Apple IIc Plus - the rarest and fastest Apple II!

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2020
  • Returning to one of my favorite subjects - the Apple II - I decide to finally repair a broken Apple IIc Plus gifted to me a little more than a year ago. This machine was the final true hardware revision to the Apple II line, coming in 1988, and the last standalone machine in the line released. It was also the fastest, with a 4Mhz CPU (vs. 1Mhz in most other Apple II's, and 2.6Mhz in the IIGS).
    But it was a problematic machine for Apple, with a concept that had been watered down to the point of, well, pointlessness. The market wanted it even less than it wanted the original IIc (which was my first computer - the one in the thumbnail is my original machine). Still, it is an interesting computer for its accelerated CPU, and its somewhat anachronistic nature at the time of its launch.
    Please let me know if you happen to have a working Apple 3.5 drive or eject motor for sale! There is contact info on my about page.
    Subscribe to my channel: czcams.com/users/ModernClassi...
    Support me on Patreon!: / modernclassic
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 300

  • @ModernClassic
    @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety +42

    Hey guys! Couple things: if anyone does have an Apple 3.5 drive (internal or external, doesn't matter) or just the eject motor that you're interested in selling for a reasonable price, please let me know. (You can use the contact info on my about page.) Also, I know there are a couple of errors in this video that I didn't catch until too late - for example, the IIGS is a 2.8Mhz machine, not 2.6Mhz. Such is the danger of speaking off the cuff. Lastly, several people have mentioned that the music in the repair section is louder than my voice - it isn't in Resolve, and it isn't in my exported file, but CZcams seems to have brickwalled the music but left my voice at the levels I set. This is irritating for all of us, but it is just one of those CZcams-isms, and once a video is uploaded and published there is nothing to be done about it. We all just have to live with it - sorry!

    • @Nukle0n
      @Nukle0n Před 4 lety +4

      You can also just get a new gear, it's the gear that has turned yellow and has become brittle, it seems like whatever factory they got specifically that gear from didn't make them right so they've failed on nearly every single drive. That's why you need 3D printed replacements.

    • @staggerwings
      @staggerwings Před 4 lety

      I have a non-functioning 3.5 inch external drive. I recall it wouldn't read disks or eject but I can send it to you for just postage in case either the little eject board or the motor is still good, assuming your drive had the opposite component fail. The motor assembly still has the horizontal gear with the metal engagement pin. If you don't want the whole thing I can send you just the motor and board. Let me know.

    • @RobertBullock
      @RobertBullock Před 4 lety

      Also I do have an extra ejector motor with the gear in if the drive is the same mech as Mac/IIgs (A9M0106). Those are 800k but IIRC the ejector motor part is the same on the 1.44 FDHD.

    • @alextirrellRI
      @alextirrellRI Před 4 lety

      @@Nukle0n Yeah, broken gear was my first thought. Didn't get a good enough look at it in the video to tell.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety

      I show the gear in the video; it's perfectly fine. The motor does not turn on its own (it's not trying to spin the gears), but it does turn by hand, so it's probably not seized. It doesn't even make an attempt to turn.

  • @esra_erimez
    @esra_erimez Před 4 lety +35

    This channel is like visiting a knowledgeable good friend.

  • @bobbytheitguy4289
    @bobbytheitguy4289 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane. I got an Apple IIc for my 12th birthday back in the days. I remember my friends had dual disk drives on their IIe's which I envied, but they would copy and give me some of their games. I also had FS II as well as Wizardry, Ultima IV, and Summer Games (1984). I also had a 300 baud modem that my mom bought me a year later, and used it to surf the very beginnings of the WWW....actually it was Compuserve ...but still a lot of fun. Great times and great machine.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Před 4 lety +18

    I've heard that the inspiration of the Apple IIc Plus was Apple's jealousy of the Laser 128EX, a lower-cost IIc clone with a 3.6 MHz CPU. Laser supposedly even had a 128EX/2 model with a built-in 3.5" diskette drive, also released in 1988, but most of the 128EX/2's I've seen have a 5.25" drive. That one sold for $499 (without a monitor), so even with the IIc Plus's price reduction, the Laser was still the less expensive machine. And your Magnavox monitor should have a button to switch it to green text mode, which would eliminate the rainbow streaking in 80-column mode -- or else you could just turn the color control all the way down.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety +3

      The green mode on the Magnavox is not really the same as the Apple monochrome monitor - all it seems to do is block red and blue, so what you get is even uglier than just leaving it in full color mode.

    • @josephbseeley
      @josephbseeley Před 4 lety

      @Vwestlife Are you certain they were 128/EX2s? I thought the EXs were 5.25" and EX2 were 3.5" drives. My brother had the EX and it was 5.25" which was actually more handy back then.

  • @arentol99
    @arentol99 Před rokem +1

    Lots of good memories here. Got a //c in 1986… launched my lifelong love of IT and my career.

