May 9, 1997: The Clone Problem Typified
Umax, an early Apple cloner, released the clunkily named SuperMac C500 LT/140 with little fanfare. The machine offered 140 MHz of processing power, a Motorola 603e, 1.2 GB of hard drive space and 16 MB of standard RAM.
Those aren't the most impressive specs for the time but the SuperMac revealed a problem for Apple. The problem was price. Where the SuperMac C500 retailed for a mere $999, the closest Apple equivalent model, the Performa 6360, retailed for half again as much at $1500.
True, the Performa packed an extra 20 MHz in clock speed but that was the only noticeable advantage. The first sub $1,000 clone that illustrated Apple's problem with the clone makers was introduced on May 9, 1997.
Comments
Yep, Apple had no idea what it was doing back then. It was lost in the desert. It was trying to be both a software company and a hardware company not realizing that every software sale to an OEM meanth a hardware loss to Apple.
Poor design and unfocused product lines pushed many of us to buy Power Computing or Umax. I was bummed when Jobs killed Power Computing (I loved my easily upgraded PowerBase), but it had to be done for Apple to survive.