Modem

A modem (/demodulator) is an electronic device for converting between serial data (such as RS-232) from a computer to an analog audio signal suitable for transmission over a telephone line connected to another modem, and vice-versa. In one scheme the audio signal is composed of silence (no data) or one of two frequencies representing zero and one.

Description
Modems are distinguished primarily by the maximum data rate they support. Data rates can range from 75 bits per second up to 56000 and beyond. Data from the user (i.e. flowing from the local terminal or computer via the modem to the telephone line) is sometimes at a lower rate than the other direction, on the assumption that the user cannot type more than a few characters per second.

Various data compression and algorithms are required to support the highest speeds. Other optional features are auto-dial (auto-call) and auto-answer which allow the computer to initiate and accept calls without human intervention. Most modern modems support a number of different protocols, and two modems, when first connected, will automatically negotiate to find a common protocol (this process may be audible through the modem or computer's loudspeakers). Some modem protocols allow the two modems to renegotiate ("retrain") if the initial choice of data rate is too high and gives too many transmission errors.

A modem may either be internal (connected to the computer's bus) or external ("stand-alone", connected to one of the computer's serial ports). The actual speed of transmission in characters per second depends not just the modem-to-modem data rate, but also on the speed with which the processor can transfer data to and from the modem, the kind of compression used and whether the data is compressed by the processor or the modem, the amount of noise on the telephone line (which causes retransmissions), the serial character format (typically 8N1: one start bit, eight data bits, no parity, one stop bit).

History
The first modem to support an Apple Computer product was the Micromodem II for the Apple II. A card was inserted into to an expansion slot and attached to an external coupler that could communicate through a telephone line at up to 300 baud.

Modems from Apple

 * Apple Modem 300 (RS-232), for Apple II series and early Compact Macs.
 * Apple Modem 1200 (RS-232)
 * Apple Personal Modem 300/1200 (RS-422), for most "beige" classic Macs.
 * AppleFax Modem
 * Apple Data Modem 2400
 * Apple Djinn for 2400 baud access to in France.
 * Apple Djinn Pro for 14,000 baud access to Minitel in France.
 * Apple Express Modem, for early PowerBooks.
 * Apple Newton Fax Modem for MessagePads.
 * GeoPort Telecom Adapter, for GeoPort-equipped Quadra AV and Power Macintosh models.
 * Apple USB Modem, for Macs with support for USB 2.0.

Transition to digital broadband
Conventional telephone modems for have fallen out of use with the transition to faster s, s (DSL), and digital cellular technology such as 4G. Apple stopped including internal dial-up modems during its transition to Intel processors in 2006. In July 2019, Intel announced that it was selling its cellular modem business to Apple, which is reportedly developing its own 5G technology.