Macintosh TV
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| Also known as | 
Mac TV LD50 Peter Pan[1]  | 
|---|---|
| Release date | October 25, 1993[2][3][4][5] | 
| Introductory price | US$2,097 (equivalent to $3,441 in 2015)[6] | 
| Discontinued | February 1, 1994[7] | 
| Units shipped | 10,000[8][9] | 
| Operating system | System 7.1-System 7.1.1, System 7.1.2 (PowerPC upgrade), System 7.5-Mac OS 7.6.1(with Enabler 404), or with PowerPC upgrade, Mac OS 9.1 | 
| CPU | Motorola 68030 @ 32 MHz | 
| Memory | 5 MB RAM (80 ns 72-pin SIMM), expandable to 8 MB, 1 MB ROM | 
| Storage | 
160 MB Hard Disk Drive, Floppy Disk Drive 1.44 MB SuperDrive  | 
| Display | built-in 14" Sony Trinitron CRT | 
| Graphics | video: 512 KB VRAM; supports 640 x 480 at 8-bits | 
| Dimensions | 17.9" x 13.5" x 16.5" | 
| Weight | 40.5 lb. | 
| Website | 
support | 
The Macintosh TV is Apple Computer's first attempt at computer-television integration. It shared the external appearance of the Macintosh LC 500 series, but in black.[10] The Macintosh TV was essentially a Performa 520 that could switch its built-in 14" Sony Trinitron CRT from being a computer display to a cable-ready television. It was incapable of showing television in a desktop window, although it could capture still frames to PICT files.
It came with a small credit card-sized remote control that was also compatible with Sony televisions. It was the first Macintosh to be made in black and came with a custom black keyboard and mouse. Later Apple would issue a custom black Performa 5420 in markets outside the United States with many of the features of the Mac TV. Apple's similar TV tuner card was a popular option for later LC, Performa series, and select models of Power Macintosh G3 beige computers.
Only 10,000 were made in the model's short time on the market.[8]
Specifications[11]
- Bus: 16 MHz
 - FPU: none
 - performance: 7.0 MIPS
 - RAM: 5 MB from factory (4 MB on motherboard, expandable to 8 MB using a single 100ns 72-pin SIMM; can use 1 MB or 4 MB SIMM)
 - L2 cache: none
 - CD-ROM: AppleCD 300i (2x)
 - ADB ports for keyboard and mouse
 - DIN-8 serial ports on back of computer
 - DB-25 SCSI connector on back of computer
 - Antenna In (F-type RF Connector)
 - Composite Video-In, Stereo Audio Input (RCA-type)
 - no expansion slots
 - PRAM battery: 3.6 V lithium
 - Gestalt ID: 88
 - addressing: 32-bit
 - upgrade path: none
 
References
- ↑ Macintosh TV, The Apple Museum, Interesting Facts: As I said, the Mac TV's code name was "LD50". In the medical field, this means "lethal dosage 50%", which means half the people that take it will die. Apple developers probably didn't know this, but others must've because it caused some contraversy. [sic]
 - ↑ APPLE UNVEILS MACINTOSH TV; MACINTOSH COMPUTER COMBINES TELEVISION AND STEREO CD PLAYER IN SINGLE, LOW-COST UNIT (Product Announcement), PR Newswire > October 25, 1993 - Free Online Library
 - ↑ Apple rolls out Macintosh TV, Oct. 25, 1993 - UPI Archives
 - ↑ The Information Appliance, By Catherine Arnst, November 22, 1993 - Bloomberg, ...Apple has recently introduced a similar machine, the Mac TV, that looks like a television set with a keyboard attached. The Mac TV can accept CD-ROM computer disks and display captions on the TV programs....
 - ↑ Mac TV, LEM Staff - 1993.10.25, Low End Mac, This was perhaps the oddest Macintosh ever. It was the last desktop Mac with a 68030 processor, the first with a built-in TV tuner, the first black desktop Mac, and the first Mac to ship with a remote control. It is the only model in the “500 Series” that doesn’t have an available PDS (Processor Direct Slot) – that gave way to the TV tuner. The built-in 14″ Trinitron monitor displays 16-bit TV images, but only 8-bit computer graphics. Software allows it to capture a single TV frame as a PICT file.
 - ↑ Black Enterprise, Apr 1994, Page 41, By Carolyn M. Brown, HOT PRODUCT Mac TV What Apple got when it crossed a Macintosh with a television It's an electronics dream come true: a computer, television and stereo all in one.
 - ↑ Macintosh TV Specs - VAW (Vectronic's Apple World) at the Wayback Machine (archived February 15, 2013)
 - 1 2 Macintosh Switcher's Guide, By Robert Standefer, Page 26, Failure #3: Mac TV - ...Only 10,000 units shipped before it was terminated...
 - ↑ The Macintosh TV was a cul de sac off the road to converged video, by Eric Bangeman - Oct 26, 2013, Ars Technica
 - ↑ The power to be your best, Get a computer, a television, and a CD player. All in one desktop system. $2079 ... New. Macintosh TV., Fall 1993, The Apple Catalog
 - ↑ Macintosh TV apple-history.com
 
