The Apple Core

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

Mac history snapshot: July, 1989

By | July 27, 2009, 8:33pm PDT

Summary: A look at the clippings file from 20 years ago in July tells of a public speech by Jean-Louis Gassee, then president of what was called the Apple Products division, and a field trip to the first multimedia exposition. While the topics may stay the same, the details, quantities and costs are eye-popping.

A look at the clippings file from 20 years ago in July tells of a public speech by Jean-Louis Gassee, then president of what was called the Apple Products division, and a field trip to the first multimedia exposition. While the topics may stay the same, the details, quantities and costs are eye-popping.

Gassee came to a meeting of the Berkeley Macintosh User Group (BMUG) that July in 1989, and gave a speech about various topics including networking, Mac performance and programming tools. He then took part in a Q&A session that of course featured more Qs than As (not so much different than today).

Note that in those days, there was no consumer Internet, no browsers and no blogs. People got their information in person; these weekly meetings on the U.C. Berkeley campus were attended by several hundred members, even in the summer and the meeting with Gassee was packed with some 450 visitors.

Here is a bit of what I wrote about Gassee and the meeting in my column in MicroTimes, a free monthly magazine that was handed out in computer stores and repair shops in California.

Gassee is a magnificent Mac Moliere, directing and dominating a crowd. To him, the meeting is a diplomatic, rhetorical exercise. If a subject was too tough, critical, or on an issue that Jean-Louis obviously could not speak about (holy non-disclosure Byteman!), we took it on the chin.

He would glare at a poor questioning sap, with a professorial why-are-you-wasting-all-our-time expression. Sometimes we’d get a real sour-dough French bread shrug and a you-call-this-a-question? sneer. “I don’t know what you’re talking about?” Fine, we’ll buy it — just leave our egos intact!

Often this nondisclosure was followed by the Apple standard, don’t-worry, be-happy, we’re-hard-at-work-on-it, “stick with us,” line. The guy is in charge of the shop. If anyone expected anything more than what was offered, they were being naive.

Gassee left Apple in 1990 and formed Be Inc., that made a workstation with BeOS, which was in contention to be the successor to the Mac OS (until Steve Jobs was chosen to bring in the NeXT team). He then was the Chairman of PalmSource. Gassee now appears to be an executive with a venture capital firm.

Hot on the mind of members in 1989 was the amount of memory that would be needed to run the forthcoming version of the Mac OS, System 7.0. This would be a very significant break in technology from the past.

Some folks said the it would require 2MB of RAM and others 4MB — this is megabytes not GB, gigabytes, as we have today. Memory was very expensive, and computers didn’t feature a standard upgrade slot for RAM. Upgrades for several megabytes could cost $750 or more.

From a dark corner of the hall, a voice said, “It runs under one Mbyte of RAM — because I’ve done it.” Obviously, one of the developer regulars who wasn’t worried about his NDA sitting in the shadows.

Memory concerns are always with us. With Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard coming out in the next quarter, the transition to 64-bit computing continues. It’s mostly seamless for users, but we don’t really know where the sweet spot of cost and performance will be for memory in Snow Leopard. More is almost always better.

Gassee was harangued about quality. In 1989, Apple was not known for its quality assurance and there was no Apple Care, Apple Guru bars or Apple stores. The out-of-the-box warranty was then only 90 days!

Gassee danced around Apple’s warranty policies, claiming that the company hopes to improve quality, so that you’ll never need to visit the repair shop. Everyone feels that the current 90 days parts and labor policy is way underpowered. There are signs that a coverage change has already been decided. MacWorld has started a warranty watch, until the Apple Ayatollahs release the extended guarantee.

That month there was also coverage of cross-platform hypertext and multimedia platforms in the column. It came from a visit to an expo in San Francisco for the growing market for combining various kinds of content with a graphical, database-driven front end.

Apple HyperCard was one of the pioneer apps in this field. The hot thing was to combine video along with still images and text. Remember: no Internet back then. The content vehicle was CD-ROM.

One of the products described was a “multimedia workstation,” which was called the MocKingbird II. Read the description,  note the specs and then guess the cost.

The MocKingbird II combines a Mac IIx with 8 Mbytes of RAM, two big monitors, a 40 Mbyte Bernoulli cartridge drive, MacRecorder software, an Apple Scanner, an uninterruptible power supply and a table to hold it all. The show model included many types of audio and video devices.

The hardware is combined with proprietary software, CreationStation, that authors multimedia presentations, training materials and simulations, as well as database and statistical functions. A package of templates for heavy duty industrial training are thrown into the bundle. The shell software, Forthought, is written in the Forth language. The scripts that controlled the buttons on the screen were in itsy-bitsy type under each object — it looked funky.

So, how much was all this worth in 1989? $50,000. Yikes!

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Topics

David Morgenstern has covered the Mac market and other technology segments for 20 years.

