Setting up shop in California for the first time, Esslinger and Frogdesign created the "Snow White design language" which was applied to all Apple product lines from 1984 to 1990, commencing with the Apple IIc and including the Macintosh computer.
Notable computers including 68881 or 68882 FPUs included the Sun 3 from Sun Microsystems, the Macintosh II family of computers from Apple Computer, the NeXT Computer, parts of the Atari family (Mega STE, TT and Falcon030) and the Commodore Amiga 3000.
Macintosh | Macintosh II | Macintosh 128K | Miss MacIntosh, My Darling | Macintosh File System | Tammy MacIntosh | System 7 (Macintosh) | Power Macintosh 8500 | Macintosh SE | Macintosh IIvx | Craig MacIntosh | Macintosh Toolbox | Macintosh Quadra 950 | Macintosh Plus | Macintosh IIx | Macintosh External Disk Drive | Macintosh (computer) | Macintosh clone | Macintosh Classic | Macintosh 512K | Charles Macintosh |
Macintosh II Repair and Upgrade Secrets is a 264 page hardcover do-it-yourself book written by Larry Pina that describes how to repair and upgrade a Macintosh II personal computer.
The 68030 was used in many models of the Apple Macintosh II and Commodore Amiga series of personal computers, NeXT Cube, Sun Microsystems Sun 3/80 desktop workstation (a member of the "sun3x" architecture, where the earlier "sun3" used a 68020), later Alpha Microsystems multiuser systems, and some descendants of the Atari ST line such as the Atari TT and the Atari Falcon.
Digital Surf launched their first (2D) surface analysis software package in 1990 for MS-DOS ("DigiProfil 1.0"), then their first 3D surface analysis package in 1991 for Macintosh II ("DigiSurface 1.0").