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To: WVKayaker

33 posted on 07/11/2009 10:12:33 PM PDT by Richard Kimball (We're all criminals. They just haven't figured out what some of us have done yet.)
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To: Richard Kimball

lolz

Those were the days.


35 posted on 07/11/2009 10:20:04 PM PDT by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: Richard Kimball
I bought a 10 MEGABYTE Hyperdrive (GCC) for my first Mac in 1984. It was an internal drive which Apple didn't offer. I paid $2200 +/- installed!

One report I have faith in puts the backlog of orders for 512K upgrades at over 20,000, and further states that the Fat Mac now accounts for 30% of total Mac sales. Judging from the problems I had obtaining a Fat Mac under Apple's editorial program, I can believe it (they get my firstborn son, but it is still a great deal). Once you sit in front of a Fat Mac you're spoiled for life. (For more on that topic, see the Fat Mac review elsewhere in this issue.) Packaged with hard disk, some good 512K software, a set of leather driving gloves, and a case of Pepsi, it will be a tough offer to refuse.

Macintosh sales in general continue to increase, despite the overall industry slump. According to Info World, Apple is now gearing its automated facilities to move production to over 100,000 units a month. According to Time the Mac logged the most successful introduction ever of a new micro. ...

...General Computer unveiled HyperDrive, a compact 10-meg hard disk drive that neatly fits the Macintosh internally. Because the HyperDrive interface logic board is directly connected to the Mac motherboard, both serial ports remain free for modem and printer use--a great convenience. Macs equipped with the unit can boot from either hard disk or floppy.

The system software provided with HyperDriver allows the hard disk to divide into many "virtual disks" which automatically resize themselves to accommodate the user's files. As they interface in parallel, as hard disks ought to, the new units can also transfer data seven times faster than Macs with external hard disk drives.

HyperDRive is available in two models: one including Fat Mac memory expansion to 512K RAM ($2795), and one without memory expansion ($2195). This product will excite many Mac owners, and I hope to give you a definitive hands-on review of this one very soon. Micro-Design Hard Disk -AtariNews


52 posted on 07/12/2009 3:32:56 AM PDT by WVKayaker (Even stumbling blocks can be used for re-construction - Ernst R. Hauschka)
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To: Richard Kimball

“$3398 10MB Hard Drive”

I love that. I remember one MacWorld cover that proclaimed, “Massive Hard Drives Coming,” which was touting 100MB drives. :-)


91 posted on 07/13/2009 10:14:59 AM PDT by Leonard210 (Tagline? We don't need no stinkin' tagline.)
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