Subject: _Infinite Loop_ by Michael S. Malone From: ChemSleuth@earthlink.net (Dennis Doms) Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 Date: Sat, 22 May 1999 11:21:13 GMT I thought some might like this quote from the book: --- start quote For them, the first generation of true Apple II loyalists, the Apple II line was allowed a swan song. And it was a doozy: the 1986 Apple IIGS (for "graphics and sound"), perhaps the high-water mark of the computer maker's art and, in terms of quality, price, and performance, the best computer Apple ever built. It featured an elegant box filled with the simplest componentry imaginable -- all superfluity having been winnowed out over the previous nine years -- a color display and stereo sound. It was a computer designed from the start to the finish to appeal to schools, which needed a reliable computer of considerable power at a reasonable price... yet so inexensive to build that it was like a license to print money. Plus the IIGS actually outperformed the Macintosh on the Mac's own turf. It was the II group's last hurrah. --- end quote An interesting book. It makes some analyses that I'm not sure I agree with in context (for example, asserting a lack of technical expertise in Apple's highest level decision-making management as being a unique situation for a technology company at the time, but I think I remember Adam Osborne made the same complaint about Osborne Computer in _Hypergrowth_) but there's some stories here that sound all too familiar.