Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!pro-generic.cts.com!sysop From: sysop@pro-generic.cts.com (Matthew Montano) Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple Subject: A Low-End Macintosh?! Message-ID: <9003020618.AA22592@apple.com> Date: 2 Mar 90 03:46:42 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 40 Apple's recent announcements and rumors continue to astound me. I view the Macintosh line has have "gone off the top end". A low-end Macintosh only represents a contradiction to this idea. What would a low-end Macintosh have to be? Price is an obvious factor. That seems to be the thrust. What is it going to be? Another PCjr? What would a Macintosh be if it couldn't run the big programs that most Macintosh users take for granted?! Ah, it would have to be a powerful Macintosh in order to run these programs with any scent of usability. But in order to keep it's product line organized, a low-priced resonably performing Macintosh is almost impossible. The Mac Plus and Mac SE would have to be dropped for a low-end Mac to make any sense. It's ridicoulous that Apple should have to put itself through such product shuffling to provide a product which already exists. Apple's low-end Mac is sitting in front of me. With thousands upon thousands software packages available for it. Development tools and operating system firmly entrenched and only getting better. Widespread availability of experienced 65C02 and 65C816 programmers only helps. An open architecture invites hardware products to be installed, and plently exist at the present. Apple's educational machine already exists with the IIgs's fantastic networking support. The IIgs already has decent colour that schools seem to demand. The interface is easy to use after 6 years of refiniment. All this talk of a HyperCard for the GS, System 6.0, ROM04 and so on can only make the future brighter. Corrections in pricing will immedieately remedy a grave situation. There are few reasons that the IIgs can't become a home-computing standard, putting branches into education, small-business, and music especially. IHMO, of course. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- InterNet: sysop@pro-generic.cts.com | AmericaONLine: MMontano UUCP: ..uunet!cacijl!crash!pro-generic!sysop | ProLine: sysop@pro-generic ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- I wrote GenericComm, and am finishing some protocols for it. Give me TIME! Long live the IIgs, The Cure and Toyota MR2's. MS-DOS machines may outsell other machines, but how many are actually IN-USE?