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Apple Macintosh SE/30

The Macintosh SE/30 is a personal computer that was designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Computer, Inc. from 1989 until 1991. It was the fastest and most expandable of the original black-and-white compact Macintosh series.

The SE/30 is essentially a Macintosh IIx in the same case as the Macintosh SE, with a black-and-white monitor and a single PDS slot (rather than the NuBus slots of the IIx) which supported third-party accelerators, network cards, or a display adapter. Although officially only able to support 8 MiB, the SE/30 could expand up to 128 MiB of RAM, and included a 40 or 80 MB hard drive. It was also the first compact Mac to include a 1.44 MB high density floppy disk drive as standard (late versions of the SE had one, but earlier versions did not). Conversion sets were sold to convert a regular SE to a SE/30. The SE would then have the exact same specs as an SE/30, with the difference only in the floppy drive if the SE had a 800k drive. The set included a new front to replace the original SE front with that of an SE/30.

Apple had indicated the presence of a 68030 processor by adding the letter "x" to a model's name, but when the Macintosh SE was updated to the 68030, this posed an awkward problem, as Apple was not willing to name their new computer the "Macintosh SEx". Thus, "SE/30" was the name chosen. Internally, code names like Green Jade and Fafnir were used

Manufacturer: Apple
Date: 1989

Magazines RELATED to Apple Macintosh SE/30 in our Library

Item Manufacturer Date
Personal Computer World - February 1989 01-02-1989

Other Systems Related To Apple Macintosh SE/30:

Item Manufacturer Date
Apple Power Macintosh G3 300 Apple Unknown
Apple Macintosh PowerBook 165C Apple Unknown
Apple Newton MessagePad 110 Apple Unknown
Apple II Apple 5th June 1977
Apple II Plus Apple 1978
Apple II Europlus Apple 1978
Apple III Apple June 1980
Apple Lisa 2/10 Apple January 1983
Apple IIe Apple January 1983
Apple IIc Apple April 1984
Apple Macintosh 512k Apple 9th October 1984
Apple Macintosh Plus Apple 10th January 1986
Apple II GS "Woz" edition Apple 15th September 1986
Apple II GS Apple 15th September 1986
Apple IIe Platinum Apple January 1987
Apple Macintosh SE Apple March 1987
Apple Macintosh IIcx Apple 7th March 1989
Apple Macintosh Portable Apple 1st September 1989
Apple Mac IIfx Apple 19th March 1990
Apple Macintosh LC Apple 15th October 1990
Apple Macintosh Classic Apple 15th October 1990
Apple Macintosh IIsi Apple 15th October 1990
Apple Mac LCII Apple 1st January 1992
Apple Macintosh Quadra 950 Apple 18th May 1992
Apple Macintosh Performa 200 Apple 14th September 1992
Apple Macintosh PowerBook 160 Apple October 1992
Apple Macintosh PowerBook 180 Apple 19th October 1992
Apple Mac LCIII Apple 10th February 1993
Apple Macintosh Color Classic Apple 10th February 1993
Apple Macintosh PowerBook 180C Apple June 1993
Apple Newton MessagePad Apple 3rd August 1993
Apple Macintosh LC475 Apple 21st October 1993
Apple Macintosh Quadra 650 Apple 21st October 1993
Apple Macintosh Performa 450 Apple 4th December 1993
Apple Power Macintosh 7100/66 Apple March 1994
Apple Power Macintosh 6100/60 Apple 3rd January 1995
Apple Macintosh Performa 5200CD Apple 3rd April 1995
Apple Macintosh Performa 5400/180 Apple February 1996
Apple Macintosh Performa 6400/200 Apple 7th August 1996
Apple Macintosh Performa 5500/225 Apple 17th February 1997
Apple eMate Apple 7th March 1997
Apple Newton MessagePad 2000 Apple 21st March 1997
Apple iMac G3 (Tray Loading) Apple 15th August 1998
Apple iMac G3 DV (Slot Loading) Apple 15th August 1998
Apple Power Macintosh G4 400 Apple 31st August 1999
Apple Macintosh G4 Cube (M7886) Apple July 2000
Apple iMac G3/500 Apple 22nd February 2001
Apple iMac G4 Apple 2002

This exhibit has a reference ID of CH2052. Please quote this reference ID in any communication with the Centre for Computing History.

 

Apple Macintosh SE/30

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