List of Products Discontinued By Apple Inc. - Displays

Displays

  • Apple Monitor II
  • Apple Monitor IIc
  • Apple Monitor III
  • Apple Color Monitor II
  • AppleColor RGB
  • ColorMonitor IIe/AppleColor Composite Monitor IIe
  • ColorMonitor IIc/AppleColor Composite Monitor IIc
  • Apple AudioVision 14 Display*
  • Apple Basic Color Monitor*
  • Apple Color Plus 14" Display
  • Apple High-Resolution Monochrome Monitor*
  • AppleColor High-Resolution RGB Monitor*
  • Macintosh 12-inch Monochrome Display*
  • Macintosh 12-inch RGB Display*
  • Macintosh 16-inch Color Display*
  • Macintosh 21-inch Color Display*
  • Macintosh Color Display
  • Macintosh Portrait Display*
  • Performa Display*
  • Apple Performa Plus Display*
  • Two-Page Monochrome Display*
  • Apple Multiple Scan 14 Display*
  • Apple Multiple Scan 15 Display*
  • Apple Multiple Scan 15AV Display*
  • Apple Multiple Scan 17 Display*
  • Apple Multiple Scan 1705 Display*
  • Apple Multiple Scan 20 Display*
  • Apple Multiple Scan 720 Display
  • Apple ColorSync/AppleVision 750 Display
  • Apple ColorSync AV/AppleVision 750AV Display
  • AppleVision 1710 Display*
  • AppleVision 1710AV Display*
  • Apple Studio 15"
  • Apple Studio 17"
  • Apple Studio 20"
  • Apple Cinema Display

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Famous quotes containing the word displays:

    Adults understandably assume that the level of verbal proficiency a five-year-old displays represents his level of proficiency in all areas of functioning—if he talks like an adult, he must think and feel like one. However, five-year-olds,... belie the promise of adult-like behavior with their child-like, impulsive actions.
    Dorothy H. Cohen (20th century)

    The emancipation of today displays itself mainly in cigarettes and shorts. There is even a reaction from the ideal of an intellectual and emancipated womanhood, for which the pioneers toiled and suffered, to be seen in painted lips and nails, and the return of trailing skirts and other absurdities of dress which betoken the slave-woman’s intelligent companionship.
    Sylvia Pankhurst (1882–1960)

    As boys without bonds to their fathers grow older and more desperate about their masculinity, they are in danger of forming gangs in which they strut their masculinity for one another, often overdo it, and sometimes turn to displays of fierce, macho bravado and even violence.
    Frank Pittman (20th century)