First look: Apple 'Peek Performance' event in pictures
Apple is holding its first big product announcement event of 2022, and we're excited to share the highlights here.
Apple is holding its first big product announcement event of 2022, and we're excited to share the highlights here.
At its September 9 media event, Apple is expected to show off updates to the iPad and Apple TV along with the latest iPhones. Here's our scene-by-scene view from the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium in San Francisco.
A senior Apple Computer Inc. executive told Mac resellers less than a month ago that the company had no plans to open retail stores in the near future, said a dealer who attended the meeting.
Today's lineup includes a revamp of AOL Instant Messenger clone AIMM; SkyTag's FileBuddy 6.1, complete with bug fixes; and the latest version of FabienOctave's BeHierarchic utility that adds submenus to the Apple Menu.
Apple Computer Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL) is disputing Dell Computer's (Nasdaq: DELL) claim that it has surpassed Apple in the U.
The launch of Mac OS 9 drew users across the country to their local Mac dealers last weekend and offered resellers and Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) representatives an opportunity to show off iMacs, iBooks and other new Mac hardware.Mac retail outlets told MacWEEK their OS sales were brisk throughout the weekend.
Even as Apple Computer Inc. (aapl) finds itself awash in an inventory sea of Power Mac G4 Cubes, dealers in the United States, Canada, and the UK are wondering why they haven't been able to get their hands on 366MHz or 466MHz iBook models for three weeks or more.
The year's Big Lie is the assertion that Apple has embraced open source software. Sure, Apple's nextgeneration OS X is based on its Darwin project, which is based on the open source Mach operating system.
Apple Computer Inc. on Tuesday reportedly offered a "technology demo" of a dual-processor Power Mac G4 running Mac OS X, but sources said the company stopped short of announcing a multiprocessor Mac.
San Jose, Calif. -- Apple Computer Inc. on Monday said it was slashing the price of its Web applications software WebObjects to $699 from $50,000.