  • @battleangel5595
    @battleangel5595 Před 2 lety +2

    I had the original II\c as my first computer. It was a Christmas gift ages ago. My father went bonkers when he bought it. BONKERS. A full setup with the II\c. External floppy, mouse, joystick, color monitor, and color printer. I remember playing Flight Simulator for hours. Even Aztec. Where I blew up the stairs to kill an enemy on the lowest floor only to find the idol and realize what a COMPLETE IDIOT I was for blowing up said stairs...
    The NES came out not long after. Then we had this 80386SX-16 IBM clone I loved...
    But my computing origins began on the II\c. Seeing all those big boxes under the Christmas tree from "Santa" back then... Priceless memories.

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Před rokem

      Aztec was such a fun game, climb over the status to the next level lol. I ended using that very same color monitor for my Chinese Famicom clone (a nes without the stupid lock chip) which conveniently had composite output...

  • @steveh1792
    @steveh1792 Před 4 lety +6

    The //c was my last system documentation project at Apple. We knew the Apple// family was nearing its end, as the Mac was the only future seen my upper management. So I got the full source list of the //c's firmware included in the doc set... Nice if you can find the manual set.

    • @apple2-tor
      @apple2-tor Před 2 lety

      Hi Steve. Was it a separate volume as with the //e Monitor ROM?

  • @The_Wandering_Nerd
    @The_Wandering_Nerd Před 4 lety +14

    So the market for the Apple IIc+ was someone who already had a significant investment in Apple II peripherals and software, and who wanted a small boost in productivity software, and who didn't care about games so much, and who weren't swayed by the Apple IIGS's enhanced graphics, sound, and GUI capabilities, and who didn't have the technical knowhow to just install an accelerator card, and didn't mind that they took out the headphone jack, and were willing to pay over $1000 for the privilege when faster, cheaper computers like the IBM, Tandy, Amiga, and Atari ST--or even a used Mac--would have been a much better option? Wow, Apple's contempt for its own customers hasn't really changed much in 30 years, has it?

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety +4

      I think the problem was really that it started off as a decent idea and was watered down to the point that they shouldn't have released it. It's one of those "you can make a pizza so cheap that no one will eat it" things. Who knows, maybe it's one reason why Apple stopped trying to make budget-priced products.

    • @Apple2gs
      @Apple2gs Před 4 lety +3

      32 years ago, I was excited to see a (then) brand-new Apple II model on the cover of A+ Magazine. As I started flipping through the pages about the IIc Plus, I remember being very confused... It must have better graphics, right? Better sound? More built-in RAM? Does it share ANYTHING in common with the IIGS, other than a 3.5 drive? Nope, nope, nope and nope!! Just an obsolete Apple IIc in basically a new case...huh? What the heck was Apple doing I thought? Is this a joke, are they just trying to give a middle finger to IIGS users? Honestly, the Apple IIe should have been removed from Apple's price list by early 1987, and the IIc Plus should have been a portable version of IIGS. To this day, it still makes no sense why this was released.

  • @dennisud
    @dennisud Před rokem +1

    I bought an Apple IIC way back in 1987 from an IRS worker for $795.00. It was a great tax write off! I used it for work as I was a Middle school teacher and used my very 1st Gradebook program, "Making the Grade" on it. I also made several worksheets for my students as I had 4 Apple IIe's in my classroom for Oegon Trail, Amazon Trail and a few others.
    I eventually bought a Macintosh LC-II and transferred to that and eventually The IIC was donated to an after school program nearby.

  • @apple2-tor
    @apple2-tor Před 2 lety +5

    The story about Apple limiting the speed of the //gs so that it wouldn't compete with the Macintosh is a canard, a scuttlebutt, and a tired old fable. The truth is that Western Design Center (the maker of the 65816) just didn't have the manufacturing capacity to provide Apple with the quantity of the faster CPUs required for their production, so they went with the slower 2.8Mhz chip. Regardless, this is a good video.

  • @amann2547
    @amann2547 Před rokem +1

    I'm still amazed that my (extremely cheap) stepfather bought a IIc Plus when it came out. Fond memories of that PC. So sleek, for its time.

  • @pbloo574
    @pbloo574 Před 4 lety +1

    This was a cool video. I randomly found a IIc Plus with a monitor for $60 at a flea market a few years ago and Immediately bought it because I had always wanted a vintage Apple computer of some kind. This videos makes me want to get it out of storage and mess around with it again.

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom3088 Před 2 lety

    Dude, thanks! I bought a IIc plus from Hong Kong and it was shipped to Brazil. It has several problems and I'll have lots of fun repairing it - fun now that I found your video.

  • @hawkeye454
    @hawkeye454 Před 4 lety

    Your videos are so good, I always look forward to seeing the next notification from your channel. Thanks for taking the time to make videos like this Apple repair. Cheers!

