Apple II

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First launched in 1977, the Apple II was one of the original home computers and the first to offer colour graphics and built-in audio by default.

A 6502 machine, it is noteworthy for a design philosophy in which:

  • non-processor actions, such as changing video mode or toggling the speaker, are triggered as a function of address decoding not of hardware registers — e.g. if you access address `C057` then you will set the current graphics mode to 'high resolution' regardless of whether you perform a read or a write, and in the latter case of what you write;
  • not even tasks like colour generation are abstracted — the programmer is given a 1bpp pixel output that is in-phase with the NTSC video signal and is expected to generate colours through proper placement of dots.

The original machine was followed up by the II+, which includes a better BASIC and can automatically boot from a disk drive if attached, the IIe and IIc, both of which offer up to 128kb of RAM, 80-column text and a higher-density pixel graphics mode, and the IIgs, a 16-bit 65816 backwards-compatible machine with a Macintosh-modelled OS.

All machines use a keyboard that cannot communicate multiple simultaneous keypresses, which makes playing games by keyboard difficult. The II and II+ also lack the capacity for lowercase text entry and cannot display lowercase letters in their clean text mode. However all generations of machine have analogue and trigger inputs, which are most commonly used for two two-axis analogue joysticks with two buttons, accepted by the majority of games.