Dell Cpu on sale

A CPU system dell branded, 2.8/512/80
Price:   Ksh12,000.00 and negotiable
Contacts:
  • dremaxy@gmail.com
  • 0727 822710

Additional details
This comes with fully installed softwares
*operating system (windows xp or ubuntu),
*word 2007,
*pdf reader,
*flash player,
*avast antivirus
*vlc music player

plus a cdrom

a product of imarce tech solutions
Location:   Nairobi, Kenya
can be delivered to any 6hour travel destination in Kenya under customer cost.
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Steve Jobs: the five Apple products 'that changed the world'

Steve Jobs, the Apple founder and former CEO who died aged 56, leaves a lasting legacy in the form of his revolutionary inventions. Here are the five core Apple products that changed the face of the technology, music and publishing industries.

Steve Jobs' Apple career: in pictures
Steve Jobs 
iPod
In October 2001 the face of the music industry was changed forever with the launch of a small palm-sized gadget called "the iPod".
The rectangular-shaped portable music device had a central-scroll wheel on the front and a small window for song selection. It could be charged with a "docking station" and songs could be loaded directly onto the music player from a computer.
There had been digital music players before, but the fresh look and simplistic usability put the Apple player in a class of its own among portable music devises.
The first iPod was available in 5GB and 10 GB models and could hold up to 1,000 songs. The name iPod for a personal music player was coined by Apple copywriter Vinnie Chieco who supposedly got the idea after watching the pods in 2001: A space Odyssey.
In pictures: Apple iPod - a history
The second generation of the iPod was launched in 2002 with a touch-sensitive scroll wheel. Throughout 2002, 600,000 iPods were sold and by the end of 2003 iPod sales hit the two million mark.
Apple sold its 100 millionth iPod in April 2007 making it the fastest selling music player in history.
To date there have been several iPod versions released including the nano, shuffle and touch. More than 275 million iPods have been sold around the world.

iTunes

In April 2003, just as the third-generation iPod was released, Apple launched its online music store iTunes with 200,000 songs.
Before iTunes, music executives had failed to be convinced about the success of an online music market. But coupled with Apple's hugely-successful iPod - launched just two years earlier - Steve Jobs proved it was a market worth exploring.
The product was an immediate success selling one million songs in its first week and by December it had sold 25 million songs. In 2010 iTune song downloads hit 10 billion.
There have been several updates of iTunes, the most significant being the introduction of film purchase and rentals in 2008. This week, Apple announced that iTunes will be accessibly across all their devices as part of their move into "cloud" computing.

iPhone

The first iPhone was released in January 2007 to a huge fanfare. The phone catapulted Apple ahead of its smartphone rivals with its multi-touch screen. A year later the iPhone 3G was released and the App Store was launched.
In July this year App Store downloads hit 15 billion with the company having launched App subscriptions just a few months earlier in February.

To date Apple have sold 125 million iPhones around the world (as of August 8, 2011). The telephone is still gaining popularity with avid Blackberry-user Barack Obama, the US president, even suggesting he may switch to the iPhone.
Yesterday Apple launched the iPhone 4S with its voice-control function Siri, which promises to revolutionise the way people use their phones (again).
Video: Apple iPhone 4S revealed

Mac

In front of thousands of laughing delegates, a tuxedo-clad Steve Jobs unveiled the first Macintosh computer in January 1984. It started as a small white box in a bag and evolved into the waffer-thin machine it is today.
A year later he was interviewed in Playboy explaining "something called a mouse".
The Mac evolved into two main types of Apple computer; the iMac and MacBook. There are now nearly 60 million Mac users around the world.

iPad

The iPad - a Mac/ iPhone hybrid - was released in 2010. Although still in its relatively early years, the iPad has been a great success; maintaining its market presence where other tablet computers have faltered.
The availability of Apps on the device has been a particular success with many newspapers and magazines having launched versions of their publications for the device. The portable tablet is currently teetering on revolutionising the publishing industry.
To date there have been two iPad versions with 28 million units sold worldwide (as of June 6, 2011).

By Amy on telegraph.com posted by Daves Solomon

Steve Jobs ‘single-handedly’ created the digital music market

Steve Jobs, the founder and former CEO of Apple who died aged 56, has been praised for revolutionising the music industry and bringing it into the digital age.

Steve Jobs' Apple career: in pictures
 
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Steve Jobs 
Steve Jobs, the Apple founder and former CEO, has died at the age of 56 after a long battle with cancer
 
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Apple founder and former CEO Steve Jobs Photo: EPA/GETTY IMAGES
Steve Jobs: visionary Apple founder dies after cancer battle
 
On the day of his death, music industry and technology analysts have praised the way Jobs managed to create iTunes in 2003, saying he dragged the record labels into the web age.
Mark Mulligan, digital music expert and former senior Forrester analyst, said: “Steve Jobs single-handedly pulled the music industry into the digital age. Until he created iTunes, there was no legal digital music service which was fit for purpose.
“When Jobs convinced the record labels to put their collections in his store online – it change everything. Up until that point, if you bought a track online, you could only access it on the PC you had bought it on – something inconceivable nowadays…Without Jobs’s intervention the digital music market would not be where it is today.”
In April 2003, just as the third-generation iPod was released, Apple launched iTunes with 200,000 songs.
Before iTunes, music executives had failed to be convinced about the success of an online music market. But coupled with Apple's hugely-successful iPod - launched just two years earlier - Steve Jobs proved it was a market worth exploring.
 
The product was an immediate success selling one million songs in its first week and by December it had sold 25 million songs. In 2010 iTunes song downloads hit 10 billion.
There have been several updates of iTunes, the most significant being the introduction of film purchase and rentals in 2008. This week, Apple announced that iTunes will be accessible across all their devices as part of their move into "cloud" computing.
Daniel Ek, Spotify’s founder and chief executive, (another digital music service which has been highly praised for disrupting the existing model with its streaming offering), tweeted this morning; “Thank you Steve. You were a true inspiration in so many parts of my life, both personal and professional. My hat off to our time's Da Vinci.”
Musician and technology PR, Christian Ward, tweeted that Jobs’s music intervention had “sped up the demise of an industry, but created a lifestyle from the ashes”.
Moreover, in a 2009 edition of Fortune Magazine, Jimmy Iovine, founder and chairman of Interscope Records, said: “Whatever anyone says about Apple, if it wasn’t for Steve Jobs there would be no legitimate music online.”
However, Mulligan thinks Apple’s love affair with music has started to wane, as the record labels have been increasingly difficult to work with.
“Apple is not in the business of selling content – its focus is selling devices. It doesn’t get the best return of investment from music and the labels are tough to deal with. Consequently, it has found other pieces of content, such as apps, videos and games, which have become better tools to market its latest devices on. I suspect the music industry’s window of opportunity with Apple has closed.”

By Emma Barnett, posted by Daves Solomon

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