  • @photolabguy
    @photolabguy Před 4 lety

    Awesome to see this kind of content again! I hope you and your family are doing well!

  • @RetroGamesCollector
    @RetroGamesCollector Před rokem +1

    I just got hold of a IIGS so really enjoyed learning about one of it's contemporaries. This thing really moves for an Apple ][ !

  • @gallgreg
    @gallgreg Před 4 lety +1

    Great video and awesome machine!
    Glad you got it working!!
    Wish I had a IIc Plus in my collection!

  • @Lion_McLionhead
    @Lion_McLionhead Před 4 lety +1

    The dreams of the IIC in View to a Kill being some kind of wonder computer have been dashed by this series.

    • @steveh1792
      @steveh1792 Před 4 lety +2

      The //c also showed up near the beginning of "2010" with Roy Scheider computing on vacation at the beach. It was connected to an LCD display that we at Apple had been working on that didn't manage to make production when the //c was introduced.

  • @csabasanta5696
    @csabasanta5696 Před 4 lety

    Glad to see you back! Great content as always. Keep it up!

  • @alexandermirdzveli3200

    Another marvelous review from Modern Classic! True delight.

  • @dgordon2991
    @dgordon2991 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Had two of them, one with the microsoft cp/m os card and //c lcd display, other with the //c monitor. They were fun little alternatives to the //e.

  • @JimLeonard
    @JimLeonard Před 4 lety

    Sound issues aside, this was an excellent overview of the IIc Plus. Your upgrade to 4k was also very appreciated. I'm glad you're able to still pursue your hobby despite your drastic career change and training.

  • @mentalhealthnetwork
    @mentalhealthnetwork Před 4 lety +1

    I remember these in my computer lab in high school. Teacher was a hardcore Apple guy.

  • @matthewplehn4271
    @matthewplehn4271 Před 4 lety

    good to see content still coming from this channel

  • @The-Weekend-Warrior
    @The-Weekend-Warrior Před rokem +1

    Oh my, oh my... what a drive on memory lane... My first ever computer was an Apple IIc and I miss it sooooooooo much ever since it died on me and had not enough knowledge back then to repair it or have it repaired (and wanted an Atari ST badly anyways). Nice to see, thanks!

  • @musiclabmn
    @musiclabmn Před 4 lety

    Makes me a bit sad. I had one in fantastic condition, with the box and all accessories that I sold on eBay back in January. It's the ONE time I didn't fully insure it and FedEx lost it. I still think it was stolen somehow, but I have no way to prove it and they paid me $100 for my 'trouble'. Thanks for keeping another one of these rare guys kicking!

  • @misterkiji
    @misterkiji Před 4 lety +1

    I had one of these as a child. It was great. Still had to sit and load discs to play games

  • @xWindreaderx
    @xWindreaderx Před 4 lety +1

    I kick myself for not jumping on this system when I had the opportunity about a year ago! I had seen a listing on Craigslist of a guy discounting his listings for both an Apple IIe Enhanced and an Apple IIc Plus, with the IIc Plus being only $30! I waited too long to contact the guy as he’d already sold it and really do regret it to this day considering the prices these go for.

  • @bhstone1
    @bhstone1 Před 4 lety +1

    My left ear loved your MIDI music. My right ear felt very felt out.

    • @noop9k
      @noop9k Před 3 lety

      Where’s MIDI in this video?

  • @mcrazza
    @mcrazza Před 4 lety +5

    15:47
    I had Flight Simulator II for the Atari XEGS back in the day. As a kid I had absolutely no idea how to play the game. It was an absolute slideshow. Wasn't much a fan of simulators from the era. GATO was the exception.

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Před rokem +1

      I played lots of GATO with the //c. Of course its a wireframe slideshow like everything else with that platform 🙂
      Like you i had no idea what to do with in Flight Simulator II. But when you are a kid and have nothing else to do, you start touching and trying everything and writing it down. Because, "ahem", no manual... And i eventually learned to take off and land without crashing and going places. When i moved to the PC and tried FS3, felt right at home except things looked much better and smooth.

  • @paulmuaddib451
    @paulmuaddib451 Před 4 lety

    Good to see ya back!

  • @esseferio
    @esseferio Před 4 lety

    I missed these kind of videos :) Thank you :)

  • @chrisjamesr77
    @chrisjamesr77 Před 2 lety

    I used to have one of these! Somehow the sound of those keys clicking at 10:00 just brings it all back, lol

  • @Psychlist1972
    @Psychlist1972 Před 4 lety +1

    Love the chiptune music, but it's so much louder than your voice, so it blew me out of my chair :P.

  • @hopper1
    @hopper1 Před 4 lety

    That print ad near the end of the video really threw me back into my youth. I suffered with a VIC 20 (with a cassette drive) until I got into high school when I was able to purchase a Lazer 128EX from a store in a strip mall. I only ever used Apple Works on it, but it served me well throughout high school.

