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Other products include cider vinegar, (hard) cider, apple wine, apple brandy, and apple jack. The traditional cider press is a ram press. Apples are ground up and placed in a cylinder, and a piston exerts pressure. The cylinder and/or piston in a traditional cider press is designed to allow the juice to escape while retaining the solid matter.
Apple pressings. After the apples have been ground into pomace, the pomace must be squeezed to extract the juice. This is done in a device called a cider press, which like the cider mill, takes various forms. [13] One form is a large horse-operated lever press or screw press.
Apple Style Guide, published online by Apple Inc. [13] Provides editorial guidelines for text in Apple instructional publications, technical documentation, reference information, training programs, and the software user interface. An earlier version was the Apple Publications Style Guide. [14]
Apple Comics, also known as Apple Press, was an American comic book publisher which operated from 1986 to 1994. Founded by Michael Catron, it began by taking over the publishing elements of comic production from WaRP Graphics before expanding into its own titles while WaRP resumed publishing its own titles.
An Apple II computer with an external modem. The Apple II (stylized as apple ][) is a personal computer released by Apple Inc. in June 1977. It was one of the first successful mass-produced microcomputer products and is widely regarded as one of the most important personal computers of all time due to its role in popularizing home computing and influencing later software development.
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Here's how to enable Family Sharing on your iPhone: Open your Settings app. Tap your name. Go to Family Sharing . Set Up Your Family. Press Continue. Select family members that you want to invite ...
The Byte Works, founded and run by Mike Westerfield, was a key player in the history of developer tools for Apple II computers. Its first product, the ORCA/M assembler (Object Relocatable Code Assembler for Microcomputers, and also MACRO spelled backwards), developed jointly by Westerfield and Phil Montoya, was a powerful assembly language development environment, complete with a Unix-style ...