IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more. In 1976, computer pioneers Steve ...
Memories of your first computer can be priceless. Or they can cost $2,600. That’s how much Dan Budiac, a New York Web developer, recently paid on eBay to buy the same model Apple II he grew up with ...
Apple would never have survived a decade without Steve Wozniak’s marvelous machine. This is part of our package about Apple’s 50th anniversary, read more here. When you think of Apple, you probably ...
A working Apple Macintosh computer from 1984 is seen at B&R Computer Service shop in San Diego, California January 22, 2014. Friday marks the 30th anniversary of Apple Macintosh computer. Apple ...
One of the world's biggest collections of Apple products from 1977 to 2008 is being auctioned off. At the end of March, over 500 retro Apple products are going on sale online and in California. See ...
Prehistories of the personal -- Cultivating the Apple II -- Business : VisiCalc -- Games : Mystery House -- Utilities : Locksmith -- Home : The Print Shop -- Education : Snooper Troops -- ...
Thirty years ago, on June 5, 1977, what is generally considered the first successfully commercial personal computer (PC), the Apple II, went on sale. Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs invented it. It ...
The original Apple II computer went on sale in 1977, but enthusiasts are still finding new ways to use the classic computers. Case in point: the A2FPGA is a new peripheral card for Apple II computers ...
The vintage Apple II+ computer has been recreated in LEGO, including the monitor, floppy disk drives and even the Apple logos. Chiu-Kueng Tsang produced the detailed model of the computer, first on ...
Before there was an iPod, an iPhone, an iPad, or an Apple Watch—before there was a Macintosh or Apple II or even an Apple-1—there were a couple of kids who came of age in Silicon Valley in the late ...
As Apple turns 50, it’s worth looking back on the company’s greatest accomplishments and lowest moments through history. If you don’t have time for David Pogue’s 600-page epic, Apple: The First 50 ...
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