  • @zorinlynx
    @zorinlynx Před 4 lety +1

    Bank Street Writer had slow-ish scrolling because it used graphics mode to implement text display. This allowed more flexibility in what could be displayed at a cost of performance. Other productivity software like AppleWorks used native text mode and as a result were MUCH faster, even at 1MHz!

  • @Meatpipeify
    @Meatpipeify Před 4 lety

    This guy sounds just like This Old Tony. Great video!

  • @sub-jec-tiv
    @sub-jec-tiv Před 9 měsíci +2

    ][c plus is a beautiful design.

  • @davidorama6690
    @davidorama6690 Před 4 lety +1

    Apple //c was a fantastic computer. I longed to buy one back in the day.

  • @jdrukman
    @jdrukman Před 4 lety

    My first job out of college was developing educational software on a IIc+. Nice trip down memory lane.

  • @Bonpu
    @Bonpu Před 4 lety +2

    Am I really the only one thinking the Apple IIC - Hartmut Esslingens first design project for Apple - is the most beautiful personal computer ever built? To this day I am kicking myself for not snatching one when it became obsolete and hence affordable even in Europe.

  • @elfenmagix8173
    @elfenmagix8173 Před 4 lety +2

    I have the Laser128 and a Apple IIc with the 5MHz RocketChip. They both kicked the IIc+ ass though the IIc+ had better expandability than the IIc I have with the RocketChip. The Laser128 had 2 Apple slots to expand from- one internal and 1 external.

    • @gallgreg
      @gallgreg Před 4 lety

      The Laser 128 was a very cool machine! Still have one in my collection!

  • @pentiummmx2294
    @pentiummmx2294 Před 3 lety +2

    The original II, the Bell and Howell II Plus, and the IIc Plus, along with the apple iii, Lisa, Color Classic, TV, and 20th anniversary mac are rare apple relics.

  • @BrianOfAteionas
    @BrianOfAteionas Před 3 lety

    I wish I still had my IIGS. It was already outdated at the time I got one used from a friend for 20 bucks(late 90s), but it was so cool to be like 12 years old and and play these mysterious games that came with the computer. It can still remember that distinct old electronics and cigarette smell that just enriched the experience for me.

  • @kloakovalimonada
    @kloakovalimonada Před 3 lety

    Gorgeous machines.

  • @jinchoung
    @jinchoung Před 2 lety +1

    holy crap ms. pacman on apple 2 was freakin amazing!

  • @retropuffer2986
    @retropuffer2986 Před 4 lety +1

    I remember the Compute! Magazine reviews which seem to focus on how you could get 16 bit era computer for the same money. They did note that for parents the large number of software packages, especially educational, were a benefit to this system. If you recall the first couple years of 16 bit era computers (other than PC) had a tiny software base. Software base was a factor for buyers back then.
    I would imagine Apple Works would fly on this system and Apple Works was probably one of the best 8 bit era productivity software packages.

  • @adriansdigitalbasement
    @adriansdigitalbasement Před 4 lety +4

    Great video! I remember using one at school (I had a IIgs at the time) and thought it was such a stupid machine. It is neat now though :-)

    • @gamedoutgamer
      @gamedoutgamer Před 4 lety

      Yes the stupid machines BITD are often cool to own and even use.

    • @theonecalledstein
      @theonecalledstein Před 4 lety

      I also had a IIgs at the time, but still wanted one of these for the portability.

    • @travis1240
      @travis1240 Před 3 lety +1

      I remember being impressed at the 2gs graphics and sound, which was good for the time.

  • @dronejunglistplatoon
    @dronejunglistplatoon Před 4 lety

    i want one! Great vid as always.

  • @SuburbanDon
    @SuburbanDon Před rokem +1

    That original Flight Sim was BRUTAL !!!

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Před rokem +1

      And in fact would run a bit slower than real time. With accel the clock is going too fast, without it, it runs slightly slower (at least in the //c).

  • @NathanDavisVideos
    @NathanDavisVideos Před rokem +1

    5:02 - Looks like I found where the ol' saying "Take the L" came from! 😂

  • @lcdrugo
    @lcdrugo Před 4 lety +1

    I have that exact same monitor, (although it's Commodore-branded). If you push the last button on the right it switches from RGB to a green monochrome. That should sharpen up the text nicely.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety

      I know about that; all it seems to do is filter out red and green, which means you end up with even lower resolution. It's not the same as a proper monochrome monitor.

  • @adriansdigitalbasement
    @adriansdigitalbasement Před 4 lety +1

    Couple tidbits. I swear I have seen that lock slot on the original Macs too. (128k and And on) I might be mistaken. Also, some original IIc machines had the alps keyboards like I guess all IIc+ machines did. :-)

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety

      It is possible the original Macs also had that lock slot. I am not a fan of the Mac so I don't have one to check :)

  • @dank1837
    @dank1837 Před 2 lety +1

    I believe my Apple to JPlus is rarer. The Japanese version but I love the video!!!

