Historia de Apple Macintosh

 

Apple I

CPU: MOS Technology 6502
CPU Speed: 1 MHz
FPU: none
Bus Speed: 1 MHz
Data Path: 8 bit
Onboard RAM: 8 kB
Maximum RAM: 32 kB
Video
VRAM: 1 kB
Max Resolution: 60.05 Hz, 40x24 char
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Power: 58 Watts
Introduced: April 1976
Terminated: 1977
The Apple I was Steven Wozniak's first contribution to the personal computer field. It was designed over a period of years, and was only built in printed circuit-board form when Steve Jobs insisted it could be sold. It debuted in April 1976 at the Homebrew Computer Club in Palo Alto, but few took it seriously. The Apple I was based on the MOStek 6502 chip, whereas most other "kit" computers were built from the Intel 8080. The Apple I was sold through several small retailers, and included only the circuit board. A tape-interface was sold separately, but you had to build the case. The Apple I's initial cost was $666.66

 

Apple II, II+

CPU: MOS Technology 6502
CPU Speed: 1 MHz
FPU: none
Bus Speed: 1 MHz
Data Path: 8 bit
ROM: 12 kB
RAM slots: 1st expansion slot can be used
Expansion Slots: 8 proprietary
Video
Max Resolution:
6 color at 280x192, 4-bit color at 40x48
Storage
Floppy Drive: optional
Input/Output
Serial: optional expansion card
Speaker: mono
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Introduced: 1977
Terminated: 1980
Built in 1977, the Apple ][ was based on Wozniak's Apple I design, but with several additions. The first was the design of a plastic case--a rarity at the time--which was painted beige. The second was the ability to display color graphics--a holy grail in the industry. The Apple ][ also included a larger ROM, more expandable RAM (4K to start), and 8 expansion slots. It had integer BASIC hard-coded on the ROM for easier programming, and included two game paddles and a demo cassette for $1,298. In early 1978 Apple also released a disk drive for the machine, one of the most inexpensive available. The Apple ][ remained on the Apple product list until 1980. It was also repackaged in a black case and sold to educational markets by Bell & Howell.

 

Apple III & III+
CPU: SynerTek 6502A
CPU Speed: 2 MHz
FPU: none
Bus Speed: 2 MHz
Data Path: 8 bit
ROM: 4 kB
Onboard RAM: 128 kB (256 kB in revised and IIIplus)
Maximum RAM: 256 kB
Expansion Slots: 4 proprietary (compatible w/ Apple II)
Video
Max Resolution: 80x24 text, 1 bit (B&W) 590x192
Storage
Floppy Drive: built-in Shugart 143 kB 5.25"
Input/Output
Serial: optional expansion card
Speaker: mono
Miscellaneous
Codename: Sara
Introduced: June 1980
Terminated: 1985
The Apple /// was announced in June 1980. It contained a Synertek 8-bit 6502A processor which could run at speeds up to 2 MHz. It contained 128K of RAM and a 4K ROM. It could run most Apple II programs through emulation, and came with a sophisticated new operating system. It was the first Apple to include a built-in 5.25" disk drive, and hi-res graphics built-in to the motherboard. It was designed to be Apple's business offering, but sold very poorly. It sold initially for between $4,340 and $7,800, depending on the configuration. The original Apple III had many problems, and was replaced by a revised model in mid 1981, which featured 256K RAM, updated system software, and a lower price ($3495). A 5 MB external hard disk was also made available. The Apple /// sold very poorly and was replaced by the Apple ///+ ($2995) in Late 1983. The Apple ///+ was discontinued in 1985.

 

