Together with MacPaint, it was one of the two original killer applications that established the popularity of the Graphical User Interface GUI.
MacWrite is a What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get WYSIWYG word processor for the first Apple Macintosh systems in 1984.
Mouse: Mechanical tracking, optical shaft encoding 3.54 pilse per mm (90 pulse per inch)Ĭlock/calendar: CMOS custom chip with 4.5 volt user-replaceable battery backup. Keyboard: 58 key, 2-key rollover, software mapped Input: Line voltage 105 to 125 volts AC, RMS Frequency 50 to 60 Hz Power 60 watts Sound generator: 4-voice sound with 8-bit digital-analog conversion 22 KHz sample rate
#MACINTOSH 1985 MAC DRAW MAC PAINT SERIAL#
Interfaces: Synchronous serial keyboard bus 2 RS232/RS422 serial ports, 230.4K baud, Mouse interface, External disk Screen: 9-inch diagonal, high resolution 512-pixel by 342-pixel bit-mapped display Processor: Motorola MC68000, 32-bit architecture. The Appendix on Macintosh Specifications: The system section includes Using the Finder: Mouse Techniques, Handling Windows, Managing Documents, Managing Disks. Includes a comprehensive manual to help the new user to learn about the revolutionary Macintosh and its system and application software. Macintosh package including: System MacWrite MacPaint for the Apple Macintosh Plus, usually provided with the computer. Macintosh System MacWrite MacPaint Home > Browse Our Collection > Software > Apple Software > Macintosh System MacWrite MacPaint