Steve Jobs announces Safari for Windows Video
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Steve Jobs announces Safari for Windows
Steve Jobs announces Safari for WindowsApple makes a bid for a larger slice of the browser market with a version of Safari for Windows, XP, and Vista.
At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, CEO Steve Jobs takes a swipe at Microsoft by announcing Leopard is being released in different versions--all at the same price.
Steve Jobs talks iPhone at WWDC 2007
Onstage at the Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco Monday, Apple's CEO talks about the much-anticipated device, including how developers can write Web programs for it using the Safari engine.
Steve Jobs talks iPhone at WWDC 2007
Onstage at the Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco Monday, Apple's CEO talks about the much-anticipated device, including how developers can write Web programs for it using the Safari engine.
Leopard to come in different versions?
At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, CEO Steve Jobs takes a swipe at Microsoft by announcing Leopard is being released in different versions--all at the same price.
Daily Debrief: iPhone 3G's unveiling
Following Steve Jobs' announcement Monday of the new iPhone at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference, CNET News.com's Charlie Cooper and Tom Krazit discuss features the smartphone both boasts and lacks.
Apple offers "Spaces" for virtual desktops
Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduces "Spaces," a new application for the Leopard operating system that enables users to group different applications in separate environments. The keynote took place Monday at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference 2006 in San Francisco.
Apple previews next version of Mac OS X
At the Worldwide Developer Conference in San Francisco, Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs shows off Tiger, the next version of Mac OS X. The operating system has more than 150 new features, including a systemwide search engine and an update to iChat that allows up to four people to hold a videoconference.
Apple unleashes Safari 'turbo' browser
At Macworld in San Francisco, CEO Steve Jobs unveils a new browser called Safari that he claims is three times faster than Internet Explorer on a Mac.
The Leopard with a Time Machine
Apple Computer's vice president of platform experience, Scott Forstall, demonstrates the company's new application "Time Machine." Users can travel through time by scrolling through different windows that represent days, looking for the file they need. The keynote took place Monday at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference 2006 in San Francisco.
