB (max 8 MB) | LC PDS* | N/A | October 1993/ February 1994 | |||
LC 630** | 33 MHz 68LC040 | 7.1.2 Pro | 8.1 | 250–500 MB | 4 MB (max 36 MB) | LC PDS/Comm/Video | 1 MB | Quadra 630, Performa 630-640CD | July 1994/ October 1995 |
Timelines
Timeline of Macintosh LC models
Timeline of Apple II family models
References
- ↑ Carlton, Jim (1997). Apple: The inside story of intrigue, egomania, and business blunders. New York: Random House. pp. 79–80. ISBN 0-8129-2851-2..
- ↑ "Bite Of Apple - NY Times News Service November 25, 1990".
Apple also introduced a new color monitor recently, the 12-inch RGB Display. At $599, the new color monitor is $400 less expensive than Apple`s slightly larger 13-inch color display.
- ↑ Mac LC III, Low End Mac
- ↑ http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_lc/specs/mac_lc_iii.html
- ↑ http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_lc/specs/mac_lc_iii_plus.html
- ↑ 14 Years of Useful Service from a Macintosh LC III, By Mark Shipp, 2008.02.26, Low End Mac
- ↑ "Fusion, Transfusion or Confusion / Future Directions In Computer Entertainment". Computer Gaming World. December 1990. p. 26. Retrieved 16 November 2013.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Macintosh LC. |
- Apple-History.com
- Mac LC at lowendmac.com
- Apple Mac LC, Macintosh LCII at Forevermac.com
- Macintosh LC technical specification at apple.com
- Macintosh LC II technical specification at apple.com
- Macintosh LC III technical specification at apple.com
- Macintosh LC III+ technical specification at apple.com
Preceded by (Apple IIe) (Macintosh II) |
Macintosh LC October 21, 1991 |
Succeeded by Macintosh Quadra 630 Macintosh LC 500 series |
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