Phil B. recently alerted me to the following info, that really captured my attention:I used the Jan 1985 Dr. Dobb's Journal article "Fatten Your Mac" by Thomas Lafleur and Susan Raab to do my upgrade. As I'm deployed in Iraq I can't look at my copy...
Suffice it to say, I've been searching everywhere in vain to secure that 9/85 issue of Dr. Dobb's Journal. And when I happened to see Aoresteen's post today, I was reinvigorated. If you have the 1/85 issue, would you also happen to have the 9/85 issue as well? If so, is there any way you could scan some relevant articles?Fastime MacSCSIThe September 1985 issue of Doctor Dobb's Journal published an article by John Bass describing a SCSI interface board for the 128 and 512K Macs. The article included schematics for a basic board and sample driver code.
You are assuming that they had to choose between delaying launch to enable more memory, and launching quickly with 128K. There was a third option: Launch on time with more memory, and accept lower margins. As discussed earlier in this thread, they would not have lost money by any stretch of the imagination. They would have made handsome margins, in fact, but Sculley wanted more than handsome.Delaying the launch until memory prices came down might have been the death of the Mac and Apple.
Sculley already overruled Jobs on the pricing of the Mac, tacking on something like $500 more than was originally planned, but for Apple to launch the Mac with a lower margin might not have worked because like I said, Lisa and the IIe were largely being superseded by PC's. Apple needed a machine with a high margin to pay the bills or they wouldn't have survived.You are assuming that they had to choose between delaying launch to enable more memory, and launching quickly with 128K. There was a third option: Launch on time with more memory, and accept lower margins. As discussed earlier in this thread, they would not have lost money by any stretch of the imagination. They would have made handsome margins, in fact, but Sculley wanted more than handsome.Delaying the launch until memory prices came down might have been the death of the Mac and Apple.
And the Mac team knew full well that 128K was inadequate for their GUI-based machine.
So you think Apple could have released a 512k Mac for $1995 or even $2495 in 1984? I don't think that would have been possible. 256k maybe, but not 512k.Needless to say, high margins per se do not necessarily translate to large profits. It's not at all a solid argument that (over)pricing the Mac was essential to saving Apple from declining income. It's really a question of market elasticity. If a drop in price (or larger memory, say) increases your market disproportionately, then profits may actually increase. So, the real question is whether Sculley's pricing by fiat was self-defeating. The rapid flattening of Mac sales suggests that it was. A strong case can be (and has been) made that introducing the Mac with 512K without a price increase would have enabled developers to offer compelling applications sooner, and thus make the Mac a truly useful computer, rather than having it be the lovely toy that the 128K essentially was.
The Apple II was a cash cow that carried Apple, and the Mac, into the 90s. The Mac did not become truly successful until the SE & Mac II were introduced in 1987.the IIe was losing it's edge to the PC.
And it was only in education where the IIe was carrying it's weight. The IBM PC had pretty much pushed the Apple II's out of offices and competition from other makers of 8 bit computers like Atari and Commodore were taking the home users. The IIe had become a niche machine and the writing was on the wall for it. Jobs knew they wouldn't be able to depend on the IIe forever with PC's proliferating. Eventually the IIe's would have been pushed out of the schools which was why he got so into the Macintosh project. Mac was going to be the future of Apple when the IIe stopped selling. If the Mac failed, it would have been the end for Apple because the successors of the IIe (the IIGS, IIc and IIc+) all failed to achieve the same popularity.The Apple II was a cash cow that carried Apple, and the Mac, into the 90s. The Mac did not become truly successful until the SE & Mac II were introduced in 1987.the IIe was losing it's edge to the PC.
I don't think anybody here advocated delaying a launch until RAM prices dropped. That would be foolish. Bill Gates would have released Windows 1.0 and no one would have anything else to compare it to and Apple really would have been dead, lawsuit or no. The argument as Tom Lee so astutely puts it is that Apple was and is a greedy company that was making far more than they actually needed to. They had more money than they knew what to do with at the time and would have done far better with the Mac had they sold it for less and targeted a wider audience. It did incredibly well for being as underpowered as it was thanks to Sculley's marketing campaign. But once the initial fascination wore off on the early adopters of this revolutionary technology, the bread and butter consumers avoided it thanks to the high price and poor reviews it was receiving. If it weren't for Apple's wise decision to get as many software developers on board from the launch, they might well have dried up and blown away by August '84. Between the huge selection of software and growing enthusiasm for the platform, they made it. Apple's investment in education really turned the tide, which ultimately saved them as students quickly embraced the Mac and bought them for themselves as soon as they had jobs. But, they failed to learn their lessons from Lisa, which was no matter how revolutionary if people can't justify the cost they will make due with something else. Yes RAM was expensive, yes it was hard to come by, but in the end, that isn't what kept the price artificially high for the underpowered 128K.
There's no argument that Apple needed to earn money from the Mac. However, you continue to make the assumption that high prices implies high profits. That could be true, but it is not necessarily true. By extension of your logic, Sculley should not have stopped at a $500 increase.Those early Macs had to have high prices to pay for the development costs as well as the advertising and promotion. If they had gone with Jobs pricing or upped the specification without a price increase, Mac would have dragged Apple down and might not have survived to 1987 ...
Wow. I would really like to see some citations for this hypothesis. I've read almost every book about Apple there is and none of them painted this picture. Yet all of them make pointed reference to Apple's greed. Also, more sales balance out lower prices. It's basic economics. Period. The Mac did not have to be high priced to support Apple's R&D. It just needed to sell well, as I said before they had lots of money in the bank at that time. The fact it did both for the first 4 months is irrelevant. It certainly didn't help them survive the fall that resulted in Jobs dismissal. They were essentially hoist by their own petard.Those early Macs had to have high prices to pay for the development costs as well as the advertising and promotion. If they had gone with Jobs pricing or upped the specification without a price increase, Mac would have dragged Apple down and might not have survived to 1987 when things started looking up to the point where Apple could think about dumping the Apple II and going exclusively Mac. Mac had to start recovering it's costs or the technology might have died before it achieved wide acceptance. Apple would be defunct and Macintosh would be nothing more than a blip on the timeline of computer history.
The apple II was very useful for the (chemical) industryI also question the validity of your statement that the Apple II was strictly a niche computer for education only. Hard to imagine releasing the IIc after the Mac, releasing the IIGS at ALL....