  • @3Dparallax
    @3Dparallax Před 4 lety

    Even used the garamond font, nice touch.

  • @williamogilvie6909
    @williamogilvie6909 Před rokem +2

    Very interesting. I worked in an Apple store (not owned by Apple) and sold several IIe's, an Apple 3, etc. I own what is absolutely the rarest Apple. It was called the Euro-Apple. It was designed for PAL-Secam video. I bought the board, populated with TTL and a 6502, in 1982. People tried to find a way to make them work with NTSC monitors. I was successful, and was able to buy a set of genuine Apple II ROM chips. FYI: That synthesized music is horrible.

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Před rokem

      Its the old trick also used with PC clones, to make the beeper produce something resembling low bit pcm playback. Very CPU intensive, often pauses the game. No SID chip here...

  • @rager1969
    @rager1969 Před 4 lety +1

    The Apple II Color (composite) monitors are amazingly sharp. I don't know if it automatically puts itself into monochrome mode for text but there is no NTSC artifacting on 80 column text. I'd recommend acquiring one.

    • @jrmcferren
      @jrmcferren Před 3 lety

      I'm not sure, some Apples may have killed the chroma circuit, but I don't think they all did. Apple color monitors had a color/mono switch. The Apple IIgs I think simulated the chroma artifacts too, the Apple IIgs RGB monitors also had the color/mono switch. I have also experienced an Apple IIe system on a pro video monitor which told me when the chroma was disabled.

  • @jrherita
    @jrherita Před 9 měsíci +2

    The IIC+ is the sort of upgrade I really wish Atari had given their 8bit. (3.5” disk support and higher frequency).

  • @hippodackl1521
    @hippodackl1521 Před rokem

    Great video, really

  • @Nukle0n
    @Nukle0n Před 4 lety +1

    I think Adrian Black talked about how the later manufactured IIcs also got rid of the mechanical Alps keyboard. Also that SmartPort support is just a function of the ROM, so you can burn a new rom for the IIc and put it in there (You have to open a close some jumpers on the board as well) and that will add that functionality, plus the self-test.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety

      Yeah I just don't have really any experience with later IIc's. I remember being surprised at the time when I looked in magazines and saw that you could upgrade the RAM. (This was one of the drawbacks of the IIc that I remember weighing when I chose it.) I opened mine up one day and there was no slot for it. That was my first inkling that Apple was making changes to the IIc on the fly.

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Před rokem

      Yes, i definitely had one of those with the better keyboard. A friend had the other one. His also became yellow very quickly while mine remained white much longer...

  • @TheSulross
    @TheSulross Před 4 lety +1

    Another problem was that neither the 6502 or 65816 were enabled in their designs to be able to run high level languages (very well) that require a call stack, such as C. By the mid 80s, business software had shifted to using C instead of assembly language (Intel did intentionally design the 8086 - way back in 1977 - to be able to run high level, call stack based languages). Yes, the early great software for the PC, like Lotus 123, was written in assembly language, but the C compilers quickly go better and improved their code generation - and memory became cheaper. So the industry around personal computers shifted to using high level, compiled languages. Even products like Turbo Pascal and Turbo C enabled this for the masses. If you look today you will see that there are C compilers for the 6502, but they generate bloated software and essentially implement a hack (establish a call stack off to the side of the 6502 default stack). There are no dedicated registers and instructions for using this stack - so the code is verbose and inefficient. There is a lot of retro activity to write games for the old 8-bit 6502 computers (like the Commodore 64) but people really have to learn assembly language to do that with much success (and ability to turn out games that have any appeal). But in commercial software for business purposes, high level compiled languages like C were a significant economic leverage. So in the latter half of the 80s, a new computer unable to facilitate this high level language economic leverage were at a great disadvantage - who would want to bother targeting such a computer if it meant having to return to writing business applications in assembly language? Yeah, nobody wanted to do that. And this is also part of the reason the IIgs failed - its 65816 still failed to add sufficient improvements to support high level languages like C. The call stack could be bigger but it was still pinned down in the special zero 64K block and there were still no special registers and instructions added for manipulating a call stack that makes high level language code generation more efficient (i.e., practical). The 6502 doomed itself because even with the 65816 it failed to sufficiently innovate forward. It was forever stuck in the late 70s, early 80s era of personal computing.

  • @tomladdus9264
    @tomladdus9264 Před rokem +1

    I am amazed I don't remember this model at all. I was a big apple ii fan.

