eMac
Codename: "P69"
Discontinued: May 2003
Processor: PowerPC 7450 v2.1 (G4)
Processor Speed: 700 or 800 MHz
Cache: 32 KB L1, 256k backside (1:1)
Data Path: 64 bit
System Bus: 100 MHz
Hard Drive Size: 40 or 60 GB
Media: 32x CD-ROM, CD-RW, DVD/CD-RW, or SuperDrive
Colours: Ice
Weight and Dimensions: 50 lbs, 15.8" H x 15.8" W x 17.1" D
Original Mac OS: Mac OS 9.2.2 and Mac OS X 10.1.4
Maximum Mac OS: Latest release of Mac OS X
Machine ID: PowerMac4,4
Motherboard RAM: None
Maximum RAM: 1 GB
Number of Sockets: 2 - PC133 3.3 volt, unbuffered, 8-byte, non-parity 168-pin SDRAM
Minimum RAM Speed: 125 MHz (8 ns)
Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce2 MX (AGP 2x)
Video Memory: 32 MB DDR
Built-in Display: 17" 0.25mm dot-pitch CRT
Resolutions: 640 x 480 @ 138 Hz, 800 x 600 @ 112 Hz, 1024 x 768 @ 89 Hz, 1152 x 864 @ 80 Hz, 1280 x 960 @ 72 Hz
Display Connection: Mini-VGA
Slots: None
Hard Drive Bus: Ultra ATA/66
Modem: None or 56k v90
AirPort: Optional AirPort card
Bluetooth: None
PRAM Battery: 3.6V Lithium
Power: 170 watts
USB: 3 - 12 MBit/s
FireWire: 2 - 400 MBit/s
Ethernet: 10/100BaseT
Infrared: None
Sound: 16-bit stereo headphone jack, integrated stereo speakers
History: Introduced in April 2002, the eMac brought G4 power and a 17 inch monitor to the familiar iMac form factor. Based on the same architecture as the flat panel iMac, the eMac was initially available only for educational markets. It shipped in two configurations: a 32x CD-ROM model for $999 U.S., and a CD-RW/DVD-ROM model for $1199 U.S. In June 2002, the eMac was released to the consumer market in a single model, with a CD-RW drive and 128 MB of RAM, for $1099 U.S. In August 2002, the eMac received a speed-bump and feature upgrade, and was released to the consumer market. The $999 U.S. model ($1099 U.S. consumer) now shipped with a CD-RW/DVD-ROM drive. A $1499 U.S. 800 MHz model was also released to the consumer market, with 256 MB of RAM, a 60 GB hard drive and a SuperDrive.

