Applied Engineering
Applied Engineering, headquartered in Carrollton, Texas, was a leading third-party hardware vendor for Apple II computers from the early 1980s until the mid-1990s.
History
In its day, Applied Engineering built a solid reputation among Apple II owners for their innovation, excellent build quality, and generous warranty support. AE was quick to fill in gaps in the market for Apple II add-on boards and expansion options, often developing products for the Apple II line that neither Apple Computer nor other third-party vendors offered.By the early 1990s, as Apple Computer, Inc., began to withdraw support for the Apple II series and focus on the Macintosh line, the market for Apple II hardware and software began to wane. Many Apple II users began to migrate to other platforms, such as the Macintosh and IBM PC-compatibles. In an attempt to capitalize on its well-known brand name among previous Apple II owners, Applied Engineering began to market products for the Macintosh and Commodore Amiga lines. However, because of stiff competition in already active markets, and AE's late entries, Applied Engineering could not duplicate the success it had experienced with the Apple II. Around the same time, cost-cutting measures were implemented, such as shortening warranty periods, charging for technical support and a using inferior parts, turning off loyal and long-time customers. Eventually dwindling Apple II sales and a failure to shift into other markets caused Applied Engineering to go out of business by 1994.
Product offerings
Some of Applied Engineering's best-known products for the Apple II included:- RamWorks — memory expansion card for the Apple IIe
- TransWarp — CPU accelerator card for the Apple IIe and Apple IIGS
- Vulcan — internal hard drive
- PC Transporter — NEC V30 card that allowed Apple IIs to run MS-DOS programs
Multi-function cards were a mainstay of AE's product offerings, of which the Serial Pro serial interface card was a typical example. Besides offering a standard RS-232 serial port, the card included a ProDOS-compatible real-time clock, thus combining two cards into one and freeing up an extra slot. When used with a dot-matrix printer, the Serial Pro offered several screen-dump print options, such as printing either of the two Apple II high-resolution pages alone, both in a single dump, or the first hi-res page rotated or inverted.
Partial product list
For all Apple IIs except IIc/IIc Plus
- Serial Pro — Apple II serial (RS-232) card
- Parallel Pro — Apple II parallel card
- Buffer Pro — Buffer add-on for Parallel Pro
- Vulcan — Internal hard disk and disk controller
- Vulcan Gold — Internal hard disk
- PC Transporter — NEC V30 IBM PC co-processor card
- Super Music Synthesizer — Apple II sound card
- Phasor — Apple II sound card
- TimeMaster H. O. and TimeMaster II H. O. — Apple II real-time clock card
- A/D + D/A Card — Analog/digital signal acquisition and industrial control card
- I/O 32 Card — 32-bit TTL/CMOS digital I/O card
- DataLink 1200/2400 — internal telephone modems
- FastMath — Math co-processor card
- Z-80 Plus — CP/M card
Apple II/II Plus Specific
- AE 16K Card — Reduced-chip substitute for Apple's 16 KB Language Card
- ViewMaster 80 — Videx- and Videoterm-compatible 80-column card with lowercase and light pen support
Apple IIe
- MemoryMaster — Early reduced-chip substitute for Apple's Extended 80-Column Card
- MemoryMaster IIe — replacement 80-column card with 64 KB—256 KB
- RamWorks — 80-column + memory expansion card with 256—1024 KB RAM
- RamWorks II — 80-column + memory expansion card with 1+ MB RAM
- RamWorks III — 80-column + memory expansion card with 1-3 MB RAM
- RamKeeper — Battery backup option for RamWorks series
- RamFactor — Slot 1 to 7 memory card for //e and II+. Up to 1 MB RAM
- RamFactor 4 Meg Expander — Increase RamFactor memory by up to 4MB for a maximum of 5MB on one slot
- RamCharger — Battery backup option for the RamFactor which could allow booting from a RAM drive
- ColorLink — Daughterboard RGB option for RamWorks series providing analog and IBM-compatible RGB output
- Digital Prism — Daughterboard RGB option for RamWorks series providing IBM-compatible RGB output only
- TransWarp, TransWarp II — Apple II accelerator card
Apple IIc/IIc Plus
- Z-RAM, Z-RAM Ultra, Z-RAM Ultra II, Z-RAM Ultra III — Memory expansion card
- RAM Express, RAM Express II — Memory expansion card
- Z-80c — CP/M card
Apple IIGS
- TransWarp GS — Apple IIGS accelerator card
- GS-RAM, GS-RAM Ultra, GS-RAM Plus — Apple IIGS memory expansion cards. The cards hold 1.5 MB, 4 MB, and 6 MB respectively.
- RamKeeper — Battery backed RAM drive for the Apple IIGS
- Sonic Blaster — Apple IIGS sound card
- Audio Animator — Apple IIGS sound card with external audio mixer and MIDI I/O
- Conserver — Integrated disk drive organizer, surge protector, and cooling fan
Miscellaneous
- AE 1.6-MB Drive — 1.6 MB, 3.5-inch floppy drive for IIGS
- AE 1.44-MB Drive — 1.44 MB, 3.5-inch floppy drive for Commodore [Amiga 500], 2000 beat Commodore's own high-density drive to market. Not compatible with the 1.76 MB Amiga Chinon high-density floppy.
- AE 800-KB Drive — 800 KB, 3.5-inch floppy drive for IIe, IIc/IIc Plus, and IIGS
- TransWarp — 16 and 40 MHz accelerator boards for Macintosh SE