Back in 1976, the Apple I showed that a computer for the rest of us meant something very different from today ...
As Apple turns 50, ITV News looks back at five decades of innovation that has defined one of the most powerful companies in history.
Silicon Valley history buffs know Ronald Wayne’s story well. He worked with Steve Jobs at Atari and when the agreement was signed to create Apple Computer on April 1, 1976 — 50 years ago next month — ...
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 ...
For the past 50 years, Apple has been changing the world. In a way, Apple created its own world — one of design-forward computers and accessories that anyone could use and just about everyone wanted ...
In 1976, 14-year-old Chris Espinosa rode a moped to his job demonstrating computers made in Steve Jobs’s childhood home. The company has changed, but he’s still there.
Rather than revisiting Apple’s corporate milestones at its 50th anniversary, Adam Engst reflects on how the community around Apple once fostered connection and idealism—and why rebuilding that human ...
A scrawny hippie and a nerdy engineer vowed to change the world when they founded a Silicon Valley startup on April Fools’ Day 50 years ago and then — no joke — pulled it off.
Apple hardware has gone into orbit, starting with shuttle-era experiments, through a long exclusion, and now a controlled ...