40 years ago, the very first Apple Mac computer was released. The Apple Macintosh 128K arrived on 24 January 1984, revolutionising personal computing and becoming the firstly commercially successful ...
Today, January 24 is the 38th annual Macintosh Computer Day, the day each year that honors the unveiling of the very first Macintosh. On Jan. 24, 1984, Apple unleashed the first personal computer to ...
The original Macintosh 128K, famously unveiled in 1984 with an appropriately Orwellian advertising campaign, remains a source ...
One of two Apple Macintosh prototypes extant and already the most valuable Apple Macintosh to have ever sold at auction, #M0001 is heading for auction at Bonhams’ History of Science & Technology Sale ...
Happy birthday, Apple Mac. Whether you can remember the hullabaloo of the very first Mac being announced on January 24, 1984, or your first Mac is the latest iMac, you’ll know that there’s something ...
Bill Atkinson, a pioneering computer engineer and programmer at Apple, instrumental in the creation of the Macintosh computer in January 1984, died June 5. Atkinson, 74, passed away at his home in ...
Apple announced the Macintosh 41 years ago today, introducing the first widely successful personal computer with a graphical user interface. The Macintosh revolutionized personal computing by ...
“The freshmen now entering Drexel [in the early 1980s] will spend the greater portion of their professional lives in the 21st century, in an environment in which the computer will be an everyday, even ...
Apple products have reached a certain stratosphere among consumers, a level that's enviable and somewhat unattainable by other technology firms. When Apple pushes a product, consumers immediately ...
The rise of personal computing in the early 1980s introduced machines that reshaped how people interacted with technology.
Apple’s "1984" Macintosh commercial aired during the Super Bowl that year and is still widely considered one of the best commercials of all time. The commercial strayed from the norm seen then in ...