Group Bookmarks tagged apple
You are here: Diigo Home > Groups > The Apple Group > Bookmarks > Group Bookmarks tagged apple
In the U.S., the oft-touted “halo effect” from Apple’s iPods and iPhones looks to be encouraging consumers to try the company’s computers as well. Apple saw U.S. sales jump 38.1% in the quarter, according to Gartner (31.7% says IDC), pushing the company into third place, behind Dell and HP, with an 8.5% market share, compared to 6.4% last year.
more from bits.blogs.nytimes.com
Windows 95 was a remarkable moment in personal computing. Its successor has come. But not from Microsoft. Apple has launched the defining platform of the early 21st century. The PC is dead—or will be. Long live the smart phone, er, iPhone.
more from blogs.eweek.com
A to G is a simple, free utility for Mac OS X that exports your Apple Address Book contacts into a Gmail-readable text file. Once exported, simply click Import in the Contacts section of your Gmail account, choose the file you exported, and you're done! A to G will bring over your contacts' phone numbers, email addresses, physical addresses, companies, job titles and notes so that you can have info you need wherever you have Gmail.
more from bborofka.com
Apple Remote Desktop includes tools, remote UNIX commands, and command line tool info
more from macenterprise.org
The latest news, reviews, how-to's and expert opinions on Apple
more from www.pcworld.com
A free-ranging daily blog on issues related to Unix - including Linux, BSD, and Solaris - with a particular focus on enterprise-level decision-making.
more from blogs.zdnet.com
Phil Torrone noticed today on the Segway Chat forums that "Doug Field, the chief technology officer at Segway who heads their entire engineering team (and has since Day 1), is leaving Segway to become a VP of product design at Apple." The announcement continues: Doug has been the driving force in making the Segway what it is today and will...
more from radar.oreilly.com
Apple's Knowledge Navigator concept video (1987) by Allan Kay and team. This work builds on Kay's original Dynabook concept developed at Xerox PARC in the early 1970s.
more from video.google.com