Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Apple User Group Connection (AUGC) was established in 1985 by Apple and led by Apple employee Ellen Petry Leanse. AUGC was formed in response to concerns from users in community user groups that, with release of the Macintosh, development for existing Apple II and Apple III computers was compromised. The idea was for Apple to share ...
NASA's Dave Lavery, through his work with Apple User Groups within NASA and the Jet Propulsion Lab, was an active influencer of the User Group Connection's early progress. The early days of Leanse's role aligned her with Apple's passionate user group community and gave her an eye-opening window into a new world: the early roots of the World ...
Apple User Group Connection; AppleWorks User Group; B. Berkeley Macintosh Users Group; D. DUsers; M. Macintosh User Group This page was last edited on 6 April 2019 ...
The Apple community consists of the users, ... (MUGs) are groups of Macintosh users, that started after the 1985 creation of the Apple User Group Connection (AUGC).
Wozniak and Macintosh system software designer Andy Hertzfeld at an Apple User Group Connection meeting in 1985. Starting in the mid-1980s, as the Macintosh experienced slow but steady growth, Apple's corporate leadership, including Steve Jobs, increasingly disrespected its flagship cash cow Apple II series—and Wozniak along with it.
Users' groups may be organized around a particular brand of hardware (e.g., Mac), software and operating systems (e.g. Linux), or more rarely may be dedicated to retro systems (e.g., Apple II). An example of an early user group is the Apple User Group Connection.
A social media user said she filmed several drones hovering over Fairfield, Connecticut, on Thursday, Dec. 12. Drones Spotted Across Northeast Likely Coming From 'Inside The Us,' Military Expert Says.
A Macintosh User Group (MUG) is a users' group of people who use Macintosh computers made by Apple Inc. or other manufacturers and who use the Macintosh operating system (OS). These groups are primarily locally situated and meet regularly to discuss Macintosh computers, the Mac OS, software and peripherals that work with these computers.