Lisa/Lisa 2/Mac XL
CPU: Motorola MC68000
CPU Speed: 5 MHz
FPU: none
Bus Speed: 5 MHz
Data Path: 16 bit
ROM: 16 kB of diagnostic and bootstrap code present
Expansion Slots: 3 Proprietary
Video
Monitor: 12" 720 x 364 built-in (B/W, rectangular pixels)
Storage
Hard Drive: 5 MB external (10 MB in some configurations of Lisa 2/MacXL)
Floppy Drive: two 871 kB 5.25" (one 400 kB 3.5" in Lisa2)
Input/Output
Serial: 2 RS-232
Audio Out: Continuously Variable Slope Demodulator (CVSD)
Speaker: mono
Miscellaneous
Codename: Lisa
Gestalt ID: 2
Power: 150 Watts
Dimensions: 15.2" H x 18.7" W x 13.8" D
Weight: 48 lbs.
Maximum OS: LisaOS/MacWorks
Minimum OS: LisaOS
Introduced: January 1983
Terminated: August 1986
Notes
The Lisa included a single parallel port, which was dropped in the Lisa 2 and MacXL. The Lisa 2 and MacXL used 2 400 kB Sony 3.5" floppy drives, and both had 10 MB hard drives. An optional screen upgrade was available which allowed the Mac XL to use square pixels, for better Mac OS emulation. Screen resolution after this upgrade was 608x431.
Named for one of its designer's daughters, the Lisa (pictured below left) was supposed to be the Next Big Thing. It was the first personal computer to use a Graphical User Interface. Aimed mainly at large businesses, Apple said the Lisa would increase productivity by making computers easier to work with. The Lisa had a Motorola 68000 Processor running at 5 MHz, 1 MB of RAM two 5.25" 871 kB floppy drives, an external 5 MB hard drive, and a built in 12" 720 x 360 monochrome monitor. At $9,995 it was a plunge few businesses were willing to take. When the Macintosh came out in 1984 for significantly less money, it eroded the Lisa's credibility further. Realizing this, Apple released the Lisa 2 (pictured above right) at the same time as the Mac. The Lisa 2 cost half as much as the original, replaced the two 5.25" drives with a single 400 kB 3.5" drive, and offered configurations with up to 2 MB of RAM, and a 10 MB hard drive. In January 1985, the Lisa 2/10 was renamed the Macintosh XL, and outfitted with MacWorks, an emulator that allowed the Lisa to run the Mac OS. The XL was discontinued later that year.

 

Macintosh SE/30
CPU: Motorola MC68030
CPU Speed: 16 MHz
FPU: 68882
Bus Speed: 16 MHz
Data Path: 32 bit (not 32 bit clean)
ROM: 256 kB
RAM Type: 30 pin SIMM
Minimum RAM Speed: 120 ns
Onboard RAM: 0 MB
RAM slots: 8
Maximum RAM: 32 MB
Level 1 Cache: 0.5 kB
Expansion Slots: 1 SE/30 PDS
Video
Monitor: 9" built-in
Max Resolution: 1 bit 512x342
Storage
Hard Drive: 40-80 MB
Floppy Drive: 1.4 MB SuperDrive
Input/Output
ADB: 2
Serial: 2
SCSI: DB-25
Audio Out: stereo 8 bit mini
Speaker: mono
Miscellaneous
Codename: Green Jade, Fafnir
Gestalt ID: 9
Power: 75 Watts
Dimensions: 13.6" H x 9.6" W x 10.9" D
Weight: 19.5 lbs.
Maximum OS: 7.5.5
Minimum OS: 6.0.3
Introduced: January 1989
Terminated: October 1990
Released in January of 1989, The SE/30 was essentially a IIx inside an SE case. The second floppy feature of the SE was no longer offered in the SE/30, in favor of a built-in hard drive. The machine sold for $4,369.

 

Macintosh Centris 650
CPU: Motorola MC68040
CPU Speed: 25 MHz
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 25 MHz
Data Path: 32 bit
ROM: 1 MB
RAM Type: 72 pin SIMM
Minimum RAM Speed: 80 ns
Onboard RAM: 4/8 MB (see notes)
RAM slots: 4
Maximum RAM: 132/136 MB (see notes)
Level 1 Cache: 8 kB
Expansion Slots: 3 NuBus, 1 PDS
Video
VRAM: 512 kB - 1 MB (two sockets)
Max Resolution: 1152x870
Video Out: DB-15
Storage
Hard Drive: 80-500 MB
Floppy Drive: 1.4 MB SuperDrive
Optical Drive: 2x CD-ROM
Input/Output
ADB: 1
Serial: 2
SCSI: DB-25
Audio Out: mono 8 bit mini
Audio In: stereo 8 bit mini
Speaker: mono
Microphone: mono
Networking
Ethernet: AAUI-15
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Gestalt ID: 30
Power: 230 Watts
Dimensions: 6" H x 13" W x 16.4" D
Weight: 25 lbs.
Maximum OS: 8.1
Minimum OS: 7.0.1
Introduced: February 1993
Terminated: October 1993
Notes
The Centris 650 received a silent RAM upgrade: later models included 8 MB of on board RAM, instead of the initial 4 MB. This increased the maximum RAM from 132 MB to 136 MB.
Introduced in February 1993, the Centris 650 was a faster, more expandable version of the Centris 610. It came in a IIvx-style case, and was powered by a 25 MHz 68040 processor. The Centris 650 sold for $2,700, and was replaced in October by the Quadra 650.

