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. | ||
Revision as of 13:17, 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
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
Physical Construction
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
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
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
First Revision (1979)
- 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+)
- Dual DB-9 connectors
- FCC approved
- Improved RF shielding
- Limited market success due to timing (Macintosh and mouse approaching)
Software
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
| 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
RF Interference
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
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
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
Overlay Care
- 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
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
Rarity
The Graphics Tablet is uncommon due to:
- Limited original sales (high price point)
- First revision recall
- Fragile internal construction
- Age-related failures
Condition Assessment
- 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
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
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
References
- AppleToTheCore.me — Apple Graphics Tablet documentation
- RR Auction lot descriptions
- Computing History museum records
