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Worth1000.com entry for this contest:

www.worth1000.com/contest.asp?contest_id=12657

 

These are funny too...

www.uriahcarpenter.info/

  

the Lisa In 1983 Apple computer introduced the Lisa computer. It was the first ever computer available to the consumer to have a GUI (graphical user interface), also known as a mouse.

 

1984 Superbowl Ad | YouTube

In 1984 Apple computer introduced the Macintosh. Check out the great write-up by Dr. Sarah Stein (link below), regarding the advertisement that ran for the Macintosh. The ad cost 1.6 million dollars to produce, and ran only one time, by design, during the 1984 Superbowl.

 

The "1984" Macintosh Ad:

Cinematic Icons and Constitutive Rhetoric in the Launch of a new Machine..

by Sarah R. Stein:

www2.bc.edu/~lissk/co378/1984.pdf

 

Dr. Sarah Stein:

communication.chass.ncsu.edu/faculty_staff/faculty_profil...

 

fiveprime.org/hivemind/Tags/stairway2heaven

fiveprime.org/hivemind/Tags/FibonacciNumbers

 

www.GrfxDziner.com/forum/forum5/14.html

 

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5-15-2010!! flickr is falling apart...

www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/128591/

  

qwikLoadr™ Videos...

1984 | Macintosh Intro Ad Superbowl • YouTube™

Macintosh | Steve Jobs Intros his baby Live! • YouTube™

 

Also here are some links:

 

the Lisa In 1983 Apple computer introduced the Lisa computer. It was the first ever computer available to the consumer to have a GUI (graphical user interface), also known as a mouse.

  

In 1984 Apple computer introduced the Macintosh. The Ridley Scott ad cost 1.6 million dollars to produce, and ran only one time, by design, during the 1984 Superbowl.

 

Some great Mac stuff.

www.uriahcarpenter.info/

 

Sheryl Crow & Kid Rock | Picture Live! • YouTube™

 

this will help with the light work too

Deanna Cremin Memorial Foundation:

GrfxDziner.com | Lights, Camera, Intro...

http://gwennie2006.blogspot.com/2010/03/lights-camera-intro.html

 

A collection of different approaches to designing the cover for "1984" by George Orwell.

 

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I've been in the corporate programming biz since graduating from college with a degree in computer science in 1982. During my ten year tenure at Lever Brothers, I wrote at least 600 interactive and background CICS programs, most of which communicated with VSAM indexed files as well as TS and TD Queues and a 3270 emulator screen. I always found it somewhat strange that such a large corporation didn't use IBM's relational database DB2. Oh well... back to the Newsweek magazine.

*PLEASE READ*

 

I'm nearing the FINAL for my 52 weeks kickstarter launch project. (Which means you'll finally stop seeing me post about it!) So far I've raised $1500+ for my $2000 goal. If I don't reach my goal, I don't get a penny of what I raised. Please help me reach my goal every penny counts! If you do pledge you get a print as a REWARD. Thank you my wonderful people! The link is below!

 

www.kickstarter.com/projects/joshuamichaelphoto/the-52-we...

With 17-inch display, CD ROM and 3 1/2- inch drives

My Apple //e computer looking moody.

Showing us a dinosaur game on his old Mac

my neighbor put this computer out to pasture, it's been sitting in her yard for almost a year

It still works, though loading the games using a tape recorder set to a specific volume is extremely tedious in 2006!

Old broken Apple Mac surplus to requirements. Wiiliamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City.

 

Justin

www.justingreen19.co.uk

 

Rediscovered this weekend: my old ZX Spectrum - 48K no less.

I've really gotta fix the resolution on this thing.

class taught by Rebecca Sower

People were digitalised long time ago and now even on a pen they tend to look for a keyboard.

Commodore Amiga 500, Commodore Amiga 1081 monitor, Workbench 1.3 software loaded.

a soft, soft touch from some junks i found along the street.

 

please check youthdrip.blogspot.com

 

also, please check out this link. :)

Apple computer in a display at the Rochester Strong Museum of Play. This is actually the same computer I had in Elementary School with the huge Floppy Disks.

Macintosh 512K factory upgraded to Plus (M0001AP) with keyboard and mouse, ImageWriter II printer, and third-party hard disk drive, 3.5-inch drive, scanner controller and tape drive. The 5.25" drive is my mistake — it is from an Apple II and should not be connected to this set.

Class taught by Pam Garrison

Apple Macintosh SE with 80SC drive and Apple ADB keyboard and mouse.

Commodore 64 with Datasette tape drive and Commodore DM602 display (Monitor80). Loaded on screen is Easy Script word processor.

They get warm during photoshopping

Born in the same year as I and widely recognized the spark that led to the microcomputer revolution.

Programming was done with the switches. No Monitor, just stylish red LED.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altair_8800

Desktop background for us nerds..

History of mobile computing :) mobilyazilar.blogspot.com

 

This is a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs photo. This license allows for redistribution, commercial and non-commercial, as long as it is passed along unchanged and in whole, with credit to Mobil Yazılar. Please don't forget to add a comment with a link to the page that this image is used.

 

Mobil Yazılar tarafından çekilmiş olan bu fotoğraf Creative Commons lisanslıdır. Fotoğrafı kullandığınız yerde fotoğrafın Mobil Yazılar tarafından çekildiğini belirtmek ve Mobil Yazılar'a link vermek kaydıyla ticari amaçlı ya da kâr amacı gütmeyen her türlü çalışmanızda ücretsiz olarak kullanabilirsiniz. Nerede kullandığınızı aşağıya yorum bırakarak belirtirseniz sevinirim.

One of the first 1000 Apple IIGS signed by Woz (he bought it for $1000 in 1986) and his new iPhone 3GS ($299 - he had a first gen iPhone which was recently stolen on the 22, so he was able to get the good price).

 

oldcomputers.net/appleiigs.html

 

iPhone launch at MacWorld, the long lines of the debut, the 3G, iPhone devcamps, and more at

 

www.flickr.com/photos/ari/collections/72157600740718525/

Apple Monitor (model no. G090S), Apple Monitor II, and Commodore DM602 display (Monitor80).

A computer found on the bank of an East Anglian drainage channel, having evidently been raised from the bottom during recent dredging operations. This was within 50 yards of the entrance to a local authority "recycling centre", or rubbish dump. I wonder what's on the hard drive. Compaq Presario of some sort, with HP 9100 CD writer and floppy drive.

Commodore Amiga 500, Commodore Amiga 1081 monitor, The Arcade joystick, Hitachi boombox.

I just came across this old 3½ x 5 inch photo and decided to scan it for my flickr friends. Here I am working on my little Mac SE, trying to do something in a very simple b+w paint program. In the far right background is the 1988 calendar I designed for Sloan Paper Company. Just under my closed typewriter I can see the calendar sheet reads "November." Just behind my Mac you can see my old Apple Imagewriter, dot matrix, printer. I still had a lot of hair back then, but it was beginning to thin. I was forty-six years of age when I made this self-timed shot.

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