 

Power Macintosh 9600
CPU: PowerPC 604e
CPU Speed: 200/233/200x2/300/350 MHz
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 50 MHz
Data Path: 64 bit
ROM: 4 MB
RAM Type: 168 pin DIMM
Minimum RAM Speed: 70 ns
Onboard RAM: 0 MB
RAM slots: 12
Maximum RAM: 1536 MB
Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 32 kB instruction
Level 2 Cache: 512 kB DIMM
Expansion Slots: 6 PCI
Storage
Hard Drive: 4.0 GB 7200 RPM
Floppy Drive: 1.4 MB SuperDrive
Optical Drive: 12x CD-ROM
Input/Output
ADB: 1
Serial: 2
SCSI: DB-25
Audio Out: stereo 16 bit mini
Audio In: stereo 16 bit mini
Speaker: mono
Networking
Ethernet: AAUI-15, 10Base-T
Miscellaneous
Codename: Kansas
Gestalt ID: 67
Power: 390 Watts
Dimensions: 17.3" H x 9.7" W x 17.3" D
Weight: 35 lbs.
Maximum OS: 9.1
Minimum OS: 7.5.5
Introduced: February 1997
Terminated: Early 1998
Notes
The Minimum System Software for the 300 and 350 MHz models was 7.6.1. These models used a "Mach 5" 604e processor with a 1 MB inline level 2 cache, shipped with a 24x CD-ROM, and required 60 ns or faster RAM.
The flagship of what might be termed the third wave of Power Macs, the 9600 was announced in February 1997. It was packadged in an eye-pleasing new tower design, built to make its insides more easily accessable. It ran on 233, 200 or dual 200 MHz 604e's.
Although it looked different on the outside, the motherboard was basically the same design as that of the 9500. The 9600 was originally priced at $4,700 for the dual 200 MHz configuration, $4,200 for the single 233 MHz, and $3,700 for the single 200 MHz. In August, the 9600 was "speed bumped" with either a 300 or 350 MHz "Mach 5" chip, a new high speed variant on the 604e. The 350 MHz version barely shipped before Apple took it off the market, partially because of the small supply of 350 MHz chips, but mostly because their upcoming PPC 750-based "Gossomer" Macs (the PowerMac G3) would eclipse it both in performance and price.
The 350-MHz 9600 returned several months later to fill out the High-End market. While the G3 was in many cases faster, its motherboard had only three PCI slots and three RAM slots. With superior expandability, the 9600 was still the high-end choice for many.

 

iMac (Rev. C)
CPU: PowerPC 750
CPU Speed: 266 MHz
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 66 MHz
Data Path: 64 bit
ROM: 1 MB ROM + 3 MB toolbox ROM loaded into RAM
RAM Type: 144 pin SO-DIMM
Minimum RAM Speed: 100 MHz
Onboard RAM: 0 MB
RAM slots: 2
Maximum RAM: 256 MB
Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 32 kB instruction
Level 2 Cache: 512 kB backside, 1:2
Video
Monitor: 15"
VRAM: 6 MB SGRAM
Max Resolution: 24 bit 1024x768
Storage
Hard Drive: 6 GB
ATA Bus: EIDE
Optical Drive: 24x CD-ROM
Input/Output
USB: 2
Audio Out: stereo 16 bit mini
Audio In: stereo 16 bit mini
Speaker: stereo, SRS
Microphone: mono
Networking
Modem: 56 kbps
Ethernet: 10/100Base-T
Miscellaneous
Codename: Lifesavers
Gestalt ID: 406
Power: 80 Watts
Dimensions: 15.8" H x 15.2" W x 17.6" D
Weight: 40 lbs.
Maximum OS: 10.3.9
Minimum OS: 8.5
Introduced: January 1999
Terminated: April 1999
Announced in January 1999, the Rev. C iMac came in 5 dazzling new colors: Blueberry, Strawberry, Lime, Tangerine and Grape. Essentially a speed-bump of the original iMac, the Rev. C lacked both the mysterious "mezzanine" slot and the IRDA port, which lowered its price to $1199. The Rev. C was replaced just a few months later by the iMac Rev. D.

