So a very long time ago, when I was a wee little 14 year old, I was getting my first "modern" computer. The choice ended up being between a Performa 550 or a Macintosh TV. BTW for those curious, this was up at the ComputerTown store in Salem New Hampshire.
Anyway, I was a young teen with his own room, I wanted the computer I could use as a TV and a computer, obviously. But I was talked out of it, and the primary argument I remember, was "if it breaks you have to fix a computer AND a TV". Which of course doesn't even make sense. The "TV" was just a TV tuner card and on the off chance that it did break, I'd just have no TV anymore. That was silly and I wish I had gotten that Mac TV!!
Also, I swear to god, I also saw a larger Mac TV at that apple store, but I've never seen any reference to it anywhere. It was black and had the "Macintosh TV" label on it, but it looked like it was a larger stand alone monitor for some other system. I swear I saw it, but I've never seen anything like that since. Anyone have any ideas about this? I guess someone could have just made a macintosh tv label and stuck it on a regular old black TV and used it as a monitor? But I don't remember it looking that way. I don't remember what was on it either. It was 30 years ago.
And my last comment on the topic, what was up with the RAM in the Mac TV? It was my every spec, just a Performa 550 painted black. Yet for some reason, the P550 could take a 32 MB chip in it's RAM slot, but the Mac TV could only take a 4 MB. That is the actual only reason not to buy the Mac TV, but that would have been moot anyway. After riding 5 MB of RAM for a long time, I eventually upgraded to 8 MB, but never more than that. That 3 MB upgrade cost $275, 12 MB was never going to happen, and 36 MB, LOL keep dreaming. But why did the Mac TV seem to have this artificial limit. I know it wouldn't be the first time Apple put a totally artificial, arbitrary limit on something, but in this specific case it seems really weird. Was there a resistor you could snip off the Mac TV board to allow it to see all 36 MB?
Anyway, I was a young teen with his own room, I wanted the computer I could use as a TV and a computer, obviously. But I was talked out of it, and the primary argument I remember, was "if it breaks you have to fix a computer AND a TV". Which of course doesn't even make sense. The "TV" was just a TV tuner card and on the off chance that it did break, I'd just have no TV anymore. That was silly and I wish I had gotten that Mac TV!!
Also, I swear to god, I also saw a larger Mac TV at that apple store, but I've never seen any reference to it anywhere. It was black and had the "Macintosh TV" label on it, but it looked like it was a larger stand alone monitor for some other system. I swear I saw it, but I've never seen anything like that since. Anyone have any ideas about this? I guess someone could have just made a macintosh tv label and stuck it on a regular old black TV and used it as a monitor? But I don't remember it looking that way. I don't remember what was on it either. It was 30 years ago.
And my last comment on the topic, what was up with the RAM in the Mac TV? It was my every spec, just a Performa 550 painted black. Yet for some reason, the P550 could take a 32 MB chip in it's RAM slot, but the Mac TV could only take a 4 MB. That is the actual only reason not to buy the Mac TV, but that would have been moot anyway. After riding 5 MB of RAM for a long time, I eventually upgraded to 8 MB, but never more than that. That 3 MB upgrade cost $275, 12 MB was never going to happen, and 36 MB, LOL keep dreaming. But why did the Mac TV seem to have this artificial limit. I know it wouldn't be the first time Apple put a totally artificial, arbitrary limit on something, but in this specific case it seems really weird. Was there a resistor you could snip off the Mac TV board to allow it to see all 36 MB?


