The Six Worst Apple Products of All Time
Editor's Note: The Mac is certainly a landmark product, one of the many to make its way out of Cupertino in the last quarter-century. But not everything Apple touches turns to gold. We asked TidBits editor Adam C. Engst to list a half-dozen Apple efforts that probably seemed like good ideas at the time.
1. Macintosh IIvi and IIvx
Originally introduced in 1992 as a replacement for the popular Macintosh IIci, the IIvi and IIvx featured a new case design and an internal CD-ROM drive. Unfortunately, the IIvi was powered by a measly 16MHz 68030 CPU, while the IIvx connected a 32MHz 68030 to a 16 MHz bus; both were slower than the three-years-older, 25MHz IIci. The IIvi lasted only four months; while the IIvx held out for a year, the significantly faster 68040-based Centris 650 went on sale just four months after the IIvi and IIvx were released.
2. Macintosh TV

3. Pippin
After the Macintosh TV, Apple didn't give up on a device that connected to your living room TV. The next attempt was the Pippin, a stripped-down Mac designed by Apple and introduced by Bandai in the United States in 1996 as a video game console for multimedia CD-ROM games. It was underpowered, overpriced, and title-poor compared with the Sony PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and Nintendo 64--Bandai sold just 42,000 units before discontinuing it.
4. Power Macintosh 4400
Released in 1997, the Power Macintosh 4400 was Apple's feeble attempt at a cheap Mac knockoff. It had a sharp-edged metal case and more industry-standard components than other Macs, and it was horrible. It crashed all the time, had a particularly loud fan and a lousy internal speaker, and (oddly) had its floppy drive on the left side--convenient for maybe 10 percent of the population.
5. Twentieth Anniversary Mac

6. Apple USB Mouse
































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