Released in August 1995 along with the new plastic desktop Power Macintoshes (the 7200 and 7500,) along with the 8500, my AppleVision 1710AV has a manufacture date of December 1995.
Found in the 'free' section of Craigslist, this would have ended up in a landfill had I not liberated it. This makes it (by 68kMLA rules) a "true" liberation. The owner thinks he may have some similar-age 'vintage computer' gear in his garage that he's willing to give me, as well.
One thing I didn't know before is that (in spite of what Everymac says,) it supports 1600x1200 resolution at 60 Hz. This is insane. This gives it a pixel density of 125 pixels per inch (I have measured the viewable area of mine at 16.0 inches.) Only the "HD" 1920x1200 17" MacBook Pro has a higher dpi. (Well, and the iPhone/iPod touch, if you count them as "OS X Computers".) The automatic color calibration is a nice feature. The only complaint I have with it is that when you change resolutions, it doesn't save your screen geometry settings. So switching from 1280x960 to 1600x1200 and back (16x12 is just too small in the OS 9,) means I have to re-adjust the geometry.
Found in the 'free' section of Craigslist, this would have ended up in a landfill had I not liberated it. This makes it (by 68kMLA rules) a "true" liberation. The owner thinks he may have some similar-age 'vintage computer' gear in his garage that he's willing to give me, as well.
One thing I didn't know before is that (in spite of what Everymac says,) it supports 1600x1200 resolution at 60 Hz. This is insane. This gives it a pixel density of 125 pixels per inch (I have measured the viewable area of mine at 16.0 inches.) Only the "HD" 1920x1200 17" MacBook Pro has a higher dpi. (Well, and the iPhone/iPod touch, if you count them as "OS X Computers".) The automatic color calibration is a nice feature. The only complaint I have with it is that when you change resolutions, it doesn't save your screen geometry settings. So switching from 1280x960 to 1600x1200 and back (16x12 is just too small in the OS 9,) means I have to re-adjust the geometry.

