News & Views / February 1993

Apple Stakes Out Color Imaging Market

Tom Thompson and Tom R. Halfhill

At the January MacWorld Expo in San Francisco, Apple was expected to announce its first serious entries into the color imaging market. The QuickDraw-based Apple Color Printer, tentatively priced at $2599, is a 360-dpi color ink-jet printer that supports page sizes of up to 11 by 17 inches (European A3 tabloid) at 65 screen lines per inch. Although it doesn't have a LocalTalk port, the printer is easily shared by multiple Macs: A new printer extension called GrayShare lets other computers on a network direct their output to the printer, which plugs into the SCSI port of any Mac. GrayShare also handles color and gray-scale imaging.

The company also planned to announce the Apple Color OneScanner, a single-pass, color flatbed device that supports 24-bit color (16.7 million hues) at resolutions of from 75 to 600 dpi. It comes with Ofoto 2.0, a new color version of the one-button scanning software.

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