- First Apple Mac Game 1984 For Sale
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- First Apple Mac Game 1984 Full
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First Class Peripherals introduces the Sider, the first low-cost hard drive for the Apple II, offering 10 MB for $695. AppleColor 100 Monitor introduced. It is Apple’s first RGB monitor, with a switch that changes to a monochrome display mode, and a motorized screen tilt feature. Intel introduces the 80386 microprocessor. The Macintosh, or Mac, is a series of several lines of personal computers, manufactured by Apple Inc. The first Macintosh was introduced on January 24, 1984, by Steve Jobs and it was the first commercially successful personal computer to feature two known, but still unpopular features—the mouse and the graphical user interface, rather than the command-line interface of its predecessors. However, the Mac was not brought to market until the beginning of 1984. After the community of the computer nerds (at least those who could afford the first Mac) had satisfied its buying frenzy, the sales of the Macintosh dropped dramatically to about 5,000 units per month. Apple boss John Sculley could not change much about this either.
OSI standard published: Protocol Wars
Many agreed on the goal: to develop a global network of networks, or an “internet” in the parlance of the time. They don't agree on how. By the early 1980s, several different national and corporate protocols are competing with each other. OSI (Open Systems Interconnect) is the first with international backing, and support from the International Standards Organization as an official standard. Begun in 1977 by a member of a team that pioneered internetworking on the French CYCLADES network, OSI is officially published in 1984.
Digital Equipment’s DECNET is a strong competitor. IBM’s System Network Architecture (SNA) dominates the world of corporate computing, and will carry the majority of the world’s networking traffic up through the late 1980s. The dark horse contender is ARPA’s Internet Protocols (TCP/IP), defined only by a self-governing community of those who have access to this closed network, mostly U.S. military and computer science researchers.
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Check out our YouTube video showing the history of the Apple.com website! It has all the images and captions from this page, and is easy on the eyes.
Apple.com (1994)
Apple.com as imagined in the NCSA Mosaic browser (1994)
Source: kfury.com
Apple.com (1996)
Homepage touting Macintosh superiorty over Windows 95 (1996)
Source: arquivo.pt
Apple.com (1997)
Apple homepage touting the EMate 300 and Mac OS 8 (1997)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (1998)
Apple homepage with the iMac (1998)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (1999)
Apple homepage with the iMac (1998)
Source: archive.org
Apple homepage with the Power Mac G4 (1999)
Source: archive.org
Power Mac G4 product detail page (1999)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2000)
Apple homepage with various iMac colors (2000)
Source: archive.org
OS X tab on Apple.com (2000)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2001)
Apple.com after September 11 terror attacks (2001)
Source: archive.org
Apple homepage showcasing the iPod (2001)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2003)
Apple homepage showing redesigned iMac (2003)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2004)
Indian Ocean tsunami assistance (2004)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2005)
Apple.com homepage with iPod mini and iPod photo (2005)
Source: archive.org
Apple homepage after passing of Rosa Parks in October (2005)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2006)
Homepage with 'I'm a Mac, I'm a PC' quicktime ad (2006)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2007)
First Apple Mac Game 1984 For Sale
Apple homepage showing original iPhone model (2007)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com iPhone showcase (2007)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2008)
Apple homepage announcing the iPhone 3G (2008)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2010)
Apple homepage announcing the original iPad (2010)
Source: archive.org
Homepage iPhone 4 promotion (2010)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2011)
Apple homepage with iPad 2 (2011)
Source: archive.org
Homepage after passing of Steve Jobs (2011)
Source: archive.org
First Apple Mac Game 1984 Images
Apple.com (2013)
Apple homepage showing iPhone 5 (2013)
Source: archive.org
Homepage after the death of Nelson Mandela (2013)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2014)
Homepage celebration of 30 year Mac anniversary (2014)
Source: archive.org
Homepage with Apple CEO Tim Cook (2014)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2015)
Homepage touting the Apple Watch (2015)
Source: archive.org
First Apple Mac Game 1984 Full
Homepage with photo taken on the iPhone 6 (2015)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2016)
Apple homepage showing iPhone 7 (2016)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2017)
Apple homepage showing iPhone X (2017)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2018)
Apple homepage showing iPhone Xs (2018)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2019)
Apple homepage showing iPhone Xr promotion (2019)
Source: archive.org
Apple.com (2020)
Apple homepage paying tribute to civil rights leader John Lewis (2020)
Source: Version Museum
Next: Classic Mac OS and Mac OS X
First Apple Mac Game 1984 Free
See our illustrated design evolution of classic Mac OS from 1984 to 2001, showing the timeline of System 1 to System 9.
Also, check out our article on the visual design history of Mac OS X which launched in 2001.
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