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In common with available "micro" computers at the time the Apple I did not do very much. Unlike the other computers, which you bought as a kit and had to build yourself, the Apple I was a complete circuit board. You needed to add a case to enclose it, a keyboard to enter information into it and a TV to see what was coming out of it. Steve Wozniak had written a version of the BASIC programming language for it so a user could type in a program to perform simple arithmetic or play a text based game. As there was no means of storing the entered program it would need to be typed in every time you used the computer. Wozniak designed an adapter to allow a cassette recorder to be connected to the computer so that software could be saved on a blank audio cassette. (See links below)

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15y ago

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