Categories
Accessory Apple Apps Business Developer Fun Hardware Mac Desktop News Processors retail Retail Store

Apple’s Macintosh turns 40 today

Today marks the 40th anniversary of Steve Jobs unveiling the Macintosh, which would be the first successful mass-marketed computer with a graphical user interface.

The original Macintosh, released in 1984 introduced and popularized the computer mouse, allowing for a new type of navigation that was still a novel concept to most people at the time. Prior to this, most personal computers in this era typically had text-based command-line interfaces controlled by a keyboard.

An excerpt from Apple’s press release in 1984:

“Users tell Macintosh what to do simply by moving a ‘mouse’ — a small pointing device — to select among functions listed in menus and represented by pictorial symbols on the screen. Users are no longer forced to memorize the numerous and confusing keyboard commands of conventional computers. The result is radical ease of use and a significant reduction in learning time. In effect, the Macintosh is a desk-top appliance offering users increased utility and creativity with simplicity.”

Apple stated that the Macintosh typically took “only a few hours to learn,” and cited what are now basic computer features, such as a desktop with icons, the ability to use multiple programs in windows, drop-down menus, and copy and paste.

A quote from Jobs in Apple’s press release:

“Macintosh easily fits on a desk, both in terms of its style of operation and its physical design. It takes up about the same amount of desk space as a piece of paper. With Macintosh, the computer is an aid to spontaneity and originality, not an obstacle. It allows ideas and relationships to be viewed in new ways. Macintosh enhances not just productivity, but also creativity.”

The original Macintosh started at $2,495, which would be equivalent to over $7,000 today, and included features such as an 8 MHz processor, 128 KB of RAM, a 400 KB floppy disk drive for storage, and serial ports for connecting a printer and other accessories.

Apple’s full press release for the Macintosh can be found on Stanford University’s website.

Via MacRumors and stanford.edu