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Ugreen (绿联) is a Chinese consumer electronics brand owned by Ugreen Group Ltd and based in Shenzhen, Guangdong. [2] [3] The brand and company was established by Zhang Qingsen in 2012, and specialises in USB hardware such as cables and AC adapters, as well as other categories of consumer electronics such as audio equipment and mobile accessories.
In 1984 its Hamlet cable was the first to connect the Apple IIc computer's serial port to Centronics port printers. [23] In the 1990s it prioritized surge protectors and USB -based products. [ 6 ] In 2008, Belkin pivoted toward smartphone usage and designed new products for the smartphone accessory market.
Apple Authorized Service Providers (previously called Apple Specialist Resellers [1]) are independent companies which are certified by Apple Inc., which carry out in-warranty or out-of-warranty repairs of Apple products as part of the company's AppleCare program. [2] Apple provides retailers and repairers with tools, training, and service manuals.
Apple Inc.'s MFi Program, referring to "Made for iPhone/iPod/iPad", is a licensing program for developers of hardware and software peripherals that work with Apple's iPod, iPad and iPhone. The name is a shortened version of the long-form Made for iPod , the original program that ultimately became MFi.
The introduction of the Apple II was a major leap in development for Apple, as the product included a built-in keyboard (a first!), multi-color on-screen graphics, and more.
The mouse supplied was the Apple Mouse known as the Apple Desktop Bus Mouse II (M2706). A slightly updated model, the Color Classic II, featuring the Macintosh LC 550 logic board with a 33 MHz processor, was released in Japan, Canada and some international markets in 1993, sometimes as the Performa 275.
Beige, boring, and a bit too complicated — in the 1990s, personal computers had about as much charisma as an underwhelming date. Enter the iMac G3: the weird, egg-shaped desktop that became an ...
Power Computing Corporation was founded on November 11, 1993 in Milpitas, California, [2] backed by $5 million from Olivetti and $4 million from Kahng. At the MacWorld Expo in January 1995, just days after receiving notice he had the license to clone Macintosh computers, Kahng enlisted Mac veteran Michael Shapiro to help build the company.