Power Macintosh 7600

The Power Macintosh 7600 is a personal computer designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Computer, Inc. from April 1996 to November 1997. It is identical to the Power Macintosh 7500, but with a PowerPC 604 CPU. Three models were available with 120 MHz, 132 MHz and 200 MHz processors. Like the 7500, it includes advanced Audio-Video ports including RCA audio in and out, S-Video in, composite video in and standard Apple video ports. The 7600 features the easy-access "outrigger" desktop case first introduced with the Power Macintosh 7500. It was eventually replaced by the Power Macintosh 7300, one of the very few times that Apple updated a computer but gave it a lower model number - the reason is that the 7300 was a joint replacement for the 7600 and the Power Macintosh 7200.

Power Macintosh 7600
A Power Macintosh 7600/120
DeveloperApple Computer, Inc.
Product familyPower Macintosh
Release dateApril 22, 1996 (1996-04-22)
Introductory priceUS$2,700 (equivalent to $4,401 in 2019)
DiscontinuedNovember 17, 1997 (1997-11-17)
Operating systemSystem 7.5.3 - Mac OS 9.1
CPUPowerPC 604 @ 120, 132 and 200 MHz
Memory16 MiB, expandable to 1 GiB (70 ns 168 pin DIMM)
PredecessorPower Macintosh 7500
SuccessorPower Macintosh 7300

Models

Introduced April 22, 1996:

  • Power Macintosh 7600/120[1]

Introduced August 3, 1996:

  • Power Macintosh 7600/132[2]

Introduced February 2, 1997:

  • Power Macintosh 7600/200:[3] Sold in Japan only.[4]

Timeline of Power Macintosh models

Power Macintosh G3Power Macintosh G3Power Macintosh 8600Power Macintosh 7300Power Macintosh 9600Power Macintosh 8500Power Macintosh 7600Power Macintosh 7200Power Macintosh 9500Power Macintosh 8100Power Macintosh 7500Power Macintosh 7100Power Macintosh 6400Power Macintosh G3Power Macintosh 5500Power Macintosh 5400Power Macintosh 6500Power Macintosh 6200Power Macintosh 6100Power Macintosh 5260Power Macintosh 4400
gollark: Perhaps the characteristics of the medium cause changes to the sound. Different frequencies being louder/quieter than they should be, sort of thing.
gollark: Anyway, the upshot of this is that what3words *literal* apioform.
gollark: They *claim* that the algorithm is designed to make it so that possible misspellings go to very different locations, but this has been demonstrated to be incorrect in some cases.
gollark: Oh, and their wordlist is bad and contains various easily confusable words.
gollark: ~~I believe their official thing also needs an internet connection to work, even though it could simply not do so.~~ It does not, actually.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.