eMachines eOne

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The eOne was an all-in-one desktop computer that was produced by eMachines in 1999. It resembles Apple's "Bondi Blue" iMac.

Apple sued eMachines for allegedly infringing upon the distinctive trade dress of the iMac with the eOne. Apple and eMachines settled the case in 2000, which required the model to be discontinued.

Technical specifications

The eOne had a 433 MHz Intel Celeron microprocessor, 64 megabytes of PC-100 SDRAM RAM, a 15-inch CRT monitor, a 10BASE-T Ethernet port, a floppy drive, an 8 MB ATI video card, a 56k modem, and a CD-ROM drive, along with the ability to use two PC cards, which were commonly used to expand the capabilities of laptops.

As a Wintel-based computer, the eOne ran Windows 98 or Windows Me depending on the time of manufacture, as opposed to the iMac running Mac OS 8 or Mac OS 9.

Legacy

In 2007, three years after acquiring eMachines, Gateway released the One,{{Cite web |url=http://www.gateway.com/programs/one/one.php |title=Gateway Computers & Home Electronics: Laptops, Notebooks, Monitors, Desktops |access-date=2007-09-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071027233540/http://www.gateway.com:80/programs/one/one.php |archive-date=2007-10-27 |url-status=dead }} an all-in-one desktop computer similar to the eOne but in black and utilizing a flat-screen monitor.

References