    • @henkholdingastate
      @henkholdingastate Před rokem +1

      What a huge difference from the absolute junk keyboards of modern laptops (Totally no feedback)

  • @RustBunny
    @RustBunny Před 2 lety

    Late to the party, but glad I stumbled across this nonetheless. I have a IIc Plus that I've had since I was in high school. I had no software for it then, have nothing for it now. I should put mine through the paces some day and see if it even still works, along with the other older Apples and Macs I have sitting around (couple PowerBooks, a IIgs, a few others).

  • @knyazhefilms2154
    @knyazhefilms2154 Před 4 lety +2

    Oh I see those days Control was in a right place. Interesting ...

  • @uwtitanfan
    @uwtitanfan Před 4 lety +1

    I complied your basic program line for line on PDS 7.1 and ran it on my PS/2 30 8086 8mhz. TIme to run was 4.2 seconds.

  • @Christopher-N
    @Christopher-N Před 4 lety +5

    (17:13) "I'm gonna throw up right now ..." not on this flight, mister. :P
    "... some footage of _Flight Simulator_ running on the IBM P70 ..."

  • @mikann1379
    @mikann1379 Před 3 lety

    the last new, my favorite apple ii

  • @rmcdudmk212
    @rmcdudmk212 Před 10 měsíci

    Love the look of the IIC. Been looking for a busted one with a decent case so i can gut it and put in modern hardwere like a SBC or sothing like an Intel Nuc. 👍

  • @Mikeywil0003
    @Mikeywil0003 Před 4 lety

    That is an interesting machine, but you are right about the cost to performance. In 1988, you could get a bargain model Tandy 1000, like an EX, with a monitor for the same price, and it would run circles around a 2C+.

  • @Trusteft
    @Trusteft Před 4 lety

    This was a cool Sunday morning video to watch. Thank you for sharing.
    I wouldn't swap my then Atari ST for this machine, but I wouldn't be disappointed either if it was all I had at the time. Especially since I was/am mostly a strategy/rpg guy.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety

      I had an Atari ST until a little while ago. Unfortunately mine was one of the very early ones without an internal drive, so no way to use a floppy emulator internally, and the drive I had to go with it had the less common interface that wouldn't work with any floppy emulator without building a special cable. I never got around to doing that, so eventually just sold it. Not before taking the machine apart and cleaning and retrobrighting all the individual parts, though; it was beautiful by the time I sold it.

    • @Trusteft
      @Trusteft Před 4 lety

      @@ModernClassic Two reasons why I don't buy one (or any other similar age computer), I am worried of its condition, and I am not talking about requiring cleaning or retrobrighting. If I could find someone selling them 100% repaired/refurbished, I would...The second reason is money which right now is too tight. But one day perhaps I will. I am not good with actual proper repairs, I have an iMac (sunflower) which I bought as non working few years ago, but I am too worried I will do more damage than good if I open it.

    • @maxxdahl6062
      @maxxdahl6062 Před 4 lety

      @@Trusteft I bought a breadbin c64 a while back to get back into an old machine I wanted to play, then looked at what it would cost for me to get it going (PSU, floppy drive, etc.) and said to hell with it, bought a c64 mini for general use and will keep the breadbin for collection.

  • @KapiteinKrentebol
    @KapiteinKrentebol Před 4 lety +1

    2:00 InCider......brilliant! 😂

  • @Energyone
    @Energyone Před 2 lety

    I got one when my parents bought it as a combo with a television sale. Naturally we had to get a 5.25 floppy drive for it as nothing was on the smaller discs really. Also came with an amber monitor which was a bit annoying. Used it a ton until I got an Amiga 500 later on.

  • @iStormUK
    @iStormUK Před 3 lety

    I longed for this when it launched - I had only a ZX81 at the time, and was soooo tired of crappy keyboards and tape drives. This looked like the perfect replacement - but you know, we weren't rich enough to get new computers, and I ended up with a 2nd hand Acorn Electron instead. Woo Life of Repton gaming! :p

  • @dave4shmups
    @dave4shmups Před rokem

    Great video on the IIc+! Aside from consumers not buying 8-bit computers anymore, I think Apple’s other problem was the lack of a 5.25” built in floppy drive. You can find an episode of The Computer Chronicles where Stuart asks a lady who worked for Apple about that, and, of course, she said that Apple had a lot of software vendors lined up to make software on 3.25” disks for the IIc+. I don’t know how many software titles were released on that format, but it would be interesting to know.

  • @LajitasRain
    @LajitasRain Před 4 lety

    The Apple IIC was my first computer. I purchased at a Computer Craft store in Dallas, Texas on Memorial Day 1986 ($1,495 w/color composite monitor & Imagewriter II printer). So exactly 34 years ago.

  • @Kaiju3301
    @Kaiju3301 Před rokem +2

    Lol computer science in grade school? We weren’t slowed to use computers in high school because the principal thought we would become hackers… I graduated in 2008.

