ITHistory (1991) CATALOG: PEACHPIT PRESS (Fall Books - Computers) EZ For Sale

ITHistory (1991) CATALOG:  PEACHPIT PRESS (Fall Books - Computers)  EZ
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ITHistory (1991) CATALOG: PEACHPIT PRESS (Fall Books - Computers) EZ:
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VINTAGE (1991) CATALOG: PEACHPIT PRESS (FALL BOOKS - COMPUTERS)

Dimensions: 7 x 9" (14 Pages)
Suitable for Framing


Item is being sold as-is.

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The Apple III could be viewed as an enhanced Apple II – then the newest heir to a line of 8-bit machines dating back to 1976. Officially, however, the Apple III was not part of the Apple II line, but rather a close cousin. In 1981, International Business Machines unveiled the IBM Personal Computer (IBM PC) – a completely new 16-bit design soon available in a wide range of inexpensive clones. The business market moved rapidly towards the PC-DOS/MS-DOS platform, eventually pulling away from the Apple 8-bit computer line.[5] Despite numerous stability issues and recalls, Apple was eventually able to produce a reliable and dependable version of the machine. However, damage to the computer's reputation had already been done and it failed to do well commercially as a direct result. In the end, an estimated 65,000–75,000 Apple III computers were sold.[3][4] The Apple III Plus brought this up to ~120,000.[4] Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak stated that the primary reason for the Apple III's failure was that the system was designed by Apple's marketing department, unlike Apple's previous engineering-driven projects.[6] The Apple III's failure led to Apple reevaluating their plan to phase out the Apple II and eventually continued on with its development. As a result, later Apple II models incorporated some hardware[citation needed] and software technologies of the Apple III.



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On Jan-30-21 at 09:04:37 PST, seller added the following information:



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