At the core of any discussion about the LISA, we do need to remember that the LISA isn't the Mac, same as the Apple IIgs isn't the Mac, even though it, like the LISA, came from the same company, in the same time period, shared many developers, and likely even shared a few underlying technologies.
It's obvious that they're related, as I mentioned, they came from the same company, at almost the same time, and many of the same developers worked on them, but they are absolutely different platforms.
I think it's important to highlight the differences because they go into showing why the LISA cost at least four times what a Mac did.
Especially:
The Mac IIfx was built six years after the LISA and original Macintosh. It *(and everything around it in 1989/1990/1991) is the result of the fact that the LISA got canned and the Mac grew to fill the role the LISA was originally intended for, with the Mac originally meant to be an information appliance kind of thing.
2)
The Mac IIfx isn't really useful by modern standards. Modern standards, or even 1990's standards, is arguably not how we should judge the LISA.
(but, I understand what this statement means, in that it's easier to deal with and for them to do things using a IIfx, using knowledge and infrastructure available in 2019.)
3)
From what I've seen, the Mac IIfx isn't really rare, in comparison with the LISA. Perhaps compared with the Classic or the LC. In that context, we can agree that the IIfx is rare compared to, say, the Power Macintosh G5, but only because the G5 sold for three years into a much larger overall market with a simplified product line where it was one of essentially six or seven options.
I would actually say that they're relatively similar. And the more you look into the Lisa, the more similarities you'll find.
It's obvious that they're related, as I mentioned, they came from the same company, at almost the same time, and many of the same developers worked on them, but they are absolutely different platforms.
I think it's important to highlight the differences because they go into showing why the LISA cost at least four times what a Mac did.
I was writing partly in response to this, which seems to imply that we should judge the LISA, which was an entirely separate computer platform, based on things we know about the Macintosh.I see the Lisa in the category of a 128k. It's pretty much useless today, underpowered, etc,
Especially:
Which, 1)It's not like a IIfx, which is uncommon and expensive, but super useful.
The Mac IIfx was built six years after the LISA and original Macintosh. It *(and everything around it in 1989/1990/1991) is the result of the fact that the LISA got canned and the Mac grew to fill the role the LISA was originally intended for, with the Mac originally meant to be an information appliance kind of thing.
2)
The Mac IIfx isn't really useful by modern standards. Modern standards, or even 1990's standards, is arguably not how we should judge the LISA.
(but, I understand what this statement means, in that it's easier to deal with and for them to do things using a IIfx, using knowledge and infrastructure available in 2019.)
3)
From what I've seen, the Mac IIfx isn't really rare, in comparison with the LISA. Perhaps compared with the Classic or the LC. In that context, we can agree that the IIfx is rare compared to, say, the Power Macintosh G5, but only because the G5 sold for three years into a much larger overall market with a simplified product line where it was one of essentially six or seven options.
Will they even run 7.1? I'll admit, I'd personally want some newer hardware with some more conveniences (SCSI, the newer serial port, ADB) and perhaps a higher RAM ceiling. Long term, my LC520 is destined to be my 7.1 one machine, along with, perhaps my PB180, given that I have the PB1400 to run 7.6.1 now.I would like a Lisa, but only as a converted Mac XL with the square pixel upgrade. With the right upgrades, it would make a very nice System 7.1 machine.
Just curious, and I can only claim about 5-10 minutes of screen time on one myself, but have you had an opportunity to use and/or be shown a real LISA? It's an absolute treat. I would absolutely agree that it would be a shame to convert one that's still a LISA into a Mac XL.I have no doubt this is considered heresy by the Lisa fanatics.
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