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Lisa/Lisa 2/Mac XL
CPU
CPU: Motorola MC68000
CPU Speed: 5 MHz
FPU: none
Bus Speed: 5 MHz
Data Path: 16 bit
ROM: 16 kB of diagnostic and bootstrap code present
Expansion Slots: 3 Proprietary
Video
Monitor: 12" 720 x 364 built-in (B/W, rectangular pixels)
Storage
Hard Drive: 5 MB external (10 MB in some configurations of Lisa 2/MacXL)
Floppy Drive: two 871 kB 5.25" (one 400 kB 3.5" in Lisa2)
Input/Output
Serial: 2 RS-232
Audio Out: Continuously Variable Slope Demodulator (CVSD)
Speaker: mono
Miscellaneous
Codename: Lisa
Gestalt ID: 2
Power: 150 Watts
Dimensions: 15.2" H x 18.7" W x 13.8" D
Weight: 48 lbs.
Maximum OS: LisaOS/MacWorks
Minimum OS: LisaOS
Introduced: January 1983
Terminated: August 1986
Notes
The Lisa included a single parallel port, which was dropped in the Lisa 2
and MacXL. The Lisa 2 and MacXL used 2 400 kB Sony 3.5" floppy drives, and
both had 10 MB hard drives. An optional screen upgrade was available which
allowed the Mac XL to use square pixels, for better Mac OS emulation.
Screen resolution after this upgrade was 608x431.
Named for one of its designer's daughters, the Lisa was supposed to be the
Next Big Thing. It was the first personal computer to use a Graphical User
Interface. Aimed mainly at large businesses, Apple said the Lisa would
increase productivity by making computers easier to work with. The Lisa
had a Motorola 68000 Processor running at 5 MHz, 1 MB of RAM two 5.25" 871
kB floppy drives, an external 5 MB hard drive, and a built in 12" 720 x
360 monochrome monitor. At $9,995 it was a plunge few businesses were
willing to take. When the Macintosh came out in 1984 for significantly
less money, it eroded the Lisa's credibility further. Realizing this,
Apple released the Lisa 2 (pictured above right) at the same time as the
Mac. The Lisa 2 cost half as much as the original, replaced the two 5.25"
drives with a single 400 kB 3.5" drive, and offered configurations with up
to 2 MB of RAM, and a 10 MB hard drive. In January 1985, the Lisa 2/10 was
renamed the Macintosh XL, and outfitted with MacWorks, an emulator that
allowed the Lisa to run the Mac OS. The XL was discontinued later that
year. |