Apple first started advertising its products in the late 1970s.
The 80s showed a wide variety of ads, some of which served to convince consumers that they should purchase a computer, and specifically an Apple.
These ads were text-heavy and light on images, as were many computer and technology ads from that era.
Apple ads really came into their heyday during the 1990s, with the "Think Different" campaign, which became very popular as they featured a number of famous people.
Here's a stunning compilation of some of Apple's most notable advertisements from the 70s until the present day, including a few videos ads.
Mac OS X 10.6, aka Snow Leopard has landed. This time around, Apple goes light on the glitz in favor of some heavy work under the hood. John Siracusa dives deep into Apple's new OS offering to see what's new, what's still the same, and whether it's worth upgrading.
4Videosoft iPhone Video Converter for Mac is the professional Mac iPhone Video Converter to convert MPG, MPEG, MPEG2, MTS, M2TS, TS, VOB, MP4, M4V, RM, RMVB, WMV, ASF, etc to iPhone video MP4, H.264/MPEG-4 AVC(.mp4), MOV for you to enjoy on iPhone.
For most users, iTunes does a great job of handling all of the details of managing your media library for you, allowing you to manage your content through iTunes itself and not having to worry too much about the underlying files and folders that make up your iTunes library.
The Apple Tablet is so irresistible and it might not even be real. However the news today paints a much larger picture, larger in the size of the Tablets and larger in the operating system.
Apple's lowliest computer - the Mac Mini - benefits tremendously from a solid-state internal disk drive upgrade. Relieve the performance bottle-neck with a super-fast flash memory based drive storage
Disc images are a fairly common packaging standard for large software programs. If you want to try out a new Linux distribution, for example, chances are you'll need to download a disc image in ISO format and burn it to a blank CD-ROM or DVD.
In Mac OS X, the Desktop Database (Desktop DB) is a collection of invisible files, which store the location information of all the files on your Mac OS X hard drive. Because this database contains the location of all the files on hard drive, if it gets damaged or its size grows too large, many issues might take place. In such cases, whenever you try to access a file or start an application, the process halts with an error message stating that the desktop database is corrupt and you need to rebuild it or delete and recreate it. In such situations, you can not access your mission critical data from Mac OS X hard drive and come across serious data loss situations. In order to sort out these data loss circumstances, you need to opt for Mac File Recovery using using appropriate methods.