![]() It is the only way to use a multiscan monitor on a pre-LC Macintosh. It is made by Griffin Technologies and costs $28 plus shipping. It is called the Griffin II series video adapter. I know of none that are VGA compatible, in which case you will need a special type of adapter that lets you use a VGA monitor with a non-VGA compatible video card. On the SE and SE/30, you could install a video card that would let you use many different monitors. I do not know if the Griffin adapter will work with them or not, so I will say that these are not VGA compatible models. These are so old, they almost definitely have no support for VGA monitors. ![]() They only supported 8 colors (not 8-bit color) on the Plus, SE, and Classic, since none of these machines support 32-bit QuickDraw. These would let you display an image on a Mac compatible monitor, usually an Apple 640 x 480 monitor or a portrait monitor. SCSI Adaptersįor the Macintosh Plus, Classic, and Classic II, some companies made video adapters that plugged into the SCSI port, such as ScuzzyGraph. ![]() There is no expansion slot, SCSI port, or monitor cable on these. The exceptions are the original Macintosh, Mac 512K, and 512Ke. Naturally it is a PC monitor, not compatible with your Macintosh – or is it?Īlmost every Macintosh model can support a PC monitor (VGA), and there is almost always a way to add support even to those without built-in video. Your friend told you of a great deal on a 17″ monitor in the local computer centre. ![]()
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