  • @juliomaldonado7979
    @juliomaldonado7979 Před 3 lety

    hey dude I reed youre coment on Briana's video and glad you enjoy her work, thank you for youre suport , she appreciated it ;)

  • @ilexgarodan
    @ilexgarodan Před 4 lety

    Honestly, I'd go for the IIgs, if only because of how unique its architecture was!

  • @ww21943
    @ww21943 Před 2 lety

    Will pressing the OA key and Control start the self test on a IIGS? I think I have a bad onboard RAM chip

  • @cathrynm
    @cathrynm Před 2 měsíci +1

    Oops, yeah. All the 3.5" disk software was for 2GS.

  • @freeculture
    @freeculture Před rokem +1

    I had a later Apple //c without the awful keyboard. It wasn't a //c+ but a regular //c in Spanish. I know how the other keyboard feels because a friend had it. You tried capturing in sound... When you press the key, about halfway you get extra resistance you have to overcome so it reaches the bottom. Its a bit annoying. Mine didn't had that problem for all the years i used it. I had the Apple color monitor shown in the magazine, it had a button to kill the chroma and you would get crisp B&W when needed. I also had the Imagewritter II. oddly enough, with the platinum color, while my //c, color monitor and even the external 3 1/2" drive were snowwhite. Yes i had the opposite, an external 3 1/2, its probably the same the + has inside. Just like you, i switched to a PC clone around 1990, first XT, then 286, 386, etc. Never touched Macs, dreamed with the GS but was short lived. Would have loved a compact GS, stupid bean counters, no doubt the same people who ordered the GS being intentionally crippled down. Woz was the man. C64 was nice, but try loading a floppy with the 1641 or whatever that was vs the Apple... is literally minutes vs seconds, same game: Skyfox. One thing i remember slowing down into a crawl after a while was the Prodos tools, always wondered if it was a bug, or a ram/cpu issue. I also had a gui newsletter publishing software that may benefit from the acceleration (yeah i had a mouse, almost nothing used it). Also spent countless hours with that flightsim...

  • @rhodaborrocks1654
    @rhodaborrocks1654 Před rokem

    I still have my Apple ][ Europlus, with 9" black and white monitor and single floppy, it taught me so much and was the key to a long career as a software developer, I could never part with it.

  • @andyk939
    @andyk939 Před rokem +1

    I have one of these in my garage somewhere...

  • @WelcomeToMarkintosh
    @WelcomeToMarkintosh Před měsícem

    Awesome video-thank you! Could you tell me what model that Magnavox monitor is?

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před měsícem +1

      It's the RGB Monitor 40. (Not to be mistaken with the Color Monitor 40, which is a different monitor that only has composite, if I remember right.) There is also an RGB Monitor 80, which has a finer dot pitch (one is meant for 40 columns, the other 80 columns). They're both a little hard to find but if you can find either one, I'd grab it. They are great monitors in that they can take almost any retro source, even CGA. The 80 is obviously a bit more desirable with its finer dot pitch.

  • @timlocke3159
    @timlocke3159 Před 4 lety +9

    Your "I'll be right back" music is much louder than your voice. Perhaps lower it some.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety

      It's the same volume. I set all the levels to be equal.

    • @timlocke3159
      @timlocke3159 Před 4 lety +4

      @@ModernClassic Perhaps the volumes of the source files are different. It sure sounds a lot louder. I have to turn it down.

  • @LonSeidman
    @LonSeidman Před 4 lety

    Bank Street Writer! My word processor of choice.

  • @MrGeorgeGary
    @MrGeorgeGary Před 2 lety

    Gosh it's 6.6.22. I feel as though I am showing up really late for this party. Where can one purchase the MG ROM 5x. I would dearly love upgrading my IIc Plus with this improvement. Thanks! 😋

  • @radracer2033
    @radracer2033 Před 3 lety

    Oh I've had 3 of those iic pluses lol

  • @thedopplereffect00
    @thedopplereffect00 Před 4 lety +1

    Did the sound really take more CPU at 4Mhz? Wouldn't it be likely the CPU was waiting for the sound to play or for some interrupt to complete? Really fascinating behavior though.

  • @flounder31
    @flounder31 Před 4 lety

    I would have answered your initial question with - the Bell + Howell "Vader" IIe. Never even heard of the IIc+ - nice video!

    • @flounder31
      @flounder31 Před 4 lety

      Also - RIP Meigs Field, Chicago

    • @gallgreg
      @gallgreg Před 4 lety

      The B&H black Apple is actually a II Plus rather than a IIe...

    • @A2Central
      @A2Central Před 3 lety

      @@gallgreg there are beige Bell and Howell //e units, complete with a beige version of the backpack. It's still badged as an Apple product though, so @Chris McDaniel it's not really a seperate model.

  • @TheHelloNeighborShow
    @TheHelloNeighborShow Před 2 lety +1

    I don't want to sound like a comment section snob, but I believe the rarest apple II is the Apple II J-Plus which is a japan exclusive which featured japenese key's and different key switches

  • @Jika88mph
    @Jika88mph Před 3 lety +1

    This was my first computer and I still have it!

