February 13, 1984: The first Mac’s launch generates enormous excitement from the tech press, as epitomized by an InfoWorld cover story about the Macintosh 128K. The wave of coverage comes a few weeks ...
February 13, 1984: The first Mac’s launch generates enormous excitement from the tech press, as epitomized by an InfoWorld cover story about the Macintosh 128K. The wave of coverage comes a few weeks ...
Incidentally, the original Macintosh 128K, which hit stores at $2,495, would translate to around $7,000 today. (In that context, current Apple computers seem like a bargain.) If all goes to plan, the ...
From inside a bag on stage, Jobs presented Apple's first-ever Macintosh computer. Thirty years ago today, Steve Jobs presented Apple's first Macintosh computer. With its 9-inch, black-and-white ...
Apple's Macintosh computer celebrated its 30th anniversary today (January 24), and iFixit has marked the occasion by opening one up to reveal its innards. The original Mac came with a 9-inch black and ...
I hadn’t planned to write about Elago’s W3 Stand, an Apple Watch charging stand in the shape of a classic 128K Macintosh. I mean, what is there to say? “It’s an Apple Watch charging stand in the shape ...
The RayCue 128K Pro, a device that pays homage to the iconic Apple Macintosh while offering modern-day features. This device, with its retro aesthetic and advanced capabilities, is a testament to the ...
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 ...
There’s an apocryphal quote floating around the internet that “640K ought to be enough memory for anybody” but it does seem unlikely that this was ever actually said by any famous computer moguls of ...
Same office clean-up. I came across my trusty old Macintosh -- the original Macintosh that shipped with a whopping 1/8th of a MB of RAM, a whole 128k. And if that's not enough, you can QUADRUPLE it ...
Have you ever looked in a doll house and said “I wish those dolls had a scale replica of a 1984 Macintosh 128K that could be operated by USB?” — well, us neither, but [Nick Gillard] gives us the ...