In short
On April 16, 1977, Apple Computer Company unveiled the Apple II at the West Coast Computer Faire in San Francisco, a machine that looked like office equipment and cost less than a used car., a machine that looked like office equipment and cost less than a used car. It was the first computer designed for ordinary people to actually use-complete with color graphics, built-in programming language, and a price that didn't require institutional funding. The Apple II didn't create the personal computer market, but it proved that market could exist.
How it unfolded.
The five-minute version
What actually happened.
The Apple II arrived at a moment when computers were still room-sized industrial equipment or hobbyist kits soldered together by enthusiasts in garages. Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak had formed Apple Computer Company in 1976 after Wozniak designed the original Apple I, a bare-circuit-board machine that Jobs convinced a local electronics retailer to stock. The Apple II, unveiled April 16, 1977, at the West Coast Computer Faire in San Francisco, changed the calculus entirely. It came in a beige plastic case that looked like a typewriter, plugged into a standard wall outlet and television set, and sold for $1,298-expensive by today's standards but a revelation compared to the $20,000-plus price tags on competing systems.
Wozniak's engineering made this possible. His design used fewer chips than competitors' machines, ran cooler, and included color graphics capability at a time when most computers output only text. The machine shipped with 4 kilobytes of RAM, expandable to 48 KB., and ran at 1 megahertz. More crucially, it came with Applesoft BASIC already built in-meaning buyers could start programming immediately, no additional purchases required. That combination of accessibility, color output, and built-in software made the Apple II genuinely different from machines like the Commodore PET and Tandy TRS-80, which hit shelves around the same time.
The Apple II's real power emerged over the next few years, not at launch. VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet application, arrived in 1979 and ran only on the Apple II initially-that single piece of software justified the purchase price for thousands of small-business owners who had never thought of computers as business tools. The machine stayed in production, with incremental improvements, for sixteen years. By 1981, Apple had shipped 25,000 units; by 1983, that number topped 1 million. The Apple II established the template for personal computing: a closed, integrated system with a friendly interface, priced for individuals rather than institutions.
Steve Jobs understood something his competitors didn't: computers weren't just faster calculators for engineers. They were tools that ordinary people might actually want. The Apple II's industrial design-the work of Jerry Manock and others at Apple-signaled that. So did its price point, which positioned it as attainable technology rather than laboratory equipment. The machine never dominated the market in raw numbers; IBM's PC, launched in 1981, eventually outsold it many times over. But the Apple II proved the personal computer market existed and was worth building for, which made everything that followed-the Macintosh, the iPod, the iPhone-possible.
Year by year.
Across 17 years, 8 pivotal moments.
Timeline
How it actually unfolded.
Apple Computer Company is founded in April 1976 by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, following Wozniak's design of the Apple I single-board computer.
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak form Apple Computer Company after Wozniak designs the Apple I single-board computer.
Apple II unveiled
4 KB RAM (expandable to 48 KB)
Apple II ships to customers
First Apple II units begin shipping to retail customers following the April announcement.
VisiCalc launches on Apple II
VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet application, becomes available exclusively on Apple II. The software drives significant business-user adoption.
Apple Computer goes public
Apple's initial public offering prices shares at $22; trading opens higher on the first day.
IBM PC launches
IBM introduces its Personal Computer running PC DOS, beginning competition that will eventually dominate the market. IBM PC does not initially match Apple II's graphics capabilities.
Apple II sales exceed 1 million units
Apple II has become the best-selling personal computer. The machine remains the company's primary revenue source.
Apple II production ends
After 16 years and millions of units sold, Apple discontinues the Apple II line as the Macintosh becomes the company's focus.
Where it happened.
Location inferred from recap.country via OSM Nominatim.
The numbers.
6 numbers that anchor the scale.
By the numbers
The countable parts.
Original retail price
$0
RAM (base configuration)
0 kilobytes
RAM (maximum expandable)
0 kilobytes
Processor speed
0 megahertz
Units shipped by 1981
0
Production run length
0 years
The visual record.
At the cinema, on the charts.
While the world watched Star Wars (A New Hope), Rumours topped the charts.