  • @brianh2771
    @brianh2771 Před 4 lety

    You’re not alone. My IIc Plus came with the exact same problem. I had a spare motherboard, which simplified the troubleshooting. Then got a new ROM so I’d have two working motherboards. I also overclocked to 8 MHz.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 3 lety

      How do you overclock an apple iic plus?

    • @brianh2771
      @brianh2771 Před 3 lety

      @@gregorymalchuk272 It's simple. Just swap out the crystal oscillator with a faster one. I added a socket too. My machine works reliably with a 40 MHz crystal, which gives 8 MHz CPU speed.

    • @MRB16th
      @MRB16th Před 3 lety

      @@brianh2771 Your IIc Plus sounds cool. Huge speed boost by the way.

  • @RobertBullock
    @RobertBullock Před 4 lety

    I own a IIgs for nostalgia but never had one back in the day. I was using a 520ST by then and I had a dealer license so I got it at wholesale. Wildly better and cheaper and faster.

    • @Apple2gs
      @Apple2gs Před 4 lety +2

      I'm the reverse. Had a IIGS back in the day, but only in recent times picked up a 520ST and two 1040ST out of my fondness for vintage computers. I have to say the IIGS was overall better--vastly superior graphics, sound, operating system and GUI, and best of all, expandability with 8 internal card slots! CPU speed was about on par when comparing the 65xx vs 68xxx, but the ST had the upper hand when it came to price and support! The IIGS cost a small fortune, yet Apple, and in turn most companies, ignored it for software support. I used to drool over all the arcade games I saw in magazine for the Amiga and Atari ST got, while IIGS got left out.

  • @ChrisCebelenski
    @ChrisCebelenski Před 4 lety

    Color artifacts FTW! Nobody would use BSW on that screen with the rainbow text as you point out - a monochrome monitor was just about required for any productivity software or CP/M. This added a not-insubstantial cost for people who wanted color and mono.

  • @pmheart6
    @pmheart6 Před 4 lety

    My Mac plus had the security slot. And looking of Google the 512 did too

  • @AureliusR
    @AureliusR Před 4 lety +3

    Hey, some sound advice (get it?): You should run the audio on your videos through a compressor, with a fairly high knee but high ratio. The music comes in waaay too loud.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety

      Yup, it went through a compressor. I do it every time.

  • @backman60205
    @backman60205 Před rokem +1

    Do you remember the logos computer writing program?

  • @JamesPotts
    @JamesPotts Před 4 lety +4

    When Apple hamstrung the IIgs and then killed the entire II line, I turned away from Apple, and never returned.

    • @ModernClassic
      @ModernClassic  Před 4 lety +3

      Yup, same here. I do still love that early Apple, though. But it's like it became a totally different company when Jobs decided the Mac was the thing and the II was an obstacle standing in its way.

    • @Apple2gs
      @Apple2gs Před 4 lety +2

      Ditto here. I never forgave Apple for blatantly hobbling the IIGS and then completely abandoning it a few years later. They didn't even offer an upgrade path (a la PDS-IIe Card) and just left users like myself in the cold. Never bought another Apple product again.

    • @josephbseeley
      @josephbseeley Před 4 lety

      Nothing original to say, but had to pile on... it's oddly comforting to know other lovers of the II lwent the same path after Apple killed off the golden goose so to speak. However, switching to PCs in the late 80s was a bit rough going at the beginning: no built-in monitor or basic, mostly CGA or Hercules, and what the heck is an IRQ?? 😛 The II could have been the standard instead of PC. I actually started off with TRS-80s (up to Model 4p) and Tandy made a similar number of bad moves that disappointed and frustrated their base. Still, seriously miss those days! 😁

  • @manolokonosko2868
    @manolokonosko2868 Před 3 lety +1

    The Apple Iic was prominently featured (you could even say, it slap starred) in the 1984 film "The Explorers" . Years later I got my hands on one, which I bought at a computer tarde show for $2 - (Two American Dollars). Of course it was broken, but regardless, it was a beautiful piece of machinery. It's a pity Apple kind of crippled it in the same way IBM crippled the PC jr to avoid it cannibalizing sales of their PC XT line. As technology improved and chips could contain even more transistors than before, it would have been a great design to make it a Mac. Then again, while today any kid carries in the pocket the equivalent of a supercomputer, back in 1984, unless the kid went to a California preppy school, it was hard to fathom Apple's conception of kids carrying computers on their backpacks instead of books. And idea ahead of their time. People forget that in the 1980s, kids would be mugged, beaten up, and even killed for their sneakers or their gold frames that made them look like the guys from Run-DMC. It may be different in California, but in places like New York, where I grew up, you can't have nice things. Certain people always ruined everything for other people.