APPLE logo WATCH Silver Speidel Strap OpenDoc 1990 Wrist Wristwatch Employee Only Smart Macintosh Works! Time Analog Watch

Fashionable APPLE logo wrist watch keeps time just like your Apple iWatch! Would look FANTASTIC with any attire. Exclusively available for the OpenDoc promotion back in the 1990s. Look like a billionaire Silicon Valley titan!

Features:

APPLE logo WATCH Silver Speidel Strap OpenDoc 1990 Wrist Wristwatch Employee Only Smart Macintosh Works! Time Analog Watch


Clean modern design for office or home. Analog watch face with modern vaporwave aesthetics.


This watch is totally rare. Available only to APPLE employees working on OpenDoc during the 1990s. Extremely rare collectible!!!

From Wikipedia: Apple Watch is a smartwatch created by Apple Inc. and announced by Tim Cook on September 9, 2014. The Apple Watch incorporates fitness tracking and health-oriented capabilities as well as integration with iOS and other Apple products and services. Apple announced the Apple Watch with three "collections" such as the Apple Watch, Apple Watch Edition and Apple Watch Sport. The watch will be distinguished by different combinations of cases and interchangeable bands. The watch relies on a connected iPhone to perform many of its functions and will be compatible with the iPhone 5 or later models running iOS 8.2. The device is available to pre-order on April 10[5] and scheduled to begin shipping April 24, 2015.

OpenDoc was a multi-platform software componentry framework standard for compound documents, intended as an alternative to Microsoft's Object Linking and Embedding (OLE).

The basic idea of OpenDoc was to create small, reusable components, responsible for a specific task, such as text editing, bitmap editing or browsing an FTP server. OpenDoc provided a framework in which these components could run together, and a document format for storing the data created by each component. These documents could then be opened on other machines, where the OpenDoc frameworks would substitute suitable components for each part, even if they were from different vendors.[2] In this way users could "build up" their documents from parts. Since there was no main application and the only visible interface was the document itself, the system was known as document centered.

It was envisioned that OpenDoc would allow smaller, third-party developers to enter the office software market, able to build one good editor instead of having to provide a complete suite.



Shipping:


Feedback:


More:

Check out my stuff for sale on Half.com.

Check out my other auctions!

All content copyright © 2023, bookdude8-half



Powered by eBay Turbo Lister
The free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.