Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!mnetor!seismo!lll-crg!nike!ucbcad!ucbvax!sdcsvax!sdcc6!sdcc18!ee161abt From: ee161abt@sdcc18.ucsd.EDU (Grobbins) Newsgroups: net.micro.apple Subject: Re: //GS emulation cards Message-ID: <553@sdcc18.ucsd.EDU> Date: Thu, 16-Oct-86 20:44:35 EDT Article-I.D.: sdcc18.553 Posted: Thu Oct 16 20:44:35 1986 Date-Received: Fri, 17-Oct-86 06:03:39 EDT References: <8610150548.AA22311@ai.wisc.edu> <550@sdcc18.ucsd.EDU> <181@cod.UUCP> Reply-To: ee161abt@sdcc18.UUCP (Grobbins) Organization: U.C. San Diego Lines: 36 In article <181@cod.UUCP> rupp@cod.UUCP (William L. Rupp) writes: >In article <550@sdcc18.ucsd.EDU> ee161abt@sdcc18.UUCP (Grobbins) writes: >>Doesn't seem likely. Apple's earlier attempt at a more powerful >>Apple II, the Apple IIx, was designed to support coprocessors >>(primarily the 68000.) But the //gs doesn't have a slot intended > >Other than as a term used to refer to the next Apple II model (the >latest being the IIGS), I have not heard of the use of the name Apple IIx. >You imply that there was such a computer. Please give details. Was >this a prototype? What are your sources? Apple was, a long, long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, working on a computer I believe was the mythical Apple IIx. It was, I understand, a //e with support for more memory and with a slot specifically intended for the support of other microprocessors. I'm not sure if it was 6502 or 65816 based, though I'd guess the former, as I don't think '816's have been long available. My initial source for this was the Boston Computer Society's Newsletter _Update_, the one with the cover story on the introduction to the Macintosh (~March 1984.) In it were, besides an excellent early review of the Mac, several interesting tidbits, including the story of the twiggy drive, and reports on the //c and //x (note that the //c was released in the Fall of 1984, months after the BCS report.) I have since confirmed its existence and demise through other channels. I believe Woz had a hand in the work on the //x. (He didn't in the //gs, and it shows.) Overall, a friend on the //GS team at Apple has assured me, the //GS is a better machine (if, perhaps, less expandable.) Grobbins. "No two children are ever born into the same family." - Leo Rosten