 

iBook SE
CPU: PowerPC 750
CPU Speed: 366 MHz
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 66 MHz
Data Path: 64 bit
ROM: 1 MB ROM + 3 MB toolbox ROM loaded into RAM
RAM Type: SO-DIMM
Minimum RAM Speed: 100 MHz
Onboard RAM: 32/64 MB
RAM slots: 1
Maximum RAM: 288/320 MB
Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 32 kB instruction
Level 2 Cache: 512 kB backside, 1:2
Video
Screen: 12.1" active matrix
Video Card/Chipset: ATI Rage Mobility (2x AGP)
VRAM: 4 MB
Max Resolution: 24 bit 800x600
Storage
Hard Drive: 3.2/6 GB
ATA Bus: EIDE
Optical Drive: 24x CD-ROM
Input/Output
USB: 1
Audio Out: stereo 16 bit mini
Speaker: mono
Networking
Modem: 56 kbps
Ethernet: 10/100Base-T
Airport: optional
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Gestalt ID: 406
Power: 45 Watts
Dimensions: 11.6" H x 13.5" W x 1.8" D
Weight: 6.6 lbs.
Maximum OS: 10.3.9
Minimum OS: 9.0.2
Introduced: February 2000
Terminated: September 2000
Announced in February 2000, The iBook SE was a "speed-bumped" iBook, with the graphite coloring of its The iMac DV SE and PowerMac G4 cousins. All other specs are the same as the iBook. It sold for $1799.

 

iMac (Flat Panel)
CPU: PowerPC 7450
CPU Speed: 700/800 MHz
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 100 MHz
Data Path: 64 bit
ROM: 1 MB ROM + 3 MB toolbox ROM loaded into RAM
RAM Type: PC133 SDRAM
Minimum RAM Speed: 133 MHz
Onboard RAM: 0 MB
RAM slots: 2
Maximum RAM: 1 GB
Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 32 kB instruction
Level 2 Cache: 256 kB on-chip, 1:1
Video
Screen: 15" LCD
Video Card/Chipset: NVidia GeForce2 MX
VRAM: 32 MB
Max Resolution: 24 bit 1024x768
Video Out: mini VGA, mirror only
Storage
Hard Drive: 20/40/60 GB
ATA Bus: ATA-66
Optical Drive: See Notes
Input/Output
USB: 3
Firewire: 2
Audio Out: stereo 16 bit mini, Pro Speaker
Speaker: mono
Microphone: mono
Networking
Modem: 56 kbps
Ethernet: 10/100Base-T
Airport: optional
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Gestalt ID: 406
Power: 130 Watts
Dimensions: 12.95" H x 15.1" W x 10.6" D
Weight: 21.3 lbs.
Maximum OS: 10.4.11
Minimum OS: 9.2.2
Introduced: January 2002
Terminated: January 2003
Notes
700 MHz models used a PPC 7441 processor, and shipped with either a 24x/8x/4x CD-RW or a 32x/12x/8x/8x CD-RW/DVD-ROM drive. The 800 MHz model shipped with a 24x/8x/4x/6x/2x/1x CD-RW/DVD-RW drive. All but the CD-RW model shipped with Apple Pro Speakers.
Announced in January 2002, the iMac (Flat Panel) was the first completely redesigned iMac since the original. Based around a 15-inch LCD screen, this iMac also brought both the G4 processor and the CD-RW/DVD-R "Super Drive" to the consumer space for the first time.
The iMac (Flat Panel) featured an entirely new case design, built around the idea of a screen that could rotate and change angles easily. The "desk lamp" design was mounted atop a semi-spherical base, 10.6 inches in diameter, which housed the rest of the computer. The machine had been developed over the course of two years, and was the culmination of Apple's move away from CRT displays. Steve Jobs proudly announced, when this new iMac was released, that "The CRT is officially dead."
The iMac (Flat Panel) shipped in three configurations. The low-end model, with a 700 MHz G4 Processor, 128 MB of RAM, a 40 GB ATA-66 hard drive and a CD-RW drive, was $1299. Another 700 MHz model, with 256 MB of RAM, a 40 GB hard drive, and a CD-RW/DVD-ROM "Combo Drive," was priced at $1499. Finally, the 800 MHz model, with 256 MB of RAM, a 60 GB hard drive, and the CD-RW/DVD-R "SuperDrive," was $1799. The middle and high-end model shipped with Apple Pro Speakers, and all models included a new White Pro Keyboard and Mouse. Various price cuts were offered over the next year, and all configurations were discontinued in January 2003.

