apple

  • apple

    Apple's absolute first logo, pre 1976. Drawn by then co-founder Ronald Wayne.
    The logo features Sir Isaac Newton sitting under the apple tree where he supposedly discovered gravity, by an apple falling on his head. See here for the 1976 Apple 1 manual and advertisements where this logo was used.
    Date circa 1976
    Sreejithk2000 using Commons Helper.
  • gracehopperCOP

    Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906-1992) was a computer pioneer and naval officer. She earned a master’s degree (1930) and a Ph.D. (1934) in mathematics from Yale. Hopper is best known for her trailblazing contributions to computer programming, software development, and the design and implementation of programming languages. A maverick and an innovator, she enjoyed long and influential careers in the U.S. Navy and the computer industry.
  • HP

    HP was founded by Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard in 1939. Their first product was an audio oscillator and one of their first customers Walt Disney. Disney used the oscillator to test audio equipment in the 12 specially equipped theaters showing Fantasia in 1940.
  • turing

    Using AI-powered deep vetting and job matching techniques, Turing vets the world's most skilled developers with great technical, communication, collaboration, and problem-solving skills and helps them build dream careers with leading U.S. companies including Fortune 500 companies, unicorns, and fast-scaling start-ups.
  • timbernersLee

    Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web while at CERN, the European Particle Physics Laboratory, in 1989. He wrote the first web client and server in 1990. His specifications of URIs, HTTP and HTML were refined as Web technology spread.
  • hollerithpunchcard

    The Hollerith punched card was the principal means for recording, accounting and archiving functions, not to mention the US census, until recently. In the early 1960's Hollerith cards were the only practical means to input programs for a IBM mainframe, but today these cards are seldom seen.
  • englebartGUI

    Douglas Engelbart, American inventor whose work beginning in the 1950s led to his patent for the computer mouse, the development of the basic graphical user interface (GUI), and groupware. Engelbart won the 1997 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science, for his “inspiring vision of. Douglas Engelbart.
  • windows

    Managing Computer Resources: The primary function of the Windows operating system is to manage and organize computer resources such as CPU, RAM, and hard disk. The Windows operating system will complete various tasks such as opening applications, accessing the internet, and printing documents using these resources.
  • stemcalculator

    The stem calculator is a tool used in education to calculator the average of a student`s Science, Technology, and Mathematics (STEM) subjects. it helps determine their overall performance in these areas.
  • wifi

    Wi-Fi is a wireless technology used to connect computers, tablets, smartphones and other devices to the internet. Wi-Fi is the radio signal sent from a wireless router to a nearby device, which translates the signal into data you can see and use.
  • iphone

    The iPhone (retroactively referred to as the iPhone 2G, iPhone 1, or original iPhone) was the first iPhone model and the first smartphone designed and marketed by Apple Inc. After years of rumors and speculation, it was officially announced on January 9, 2007, and was released in the United States on June 29, 2007.
  • chromebook

    The first Chromebooks for sale, by Acer Inc. and Samsung, were announced at the Google I/O conference in May 2011 and began shipping on June 15, 2011.[4] Lenovo, Hewlett-Packard (now HP Inc.) and Google itself entered the market in early 2013. In December 2013, Samsung launched a Samsung Chromebook specifically for the Indian market that employed the company's 5 Dual core processor.
  • apple watch

    Apple design chief Jony Ive became interested in building a watch shortly after Steve Jobs's death in October 2011. That December, The New York Times reported that Apple was exploring various ideas, including a "curved-glass iPod that would wrap around the wrist", which users would interact with through the Siri voice assistant, and which "could relay information back to the iPhone".