Word: macintoshs
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...technologists believe their products are better than other people's, or at least they say they do, but Jobs believes it a little more than most. He calls the iPhone "the most important product Apple has ever announced, with the possible exception of the Apple II and the Macintosh. It's also going to be an incredible revolution for the whole industry...
...great American pastime. (Jobs declines to talk about the options issue.) But there's no point in pretending that Jobs isn't special. A college dropout, whose biological parents gave him up for adoption, Jobs has presided over four major game-changing product launches: the Apple II, the Macintosh, the iPod, and the iPhone; five if you count the release of Pixar's Toy Story, which I'm inclined to. He's like Willy Wonka and Harry Potter rolled up into...
...Harvard, the process has been driven by Marcia L. Chapin, head librarian of the Chemistry and Chemical Biology Libraries. Chapin declined to comment for this story. According to Hoctor, Harvard made several key suggestions that were eventually implemented, such as the necessity of making DiscoveryGate compatible with Macintosh computers in order for it to be viable in academic and corporate research and integrating a searchable index into the software. Anyone with a Harvard IP address can download the DiscoveryGate software platform through https://discoverygate.com...
...financial officer, Peter Oppenheimer, announced last week that the company’s higher education division just had its best ever back-to-school quarter, and Harvard is part of the trend. According to Daniel D. Moriarty, the University’s chief information officer (CIO), personal purchases of Macintosh computers at Harvard are up 30 percent from last year, while sales of IBM Lenovo machines have more or less flat-lined. Moriarty added that Harvard is one of Apple’s largest educational re-sellers. He said that several years ago, Apple sales were lagging, but now campus...
...economic performance, business and government efficiency and in the strength of its infrastructure. As recently as 2001, the U.S., with just 6% of the world's population, churned out 41% of its Ph.D.s. And its labs regularly achieve technological feats, as last month's rollout of a new, superpowerful Macintosh computer and the launch of a space probe to Pluto make clear...