 

iMac G5
CPU: PowerPC 970
CPU Speed: 1.6/1.8 GHz
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 533/600 MHz
Data Path: 64 bit
ROM: 1 MB ROM + 3 MB toolbox ROM loaded into RAM
RAM Type: PC3200 DDR
Minimum RAM Speed: 400 MHz
Onboard RAM: 0 MB
RAM slots: 2
Maximum RAM: 2 GB
Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 64 kB instruction
Level 2 Cache: 512 kB on-chip, 1:1
Video
Screen: 17/20" LCD
Video Card/Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce FX 5200 Ultra (8X AGP)
VRAM: 64 MB
Max Resolution: 24 bit 1440x900/1680x1050
Video Out: mini-VGA (mirror only)
Storage
Hard Drive: 80/160 GB 7200 RPM
ATA Bus: Serial-ATA
Optical Drive: 24x/24x/16x/8x CD-RW/DVD-ROM or 24x/16x/8x/8x/4x CD-RW/DVD-RW
Input/Output
USB: 3 2.0
Firewire: 2
Audio Out: stereo/optical 16 bit mini
Audio In: stereo 16 bit mini
Speaker: stereo
Microphone: mono
Networking
Modem: 56 kbps
Ethernet: 10/100Base-T
Airport Extreme: optional card
Bluetooth: internal support
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Gestalt ID: 406
Power: 180 Watts
Dimensions: 16.9" H x 16.8" W x 7.4" D
Weight: 18.5 lbs.
Maximum OS: 10.4.11
Minimum OS: 10.3.5
Introduced: August 2004
Terminated: May 2005
Notes
The 20" model had the following dimensions and weight: 18.6" H x 19.4" W x 7.4" D, 25.2 lbs.
Introduced on the last day of August 2004, the iMac G5 brought G5 muscle to Apple's consumer desktop line. Housed in a completely new enclosure reminiscent of Apple's Cinema Display line, the iMac G5 was a marvel of miniaturization. The case was only two inches thick, yet housed a machine considerably faster and more advanced than its G4-based predecessor.
In addition to a 64-bit G5 processor, the iMac G5 also included a much faster memory bus, better graphics for the low-end model, twice the hard drive space for the high-end model, and a new audio port which doubled as an optical digital audio output. The iMac G5 was initially available in three configurations: 17" LCD/1.6 GHz/80 GB hard drive/256 MB of RAM/Combo drive/$1299, 17" LCD/1.8 GHz/80 GB hard drive/256 MB of RAM/SuperDrive/$1499, and 20" LCD/1.8 GHz/160 GB hard drive/256 MB of RAM/SuperDrive/$1899.

 

