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Apple II was the successor to the Apple 1 on which it was largely
based. It was the very first commercial success of the Apple Computer
Company.
Because Steve Wozniak wanted to demonstrate his Breakout game with
the new Apple II, he decided to add color, sound and minimum paddle
support to the Apple 1's heir.
The Apple II came with 4 KB RAM, but it was possible to add 4 KB
or 16 KB RAM chips. Thus, the system could have memory in the following
sizes: 4K, 8K, 12K,16K, 20K, 24K, 32K, 36K, or a full 48K. This
was one of the strong points of the Apple II: from the beginning,
it was designed with expansion in mind. The 8 expansion slots were
further proof of that - users could expand their system easily,
just by plugging cards into the slots.
The ROM included the monitor, a 6502 disassembler, a mini-assembler
called 'Sweet 16' and the Integer Basic written by Wozniak in machine
language, assembled by hand on paper! Not having to load a language
from tape or disk to start programming was also a significant advantage
over competitors. Even the innovative plastic case proved to be
an important feature to attract customers.
Just a few months after the Apple II presentation at the First West
Coast Computer Fair in April 1977, Apple received about three hundred
orders for the Apple II, over a hundred more than the total number
of Apple-1's sold.
The Apple II was followed in 1979 by the Apple II+, which brought
some enhancements.
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