crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0

Macintosh 128K Teardown

crwdns2936315:0crwdne2936315:0
crwdns2936325:0crwdne2936325:0
crwdns2931653:03crwdne2931653:0
Macintosh 128K Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:01crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 Macintosh 128K Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:02crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 Macintosh 128K Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:03crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0
  • Thirty years of progress yields some impressive changes to input peripherals. Keyboards and mice are now wireless, thinner, and comprised mainly of sturdy, non-yellow metal.

  • And we now have arrow keys! In typical Apple fashion, they ditched the arrows on the original Mac to force people to use the mouse, a strange new accessory at the time.

  • Cult of Mac adds: This trend-setting streak continued. Apple jettisoned SCSI and serial ports with the release of the first iMac in 1998, hastening the acceptance of USB. Plus ça change, plus c'est pareil.

  • Here's a side-by-side comparison of a single-button voice command peripheral and a magic-based, gesture-capable, wireless input device.

  • Okay, technically that boxy one is an Apple Mouse II, Model Number M0100. It utilizes a D-subminiature serial connector (DE-9 to be exact). The spacey egg is a Magic Mouse.

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2935429:0crwdne2935429:0

crwdns2944171:0crwdnd2944171:0crwdnd2944171:0crwdnd2944171:0crwdne2944171:0