Sanyo VM 4209 Monitor thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Sanyo VM 4209 Monitor

1977

The Apple II computer was the first personal computer to achieve significant commercial success upon its release in 1977. Designed for Apple by co-founder and hardware designer Steve Wozniak and product designer Jerry Mannock in 1977, under the leadership of co-founder Steve Jobs, the Apple II signaled a significant shift in how computers were to be used in both domestic and office environments. The Apple II represents a significant moment within digital and product design and tells the story of the introduction of home computing, and the wider impact this shift had on society.

The 1977 Sanyo VM-4209 9-inch monitor, at the time of Apple II’s inception, was the most widely used CRT monitor for the computer system, having first been used for the Apple I. This particular Sanyo model was used to showcase the Apple II to trade fairs and retailers, and in early presentations of the computer.

Launched at the April 1977 West Coast Computer Fair and released onto the market two months later in June, the Apple II was the first personal computer to achieve significant commercial success. Conceived by Wozniak as a self-contained computer system that allowed users to write and run programmes in the BASIC programming language, the Apple II sold for $1298 ($5,397.39 in 2018). Wozniak designed the computer’s internal electronics and circuitry and its outer hardware was designed by product designer Jerry Manock (who led on industrial design at Apple from 1977 to 1984). Steve Jobs oversaw the development of the product as a whole and took particular responsibility for the foam-moulded removable plastic case that was intended to make the device more aesthetically pleasing and thereby marketable. At Jobs’s request the casing was produced in Pantone colour 453, a light sandy beige. In total, around 5 million Apple II computers were sold until their discontinuation in 1993.

The Apple II is an important addition to the museum’s collection, and is a lead example of the convergence of work and home computing. Apple has had significant, widespread influence on the field of digital and product design since its inception in 1976 and this is reflected in our collections. The acquisition of the Apple II joins other objects in the V&A’s collection from the company including Apple Power Book from 1992, the iMac G3 from 1998, two versions of the iPhone (from 2007 and 2014), the iPod Nano from 2012 and the iPod Touch from 2010. The Apple II and accessories represents a significant addition to the story of Apple and personal computing in the late twentieth century at the V&A.

This acquisition package was purchased from US-based collector Dany de Grave, whose family have collected items from the history of Apple since its conception in 1976.



Object details

Categories
Object type
Brief description
Sanyo VM 4209 monitor
Summary
The Apple II computer was the first personal computer to achieve significant commercial success upon its release in 1977. Designed for Apple by co-founder and hardware designer Steve Wozniak and product designer Jerry Mannock in 1977, under the leadership of co-founder Steve Jobs, the Apple II signaled a significant shift in how computers were to be used in both domestic and office environments. The Apple II represents a significant moment within digital and product design and tells the story of the introduction of home computing, and the wider impact this shift had on society.

The 1977 Sanyo VM-4209 9-inch monitor, at the time of Apple II’s inception, was the most widely used CRT monitor for the computer system, having first been used for the Apple I. This particular Sanyo model was used to showcase the Apple II to trade fairs and retailers, and in early presentations of the computer.

Launched at the April 1977 West Coast Computer Fair and released onto the market two months later in June, the Apple II was the first personal computer to achieve significant commercial success. Conceived by Wozniak as a self-contained computer system that allowed users to write and run programmes in the BASIC programming language, the Apple II sold for $1298 ($5,397.39 in 2018). Wozniak designed the computer’s internal electronics and circuitry and its outer hardware was designed by product designer Jerry Manock (who led on industrial design at Apple from 1977 to 1984). Steve Jobs oversaw the development of the product as a whole and took particular responsibility for the foam-moulded removable plastic case that was intended to make the device more aesthetically pleasing and thereby marketable. At Jobs’s request the casing was produced in Pantone colour 453, a light sandy beige. In total, around 5 million Apple II computers were sold until their discontinuation in 1993.

The Apple II is an important addition to the museum’s collection, and is a lead example of the convergence of work and home computing. Apple has had significant, widespread influence on the field of digital and product design since its inception in 1976 and this is reflected in our collections. The acquisition of the Apple II joins other objects in the V&A’s collection from the company including Apple Power Book from 1992, the iMac G3 from 1998, two versions of the iPhone (from 2007 and 2014), the iPod Nano from 2012 and the iPod Touch from 2010. The Apple II and accessories represents a significant addition to the story of Apple and personal computing in the late twentieth century at the V&A.

This acquisition package was purchased from US-based collector Dany de Grave, whose family have collected items from the history of Apple since its conception in 1976.

Collection
Accession number
CD.44-2018

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Record createdSeptember 27, 2018
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