Mac Pro
CPU: Intel Xeon 5100
CPU Speed: 2x2.6 GHz (dual-core)
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 1.33 GHz
Data Path: 64 bit
ROM: EFI
RAM Type: DDR2 FB-DIMM
Minimum RAM Speed: 667 MHz
Onboard RAM: 0 MB
RAM slots: 8
Maximum RAM: 16 GB
Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 32 kB instruction
Level 2 Cache: 4 MB (per processor) on-chip, 1:1
Expansion Slots: 3x 16-lane PCI Express
Video
Video Card/Chipset: Nvidia GeForce 7300GT (16-lane double-wide PCI Express slot)
VRAM: 256 MB
Max Resolution: all resolutions supported
Video Out: DVI (dual link)
Storage
Hard Drive: 250 GB 7200 RPM
ATA Bus: Serial-ATA
Optical Drive: 32x/24x/24x/16x/16x/6x CD-RW/DVD±RW/DVD+R DL
Input/Output
USB: 5 (2.0)
Firewire: 2
Firewire800: 2
Audio Out: 2x stereo 16 bit mini, Optical S/PDIF
Audio In: stereo 16 bit mini, Optical S/PDIF
Speaker: mono
Networking
Modem: optional external 56 kbps
Ethernet: 2x 10/100/1000Base-T
Airport Extreme: optional
Bluetooth: optional 2.0+EDR
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Gestalt ID: 406
Dimensions: 20.1" H x 8.1" W x 18.7" D
Weight: 42.4 lbs.
Maximum OS: 10.4.11
Minimum OS: 10.4.7
Introduced: August 2006
Announced at WWDC in August 2006, the Mac Pro completed Apple's transition to Intel processors, replacing the PowerMac G5 (Late 2005) as Apple's professional desktop Mac. The Mac Pro was based on two 64-bit, dual-core Intel Xeon 5100 "Woodcrest" processors, which included a 128-bit Vector Engine. The Mac Pro's case resembled its PowerMac predecessor's--with the exception of a second optical drive bay--but the interior of the case was completely redesigned. The Xeon processors required less heat-dissapation than G5 processors, allowing a smaller cooling system. The Mac Pro had four easily accessible hard drive bays (for a BTO maximum of 2 TB of storage) and easy access to its 8 RAM slots, which allowed for a Maximum of 16 GB of RAM.
With the Mac Pro, Apple decided to do something different in terms of configuration. Since the majority of Apple's professional customers tended to heavily-customize their Macs at purchase time, Apple offered a single, heavily customizable Mac Pro model. In effect, this shifted the decision-making for what configurations to sell to the resellers, leaving Apple with a streamlined manufacturing process. The single model sold for $2,499, and included two 2.66 GHz, dual-core Intel Xeon 5100 processors, 1 GB of RAM, a 250 MB hard disk, a SuperDrive, and an Nvidia GeForce 7300GT graphics card with 256MB of VRAM. BTO options included 2.0 and 3.0 GHz processors, up to 16 GB of RAM, up to 2 TB of storage, a second SuperDrive, a variety of graphics cards, and Airport Express and Bluetooth support.

 

MacBook Pro (Mid 2007)
CPU: Intel Core2 Duo
CPU Speed: 2.2/2.4 GHz
FPU: integrated
Bus Speed: 667 MHz
Data Path: 64 bit
ROM: EFI
RAM Type: PC2-5300 SO-DIMM
Minimum RAM Speed: 667 MHz
Onboard RAM: 0 MB
RAM slots: 2
Maximum RAM: 3 GB
Level 1 Cache: 32 kB data, 32 kB instruction
Level 2 Cache: 4 MB onchip, 1:1
Expansion Slots: 1 ExpressCard/34
Video
Screen: 15.4/17" active matrix TFT
Video Card/Chipset: NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT
VRAM: 128/256 MB GDDR3
Max Resolution: 24 bit 1440x900/1680x1050
Video Out: dual-link DVI
Camera: iSight
Storage
Hard Drive: 120/160 GB 5400 RPM (w/SMS) (160/7200, 200/4200 available BTO)
ATA Bus: Serial-ATA
Optical Drive: 24x/24x/16x/8x/8x/8x/8x CD-RW/DVD±RW/DVD+R DL DL
Input/Output
USB: 2/3 2.0
Firewire: 1
Firewire800: 1
Audio Out: 16 bit stereo mini, Optical S/PDIF
Audio In: 16 bit stereo mini, Optical S/PDIF
Speaker: stereo
Microphone: mono
Networking
Ethernet: 10/100/1000BaseT
Airport Extreme: 802.11n
Bluetooth: internal 2.0+EDR
Miscellaneous
Codename: ?
Gestalt ID: 406
Power: 85 Watts
Dimensions: 1.0" H x 14.1" W x 9.6" D
Weight: 5.6 lbs.
Maximum OS: 10.4.11
Minimum OS: 10.4.4
Introduced: June 2007
Notes
The 17.1" model had three 2.0 USB ports, and the following dimensions: 1" H x 15.4" W x 10.2" D.
Introduced in June 2007, the MacBook Pro (Mid 2007) was a speed-bump of the MacBook Pro (Late 2006). The MacBook Pro (Mid 2007) shipped in three configurations: 15.4"/2.2 GHz/2 GB HD/120 GB RAM/128 MB VRAM/$1999, 15.4"/2.4 GHz/2 GB HD/160 GB RAM/256 MB VRAM/$2499, and 17"/2.4 GHz/2 GB HD/160 GB RAM/256 MB VRAM/$2799.

 

Source: Apple-History