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This is an image I took at the 1979 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Bill looks a little pensive, as if he's not sure he's really going to make it. Note his support for the Apple II (see my images of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak the day they announced the Apple II in 1977. www.flickr.com/photos/munnecket/143884778/in/photostream/
This image is copyright; please contact me if you are interested in licensing this. See my catalog at Getty Images www.gettyimages.com/Search/Search.aspx?src=quick&cont... for my other computer history images.
And here are some shots of the first computer mouse I took at Doug Engelbart's home:
AppleShare Server 3.0 can remotely boot a stock Apple IIgs or Apple IIe with a Workstation Card.
The Startup setting needs to be changed on the IIgs. Press CMD+CONTROL+ESC to go to the Control Panel. Choose slots and change the Startup to Appletalk instead of the default. Slot 1 also needs to be changed to AppleTalk instead of Printer.
This page inspired me.:
Mehrfach vorhanden, davon einige noch originalverschweißt / shrinkwrapped
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In gute Hände abzugeben gegen Gebot. Versand oder Abholung in Mainz.
Look what just came in! The end of the Apple II line, the Apple IIe Enhanced/Platinum. Guess what I'll be spending my weekend doing? I learned how to program on one of these things, and this is where my love for computers began. I even still have my program disk from 3rd grade. I'm going to plug it into my Dell 24 inch :)
It's fantastic to actually own one now.
BBSing in the Apple IIGS' interesting 4-palette, interleaved 640x200 Super-High Res mode (4 palettes of 4 colors at alternating pixel columns for "16 colors" with horizontal dithering). The terminal program is Spectrum running under GS/OS. It's a rather unique screenmode
Matt Jenkins has recreated a RamWorks style memory card for the Apple IIe on a bread board using a 2MB SRAM.
AppleShare Server 3.0 can remotely boot a stock Apple IIgs or Apple IIe with a Workstation Card.
Progress! I can't believe it worked the first time through.
This page inspired me.:
OzKfest attendees at dinner.
LHS from left to right:
Steve Kazoullis
Stephen Thomas
Hans Wannop (a distant relation of Ewen's!)
Alex Lee (leaning forward)
Matt Jenkins
RHS:
Alex Lukacz
Jason Griffiths
Daniel Gow
Kim Howe
Jon Co
Andrew Roughan (leaning back)
Mount St. Helens Photo Archive
529799 43970 Volcanoes
WASHINGTON
Gifford Pinchot NF
Lester Lynch, FEMA, working on Apple II computer about Mount St. Helens volcano
June 3, 1980
catalog.archives.gov/id/7035252
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After the catastrophic eruption of May 18, President Carter declared the Mount St. Helens region a disaster area. This made Federal aid available through FEMA, under the Region 12 Director, Robert Stevens. On May 23, the Disaster Information Center of FEMA sent specialists in communications and journalism to Vancouver (Cogan and Lodato, 1981). These FEMA information personnel, who soon numbered more than a dozen, were under the local direction of Phil Cogan, FEMA Region 10 Public Affairs Officer. They coordinated and facilitated efforts by the Geological Survey and other agencies to get information to news organizations and to the public. They also set up a central information center into which information personnel of the Geological Survey and other agencies involved at Mount St. Helens moved. This resulted in a greater sense of teamwork. Information officers of FEMA and other agencies handled most routine calls about the volcano from news representatives, whereas the Information Scientist and public affairs officers handled requests for detailed scientific information about the volcano; detailed in depth interviews with scientists also were provided as time permitted.
The FEMA information center occupied part of a long, unfinished room on the third floor of a bank building [1220 Main Street] in Vancouver, Wash. Here the Information Scientist, the Public Affairs Officer, other Geological Survey personnel, and a secretary worked alongside several FEMA secretaries, 10 or more FEMA information officers, and employees from the Forest Service, Army Corps of Engineers, Small Business Administration, State of Washington, and other agencies. Kenneth Kohl of FEMA administered recording and transmitting equipment used to make daily news reports that radio stations could pick up over the telephone. FEMA teletype machines, computerized word processors, and a photographic department filled other parts of the room. A nearby bullpen contained chairs, telephones, and a conference table for reporters.
AppleShare Server 3.0 can remotely boot a stock Apple IIgs or Apple IIe with a Workstation Card.
A rudimentary login appears after finding a server.
This page inspired me.:
AppleShare Server 3.0 can remotely boot a stock Apple IIgs or Apple IIe with a Workstation Card.
Input name and password.
This page inspired me.:
Hampton Roads Academy computer lab, primarily populated with Apple IIe computers, with teacher Ken Jenkins in the foreground. Shown are two of the four or so DOS PCs added to the Apple lab. Turbo Pascal was used on the PCs for a programming class.
Newport News, Virginia
Computerroom of a Computer Hacker approx. 1984, Picture taken at the Computermuseum La Defense, Paris (2009).
BBSing in the Apple IIGS' interesting 4-palette, interleaved 640x200 Super-High Res mode (4 palettes of 4 colors at alternating pixel columns for "16 colors" with horizontal dithering). The terminal program is Spectrum running under GS/OS. It's a rather unique screenmode
Mehrfach vorhanden, davon einige noch originalverschweißt / shrinkwrapped
---
In gute Hände abzugeben gegen Gebot. Versand oder Abholung in Mainz.
AppleShare Server 3.0 can remotely boot a stock Apple IIgs or Apple IIe with a Workstation Card.
The first run of the AppleShare remote boot disk will ask for a username. Odd since the Control Panel option allows you to input it later.
This page inspired me.:
Full story in my post at Byte Cellar.
This is a scan from the November 1986 issue of A+ magazine.
I recall reading about this board when I had my Apple IIe and sort of lusting after it. The prospect of 640x384 graphics (higher resolution than the Macintosh of the day) was pretty exciting. Sadly, $395 was way too steep for me...as a 14 year old kid.
I thought I'd post this so other Apple II folks would know it existed.
Description of this board can be found here via Google Translation.