Anyone that has grown up going to school between the mid '80s and mid '90s no doubt knows what at least one kind of Apple II computer can and can't do. It always seemed that every classroom had one of these in the corner.
@HalonProductions Yes you must have a program disk to start using it. If I had it connected to the internet with the geoport it would boot to a network via the internet on a //e. Since this one was from a school, it connected to the network before loading a disk.
If you want the network card still in, I would put it in slot 1,2, or 4, or 5. Here's the allocation of the slots typically: 1 - Printer 2 - Modem / Communications / Serial 3 - 80 Column / 128K Ram Expansion 4 - Mouse Card 5 - 3.5" Drive / Hard Drive 6 - 5.25" Drive 7 - 3.5 Drive / Hard Drive / Other
I want to get one of these monitors and hook my PS2 up to it and some speakers and play GTA or Bully on it. this monitor uses standard Composite video which the PS2 can provide. I saw one of these monitors hooked to a camcorder at the museum of science in boston.
Actually that's incorrect. All of the Apple II computers have integer BASIC in ROM. You can press ctrl+resest to by-pass any cards that try to 'boot' the machine. Alternatively, you could remove such cards.
Yep. Hooked my IIe up to my 32" TV and it worked really well.
Heck yea! I remember when I used that back in elementary school!
Anyone that has grown up going to school between the mid '80s and mid '90s no doubt knows what at least one kind of Apple II computer can and can't do. It always seemed that every classroom had one of these in the corner.
@HalonProductions Yes you must have a program disk to start using it. If I had it connected to the internet with the geoport it would boot to a network via the internet on a //e. Since this one was from a school, it connected to the network before loading a disk.
If you want the network card still in, I would put it in slot 1,2, or 4, or 5.
Here's the allocation of the slots typically:
1 - Printer
2 - Modem / Communications / Serial
3 - 80 Column / 128K Ram Expansion
4 - Mouse Card
5 - 3.5" Drive / Hard Drive
6 - 5.25" Drive
7 - 3.5 Drive / Hard Drive / Other
Nice, I have one with the black and green monitor.
$2 wow! That's the biggest bargain ever! I got a PS1 for $5, but $2 for a working //e, amazing!
That's a ridiculously good deal. A super serial card alone is going for as much as $50 on ebay.
It sure is. Back then computers were built to last.
I want to get one of these monitors and hook my PS2 up to it and some speakers and play GTA or Bully on it. this monitor uses standard Composite video which the PS2 can provide. I saw one of these monitors hooked to a camcorder at the museum of science in boston.
@jrmcferren Interesting. I'll look into it. Maybe I'll post a video of the results. Thanks.
Actually that's incorrect. All of the Apple II computers have integer BASIC in ROM. You can press ctrl+resest to by-pass any cards that try to 'boot' the machine. Alternatively, you could remove such cards.
2$ for all of that? Thats A Great deal!
this was the macbook pro with retina display 15-inch in 1985 :)
@coolcatevan9 Incredible deal indeed.
Help setting cablle apple iie??
@CaptainPoovabladoo You know it!
where can i get one of these cheap? i tried ebay :P
i NEED a Macintosh 128k
holy shit.... thats old /
it almost sounds like charlie brown on the phone
ok hey are u selling any computers
i am only a kid and i know about the macintosh 128k
i am only 8 and mine came with 2 disk drives
bro can i open facebook from there if i can i'll buy it for $2 :)
i am 4 foot 8
u arnt 8 becuz ur voice has craked and i can see ur reflecttion