6 votes The deal of the century (or, the alliance of losers) Posted February 10, 2020 by rkcr Tags: apple, history, ibm, long read https://www.filfre.net/2020/02/the-deal-of-the-century-or-the-alliance-of-losers/ Link information This data is scraped automatically and may be incorrect. Authors Jimmy Maher Published Feb 7 2020 Word count 7962 words 3 comments Collapse replies Expand all Comments sorted by most votes newest first order posted relevance OK [2] rkcr (OP) February 10, 2020 Link An interesting story about a time when Apple and IBM teamed up in the early 90s. An interesting story about a time when Apple and IBM teamed up in the early 90s. 3 votes joelthelion February 10, 2020 Link Parent Very nice article. Thanks for posting! Very nice article. Thanks for posting! joplin February 11, 2020 Link I so miss both PowerPC and Motorola68k processors. They were so much more elegant than Intel chips. It's too bad they let those lines essentially die. I so miss both PowerPC and Motorola68k processors. They were so much more elegant than Intel chips. It's too bad they let those lines essentially die.
[2] rkcr (OP) February 10, 2020 Link An interesting story about a time when Apple and IBM teamed up in the early 90s. An interesting story about a time when Apple and IBM teamed up in the early 90s. 3 votes joelthelion February 10, 2020 Link Parent Very nice article. Thanks for posting! Very nice article. Thanks for posting!
joelthelion February 10, 2020 Link Parent Very nice article. Thanks for posting! Very nice article. Thanks for posting!
joplin February 11, 2020 Link I so miss both PowerPC and Motorola68k processors. They were so much more elegant than Intel chips. It's too bad they let those lines essentially die. I so miss both PowerPC and Motorola68k processors. They were so much more elegant than Intel chips. It's too bad they let those lines essentially die.
An interesting story about a time when Apple and IBM teamed up in the early 90s.
Very nice article. Thanks for posting!
I so miss both PowerPC and Motorola68k processors. They were so much more elegant than Intel chips. It's too bad they let those lines essentially die.