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The Apple III, stylized as apple /// and codenamed "Sara", was a personal computer from Apple Computer that was targeted towards business users.

History[]

Development[]

Development on the Apple III began in late 1978 with Wendell Sander as the lead engineer. However, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak noted that development was being controlled by a committee of marketing staff instead of the engineers. Steve Jobs became involved in the aesthetic design of the computer, eliminating air vents and as well as the use of a fan for quiet operation.[1] David Fradin was recruited by Apple to develop its first hard drive, the ProFile, for the Apple III.[2]

Release[]

The Apple III was unveiled at the National Computer Conference in Anaheim, California on May 19, 1980. Attendees were shuttled by British double-decker bus to Disneyland, which had been rented by Apple for 5 hours as part of the special event.[3]

Priced at US$4,340 to 7,800, the Apple III featured a 1.8 MHz Synertek SY6502A processor and 128MB of RAM. It was intended as a high-end successor to the Apple II and II+, but missed its own ship date, originally scheduled in July 1980.[3] It finally shipped the following November with the Apple SOS operating system, which had been ready since September 1980.[4] The Apple III was promoted by Steve Jobs as "the ultimate hobbyist computer" and that it "will not replace the Apple II by any means. It’s designed to enhance it."[1]

Reception[]

Apple III was plagued with reliability problems caused by the lack of air vents and fans at Jobs' insistence, which led to overheating and chips coming loose from their sockets. Apple's tech support advised users to pick up the computer two inches and drop it to help reset loose chips. The real-time clock was also prone to failure. By the time it was discontinued on April 24, 1984, only about 65,000 units had been sold.[1][5] Its higher profit margin still helped yield $100 million in annual gross profits at its peak.[2]

Revisions[]

The Apple III revised edition was announced by Apple on November 9, 1981 with improved manufacturing and quality control procedures. It was released on December 1, 1981 at a lower base price of US$3,495 with updated chip sockets, software, and base memory increased to 256KB of RAM. The faulty clock was left out of the spec and was only available as an optional add-in. A 5MB ProFile hard drive also became available as an option. Around 2,000 customers experiencing problems with their existing Apple III received a free upgrade to this version. The installed user base reached about 75,000 units by December 1983.[3][6]

Apple III plus[]

Main article: Apple III plus
AppleIII Plus

The Apple III plus was the final update to the Apple III that was released in December 1983. With a further reduced price of US$2,995, the newer model included a digital clock, a re-designed keyboard, video interlacing, rear port connectors, and 256KB of RAM.[3] The new keyboard was similar to the Apple IIe.

Owners of the original Apple III could get the new logic board as a replacement. A keyboard kit was also made, which included the updated keyboard, cover, keyboard encoder ROM, and logo replacements.

Discontinuation[]

Although the Apple III plus helped boost the installed base to 120,000 units, the damage to its reputation had already been done. The Apple III product line was discontinued in September 1985 after losses reached $60 million.[3]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Apple III introduced, May 19, 1980 by Amy Norcross, EDN. 2019-05-19.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Why I Failed with the Apple III and Steve Jobs Succeeded With the Macintosh by David Fradin, Aha!. 2016-03-23.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 The Apple III Fiasco by Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World's Most Colorful Company, p.41-44. No Starch Press. 1994.
  4. 15-DOS 3.3, ProDOS & beyond: SOS by Steven Weyhrich, Apple II History. 2010-07-01.
  5. That Time Apple Told Apple III Customers To Drop Their Computers by Jim Tanous, TechJunkie. 2014-09-13.
  6. Today in Apple history: Too little, too late for Apple III by Luke Dormehl, Cult of Mac. 2020-12-01.

External links[]

Articles[]

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Apple II with monitor and Disk II drives   Apple series
Apple I : Apple Computer 1 (Apple Computer A)
Apple II series : Apple II | II+ | IIe | IIc | IIGS | IIc Plus | IIe Card
Apple III series : Apple III | III+
Operating systems : Apple DOS | ProDOS | SOS | GS/OS
Succeeded by the Macintosh series
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