The world it landed in
What was on the radio, the screen, and everyone's mind.
Rumours - Fleetwood Mac
The dominant album of 1977, reflecting the era's shift toward polished, introspective pop-rock.
Star Wars Theme - John Williams
The year's defining orchestral moment, tethered to the blockbuster revolution that paralleled personal computing's emergence.
I Feel Love - Donna Summer
Giorgio Moroder's synthesizer-driven production presaged the electronic aesthetic that would define the digital age.
Star Wars (A New Hope) (1977)
The year's watershed moment in cinema; released four days before Apple II's launch, it signaled the mainstreaming of high-tech spectacle.
Annie Hall (1977)
Woody Allen's neurotic Manhattan tale captured the intellectual anxieties of an era on the cusp of technological transformation.
Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
Spielberg's meditation on communication and technology; released the same year as the machine designed to democratize computing.
Happy Days
Still dominant in its fifth season; represented nostalgia for the 1950s even as the present raced toward the digital future.
Charlie's Angels
In its second season; embodied the glossy, consumer-focused aesthetic of mid-1970s mass culture.
60 Minutes
In its third season; would become the vehicle for exposing the societal impact of computing's spread.
Same week, elsewhere
1977 was a paradoxical moment: the disco era and punk both peaked, suggesting simultaneous appetite for hedonistic escapism and anarchic disruption. The Apple II arrived during this cultural inflection-offering neither escape nor destruction, but rather a tool for personal agency. The computer was still understood as something befitting a hobbyist or engineer; mainstream culture treated it as science fiction. Within five years, that perception would flip entirely.
Then and now.
4 measurements then and now - the deltas the event left behind.
Then & now
The world the event landed in vs. the one it left behind.
Base Price
$1,298
1977
$999
2024
Apple II cost adjusted to 2024 dollars is approximately $6,800; modern entry-level computers are vastly cheaper for dramatically more power.
RAM
4 KB
1977
16 GB
2024
A 4-million-fold increase in standard memory capacity in less than 50 years.
Storage Capacity
Cassette tape or 5.25" floppy (140 KB)
1977
1-2 TB SSD standard
2024
Storage density increased by approximately 10 million times.
Processor Clock Speed
1 MHz
1977
3-4 GHz
2024
Raw speed improvement of 3,000-4,000x, though comparison is complicated by architectural differences and multi-core design.
The chain begins -
The chain of consequence.
The Apple II was unveiled at the West Coast Computer Faire in San Francisco.
Impact
What followed.
The Apple II was unveiled at the West Coast Computer Faire in San Francisco.
Threads pulled by this event
- 1979
Spreadsheet Software Explosion
VisiCalc's release for the Apple II created the first killer app for personal computers, proving that consumers would pay for machines to run specific software applications.
- 1980
Apple III Released
Apple's troubled follow-up to the II, designed for business users but plagued by overheating and compatibility issues, exposing the difficulty of building on an existing platform's success.
- 1981
IBM PC Released
IBM's entry into the personal computer market, directly inspired by Apple II's commercial success, establishing the x86 architecture that would dominate business computing for decades.
- 1982
Commodore 64 Launch
The best-selling single computer model in history, priced aggressively and featuring superior graphics compared to Apple II, intensifying the home computer market competition.
- 1984
Graphical User Interface Commercialization
Apple's Macintosh brought the GUI to mass market consumers, a concept that had gestated at Xerox PARC but required Apple II's market foundation and brand trust to reach viability.
Where does this story go next?

Next in the chain
World Wide Web Released to Public
Tim Berners-Lee unleashed the web on the world. No corporate overlords, no permission slips. Just hypertext, HTTP, and HTML. The internet…
Or follow another branch
The iPhone Launch
January 9, 2007: Steve Jobs unveils the iPhone. The keynote, the lawsuits, the launch lines, the $200 price cut - and how a single product…
A small memory check
Test your memory.
Three quick questions about Apple II Computer Launch. No score, no streak - just a beat to see what stuck.
1.What happened on January 1, 1983?
2.What was the Production run length?
3.When was the launch?
