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Developer | Apple Computer |
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Product family | Power Macintosh, Performa |
Type | All-in-one |
Release date | April 15, 1996 |
Discontinued | March 1, 1998 |
Operating system | System 7.5.3 - Mac OS 9.1 |
CPU | PowerPC 603ev @ 120–200 MHz |
Dimensions | Height: 17.5 inches (44 cm) Width: 16 inches (41 cm) Depth: 15.1 inches (38 cm) |
Mass | 47 pounds (21 kg) |
Predecessor | Power Macintosh 5200 LC |
Successor | Power Macintosh G3 All-In-One |
Related | Power Macintosh 5500 |
The Power Macintosh 5400 (also sold under variations of the name Performa 5400) is a personal computer designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Computer from April 1996 to March 1998. The 5400 is an all-in-one computer with an integrated monitor, and replaced the Power Macintosh 5200 LC in that role. It is largely identical to the Power Macintosh 6400 internally, which is essentially the same computer (the "Alchemy" platform) in a tower case. This is the first all-in-one Macintosh to support PCI expansion, replacing the Processor Direct Slot.
Unlike other Power Macintosh machines of the time, the 5400 was only sold to education markets. [1] [ failed verification ] Macintosh Performa-branded variants were generally only sold in Europe, Asia and Australia while the less-powerful Performa 5300CD remained on sale in the Americas for much of 1996.
The more powerful Power Macintosh 5500 was introduced in April 1997, and both computers continued to be sold alongside each other. When the education-only Power Macintosh G3 All-In-One was introduced in early 1998, the 5400 and 5500 were both discontinued.
The 5400 has one PCI slot replacing the LC-based Processor Direct Slot found in previous models, and an L2 cache slot for an optional L2 cache card. It uses a 15" shadow mask CRT with a 12.8" viewable size as the monitor, with resolutions ranging from 640x480 up to 832x624.
Introduced April 15, 1996:
Introduced April 22, 1996:
Introduced May 28, 1996:
Introduced August 5, 1996:
(unknown introduction):
Introduced October 1, 1996:
Introduced November 12, 1996:
Introduced February 17, 1997:
Timeline of Power Macintosh, Pro, and Studio models |
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