Disclosure

David Morgenstern

Freelance journalist/blogger David Morgenstern has nothing to disclose.

Biography

David Morgenstern

David Morgenstern has covered the Mac market and other technology segments for 20 years. In the recent past, he founded Ziff-Davis' Storage Supersite, served as news editor for Ziff Davis Internet and held several executive editorial positions at eWEEK. In the 1990s, David was editor of Ziff Davis' award-winning MacWEEK news publication as well as its successor title, eMediaWEEKly, which focused on multiplatform professional content creation. His byline can be found online and in print publications including CreativePro.com, Peachpit Press' Mac Bible and Popular Photography.

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those were the days!
rahbm Updated - 4th Aug 2009
I remember being introduced to PageMaker on a Mac in 1986 and being
amazed at what could be done on such a small platform.

It also intrigued me how so many people used Word for input to PM
when a simple text editor would have done just as well, if not better.
Sort of like using a combine harvester to pick up a tennis ball.

Nothing much has changed - people still pay through the nose for MS
Office to write simple letters and type up lists, when there are dozens of
cheaper and simpler alternatives.
0 Votes
+ -
Morgenstern you are a romantic
markbn 27th Jul 2009
There is no other reason to write this piece of ... blog post
0 Votes
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I must be too
Richard Flude 27th Jul 2009
Took me back:-)
0 Votes
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Contributr
More nostalgic, than romantic ...
davidmorgenstern 27th Jul 2009
Say hey! I happened to be looking at an old BMUG newsletter (these were book-sized publications) and then I checked out the current month. It brought back memories.

Technology executives were characters in those days, which is another way of saying that there was a lot of leather down in Cupertino.

Gassee was a character, in a good way, smart and clever and with a wry humor.
0 Votes
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Ah, the memories!
John Howes 28th Jul 2009
Those big BMUG meetings were great. I loved the
mention of HyperCard. One of my clients wants to retire
her SE and get all of her info out of HyperCard! She has
kept the machine all these years just for HyperCard.

Keep writing the nostalgia pieces. It's good to remember
how far we have come.
0 Votes
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RE: Mac history snapshot: July, 1989
dropmeoff 27th Jul 2009
The last time I used a Mac was in college in 1989. Those were good times. A black and white screen and that special "Mac font".
But now, I've been properly assimilated into the Microsoft Borg. Ah, to be young and Mac.
0 Votes
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@ David Morgenstern
Axsimulate 28th Jul 2009
"no Internet back then. The content vehicle was CD-ROM."

Back in 1989 the content vehicle was not CD-ROMs, it was
floppy disks. It wasn't until the early 90's did the CD-ROM
start to catch on. I remember in those days it was very difficult for developers to even fill a 650 MB disk.
0 Votes
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RE: Mac history snapshot: July, 1989
Capt_Sparky 28th Jul 2009
Last time I used/owned a Mac was the Apple MacIntosh (1984. That puppy was the hottest thing since sliced bread.
0 Votes
+ -
RE: Mac history snapshot: July, 1989
dheady@... 28th Jul 2009
I remember having a conversation with a friend who was a
professional photographer about that time. Digital
photography was in its infancy, but he was all excited
about it. He and I could both see the possibilities, yet I
brought him down to earth with the simple math on how
big 'professional' photographs would be and how, based
upon current RAM cost and even the fact that the most you
could install on a Mac (or any PC) was about 8MB, hardly
enough memory for a professional quality 8 x 10 glossy.
Wasn't too long before RAM and cost caught up to the task
though. Does Kodak still make film?
0 Votes
+ -
$26,000 (New Zealand dollars) is what a MacPlus and a
LaserWriter Plus cost me in May 1986. Just before my purchase
my employer (who didn't have to pay GST, whereas I did) had
spent $50,000 on two CPT word processing work stations and a
daisy wheel printer (with yukky typewriter-like output). The
RAM on the word processor was something like a quarter of the
MacPlus's. We had to reboot just to use the hopelessly
inadequate spellchecking feature.To add insult to injury, I was
using the Mac almost out of the box but had to take a week-
long course to learn how to work the CPT, and even then I'd
keep getting stuck because it was so hard to remember what I
had to do to, for example, print a document. The only advantage
the CPT had was its ability to create boxed tables, collapse
tables (and maybe a few other word processing features that I
can no longer remember) whereas Word version 1 was fit only
for bashing out words to later import into PageMaker.
0 Votes
+ -
those were the days!
rahbm Updated - 4th Aug 2009
I remember being introduced to PageMaker on a Mac in 1986 and being
amazed at what could be done on such a small platform.

It also intrigued me how so many people used Word for input to PM
when a simple text editor would have done just as well, if not better.
Sort of like using a combine harvester to pick up a tennis ball.

Nothing much has changed - people still pay through the nose for MS
Office to write simple letters and type up lists, when there are dozens of
cheaper and simpler alternatives.

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