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Apple’s next product launch might be the AirTag 2, here’s what we know so far about the long-awaited AirTag successor’s coming release.
Steve Jobs journeyed to Moscow, aiming to introduce Macintosh computers to the Soviet Union amidst internal Apple turmoil.
"When Apple threw parties—they threw parties, man. It was the 80s in South Florida. Let your imagination go wild," his ...
Now that Apple sells over hundreds of millions of iPhones a year, it’s easy to forget that it all began with two college dropouts in a garage with some trademark old Apple computers. Since 1976, Apple ...
A new book raises the specter that corporate offshoring of manufacturing may have undermined America's lead in technological innovation and even its national security.
The Apple II was an improved version of the Apple I computer kit, and started the boom in personal computer sales, according to the National Museum of American History. It was also the first ...
The real Apple IIe was the third model in the Apple II series of home computers developed by Cupertino. Released in 1983 as the successor to the Apple II Plus, it had quite a run during its 11 ...
The module can be installed in any Apple II, Apple II+, Apple IIe, or Apple IIgs computer. It uses a Sipeed Tang Nano 20K FPGA dev board that’s been programmed to let you connect a nearly 50 ...
Object Details maker Apple Computer Description In 1976, computer pioneers Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs began selling their Apple I computer in kit form to computer stores. By August of that year, ...
Pencil Test for Apple II "Pencil Test" is not your conventional advertisement. It's more like a short film intended to show off the capabilities of Apple's Macintosh II computer.
You can see a 1979 photo of Jobs with an Apple II at the Computer History Museum's website. The Apple I was sold in kit form - no completely assembled units were sold.