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   The Apple-II cassette interface is simple,
   fast, and I think most reliable. The data
   transfer rate averages over 180 bytes per
   second, and the recording scheme is compatible
   with the interface used with the
   Apple- I.
Note that this is almost as fast as the floppy disk drive on the Commodore 64. This is why people remember Woz but not the anonymous engineer(s) behind the 1541 disk drive.
Wow, I used the 1541 for backups in one job. I never timed it, but I'm not surprised at your report.
This computer beats the one I programmed in high school. 12 years after this ad ran.
Anyone have a Breakout in, say, Javascript that's as short and clear as the example in Basic?
woman on the kitchen 70's cliché propaganda
Great to see this again. The description at the time of the video hardware is important. My first computer, purchased around four years later, also had a 6502 and memory mapped video. Unlike the Apple, it did absolutely nothing to interleave the video memory access - if the CPU accessed the video RAM, there would be a momentary black horizontal line on the screen. Many of the Apple II's competitors were the same.