Apple Graphics Tablet: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox computer peripheral | {{Infobox computer peripheral | ||
| image = [[File:Apple Graphics Tablet.jpg]] | | image = [[File:Apple Graphics Tablet (Apple II).jpg]] | ||
| caption = Apple Graphics Tablet (Model A2M0029) | | caption = Apple Graphics Tablet (Model A2M0029) | ||
| manufacturer = Apple Computer, Inc. | | manufacturer = Apple Computer, Inc. | ||
Latest revision as of 16:16, 9 February 2026
The Apple Graphics Tablet (model A2M0029) was Apple's digitizing tablet for the Apple II family, released in 1979. Priced at US$650 (approximately $1,980 adjusted for inflation), it allowed users to draw images at 280 × 192 resolution—years before the mouse became a standard input device.
Background
[edit | edit source]The Graphics Tablet was released during a period when graphical input devices were rare and expensive. At $650, it represented a significant investment for Apple II owners. The tablet predated the mouse by several years, making it one of the earliest consumer-accessible graphical input devices.
Design
[edit | edit source]Physical Construction
[edit | edit source]The Graphics Tablet measures approximately 15 inches × 15 inches (380 mm × 380 mm), significantly larger than modern tablets:
- Plastic frame housing
- Transparent overlay sheet
- Wire matrix sensing surface
- Tethered stylus
The overlay protected the sensing matrix and provided a smooth drawing surface. Over time, these overlays yellowed or cracked, particularly in early units.
Sensing Technology
[edit | edit source]The tablet uses capacitive sensing through a wire matrix:
- X and Y coordinate wires arranged in a grid pattern
- Changes in capacitance indicate stylus position
- Wires held in position with adhesive
- Age causes adhesive failure and wire displacement
Connection
[edit | edit source]The Graphics Tablet requires a dedicated interface card (part number 670-0012) installed in an Apple II expansion slot. The first revision connected via a wire with a header that plugged directly into the card. The second revision used dual DB-9 connectors.
Revisions
[edit | edit source]First Revision (1979)
[edit | edit source]- Wire with header connector (no DB-9)
- No FCC approval
- Caused RF interference with television sets
- Pulled from market after FCC intervention
Second Revision (1980+)
[edit | edit source]- Dual DB-9 connectors
- FCC approved
- Improved RF shielding
- Limited market success due to timing (Macintosh and mouse approaching)
Software
[edit | edit source]The tablet shipped with Apple Graphics Tablet Software (1979):
- Drawing application
- 280 × 192 resolution support
- Required interface card present to load
Additional third-party software supported the tablet for various drawing and design applications.
Specifications
[edit | edit source]| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Model number | A2M0029 |
| Interface card | 670-0012 |
| Active area | ~12" × 12" (estimated) |
| Resolution | 280 × 192 pixels |
| Dimensions | ~380 mm × 380 mm × 25 mm |
| Connection | Wire header (rev 1) / DB-9 (rev 2) |
| Case material | Plastic frame, transparent overlay |
| Compatible systems | Apple II, II Plus, IIe, IIGS |
| Price (1979) | US$650 |
Issues
[edit | edit source]RF Interference
[edit | edit source]The first revision caused significant radio frequency interference with television sets. Many Apple II owners used televisions as displays, making this a serious usability problem. The FCC required Apple to pull the product until it met emissions standards.
Reliability
[edit | edit source]The internal wire matrix relies on adhesive to maintain wire positioning. Over decades, this adhesive degrades:
- Wires detach from their positions
- Coordinates become inaccurate or non-functional
- Repair is extremely difficult due to the number of wires involved
Market Timing
[edit | edit source]By the time the FCC-approved revision was available:
- The Apple IIe had launched with a more refined ecosystem
- The Macintosh (1984) introduced the mouse as standard
- Consumer interest in stylus-based input had waned
Maintenance
[edit | edit source]Overlay Care
[edit | edit source]- Clean with mild soap and water
- Avoid solvents that may cause yellowing
- Store away from direct sunlight
- Do not press heavily—overlays become brittle with age
Internal Repair
[edit | edit source]Repair of the wire matrix is generally impractical:
- Hundreds of fine wires require precise positioning
- Original adhesive cannot be easily replaced
- Disassembly often causes additional damage
Most surviving units with internal wire displacement are considered non-functional.
Collecting
[edit | edit source]Rarity
[edit | edit source]The Graphics Tablet is uncommon due to:
- Limited original sales (high price point)
- First revision recall
- Fragile internal construction
- Age-related failures
Condition Assessment
[edit | edit source]- Mint: Original box, clear overlay, functional (extremely rare)
- Excellent: Clear overlay, no visible damage, may be functional
- Good: Some overlay yellowing, unknown functionality
- Fair: Yellowed/cracked overlay, likely non-functional
- Poor: Damaged frame, missing parts, non-functional
Components
[edit | edit source]A complete system includes:
- Graphics Tablet unit (A2M0029)
- Interface card (670-0012)
- Stylus
- Software disks
- Manual
The interface card is essential and often missing from surviving units.
Market Value
[edit | edit source]Working examples with interface cards command premium prices. Non-functional units still have collector value for display purposes. Auction houses including RR Auction have sold Graphics Tablets as vintage computing collectibles.
See Also
[edit | edit source]References
[edit | edit source]- AppleToTheCore.me — Apple Graphics Tablet documentation
- RR Auction lot descriptions
- Computing History museum records
