Accessory · The Translucent Revolution · 1999

AirPort Base Station (Graphite)

A little grey flying saucer that brought wireless internet to the home. Designed by Jony Ive’s team, it made "Wi-Fi" — then called AirPort — something normal people actually used.

AirPort Base Station (Graphite) (1999), Accessory by Apple

AirPort Base Station (Graphite): key facts

When was the AirPort Base Station (Graphite) released?

The AirPort Base Station (Graphite) was released in July 1999. Apple discontinued it in 2001.

How much did the AirPort Base Station (Graphite) cost?

The AirPort Base Station (Graphite) launched at $299 in 1999 — about $574 in today’s money (approximate, US CPI).

What are the AirPort Base Station (Graphite)’s specs?

The AirPort Base Station (Graphite) used a AMD Élan running at 66 MHz, with 4 MB of memory. It ran AirPort firmware.

Why does the AirPort Base Station (Graphite) matter?

Helped take consumer Wi-Fi mainstream alongside the iBook.

Full specifications

CPUAMD Élan · 66 MHz
Cores1
Memory (RAM)4 MB
Storage
DisplayStatus LEDs
GPUN/A
PortsEthernet, modem
Weight0.5 kg
DimensionsFlying-saucer shape
Operating systemAirPort firmware
ReleasedJuly 1999
Discontinued2001
Launch price$299

How the AirPort Base Station (Graphite) compares to today

A 16 GB Apple Silicon MacBook Pro has about 4,100× more memory than this device shipped with.

At 66 MHz, the clock is roughly 48× slower than a single performance core of a 16 GB Apple Silicon MacBook Pro — and that is before counting cores, width and IPC.

Launched at $299 in 1999 — about $574 in today’s money (approx., US CPI).

Cross-architecture speed figures are clock-only and approximate; inflation figures use US CPI.

Did you know?

Apple launched it the same day Steve Jobs hula-hooped the wireless iBook on stage.

Related Accessory models

Open the AirPort Base Station (Graphite) in the interactive archive →

Last updated: 2026-06-25