- Steve Jobs
Steven Paul Jobs (born February 24 1955) is the co-founder and CEO of Apple and was the CEO of Pixar until its acquisition by Disney. He is currently the largest Disney shareholder and a member of Disney's Board of Directors. He is considered a leading figure in both the computer and entertainment industries. Jobs' history in business has contributed greatly to the mythos of the quirky, individualistic Silicon Valley entrepreneur, … - Henry MacIntosh
Henry Maitland Macintosh (June 10, 1892, Kelso - July 26, 1918) was a Scottish athlete, winner of gold medal in 4x100 m relay at the 1912 Summer Olympics. Macintosh was educated at Glenalmond College and Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. At the Stockholm Olympics, Henry Macintosh was eliminated in the first round of 100 m and did not finish in the semifinal of 200 m. As the Second leg in the British 4x100 m relay team, he won a gold medal, … - Kenneth MacIntosh
Kenneth Macintosh (born 15 January 1962) is a politician in Scotland. He is a member of the Labour party, and is currently MSP for the Eastwood constituency. He was first elected in the 1999 Scottish Parliament election and retained his seat in the 2003 and the 2007 election. Macintosh was born in Inverness and was educated at the Royal High School and the University of Edinburgh. Before entering the Scottish Parliament he was a television producer for BBC News. - Mike MacIntosh
Mike MacIntosh (born 1944) is the senior pastor of Horizon Christian Fellowship in San Diego, California and is a Christian leader in the United States. MacIntosh left the drug scene of the 1960s and got involved with Calvary Chapel. He then went on to pastor Horizon Christian Fellowship, a Calvary Chapel affiliate, in the 1970s. - Laird MacIntosh
Laird Macintosh is an American actor (born in Evanston, Illinois). He is best known as the host of the NBC reality television program "Treasure Hunters". - Charles MacIntosh
Charles Macintosh (December 29, 1766-July 25, 1843) was a Scottish chemist and inventor of waterproof fabrics. The Mackintosh raincoat is named after him. Macintosh was born in Glasgow, where he was first employed as a clerk. He devoted all his spare time to science, particularly chemistry, and before he was twenty resigned his clerkship to take up the manufacture of chemicals. In this he was highly successful, inventing various new processes. - Tammy MacIntosh
- Iain MacIntosh
Iain Macintosh is an English freelance journalist. He writes the controversial 'The Voice' Column for The New Paper in Singapore. Though he has built up a considerable fanbase in Singapore, the colourful nature of his writing often offends readers. In 2007 wished all football fans, except Chelsea supporters, a happy New Year and once compared Jerzy Dudek to a terminally ill dog. Macintosh is known to be a Southend United fan, and often writes interesting, … - Hugh MacIntosh
Hugh "Apples" MacIntosh (or "McIntosh") (1927 - 6 November 1997) was a close associate of Colombo crime family boss Carmine Persico. - Craig MacIntosh
Craig MacIntosh is an American cartoonist who, along with Steve Sack, draws the cartoon activity panel Doodles, which began in 1986 and is distributed by Creators Syndicate. MacIntosh also works on the comic strip Sally Forth and worked as an editorial cartoonist for the Minneapolis Star Tribune until 1992. Craig MacIntosh was born in Long Beach, California. in 1943. He grew up in a Navy family and lived on both coasts as a child and considers Honolulu his hometown. - Ewen MacIntosh
Ewen Macintosh (born 25 December, 1973) is an English actor. He is best-known for the role of Keith in the original UK television production of "The Office" (although interestingly his name was mis-spelled 'Ewan' Macintosh in the show's credits). He has also appeared in "Little Britain" and the Channel 4 series "California Dreaming". He is a keen poker player and has even beaten legendary English poker player Dave "The Devilfish" Ulliott. - Jef Raskin
Jef Raskin (March 9, 1943-February 26, 2005) was an American human-computer interface expert best-known for starting the Macintosh project for Apple Computer in the late 1970s. - Andy Hertzfeld
Andy Hertzfeld (born April 6, 1953) was a key member of the original Apple Macintosh development team during the 1980s. After buying an Apple II in January 1978, he went to work for Apple Computer from August 1979 until March 1984, where he was a key designer of the Macintosh system software. Since leaving Apple, he has co-founded three companies: Radius in 1986, General Magic in 1990 and Eazel in 1999. Hertzfeld joined Google in 2005 and has been working there since. - Steve Capps
Steve Capps is a computer programmer and engineer who is best known for his work on the Apple Inc. Macintosh computer and Newton OS during the 1980s and 1990s. He started working at the Xerox Corporation while still a computer science student at the Rochester Institute of Technology. In 1981, Capps started working for Apple on the Lisa project and he continued his work on the Macintosh, principally writing the Finder and Macintosh system utilities. - Gisele Bündchen
Gisele Caroline Nonnenmacher Bündchen is a Brazilian supermodel who is constantly acclaimed as the most famous and the highest-paid model in the world. Since her introduction onto the fashion scene in the '90s she has appeared in countless billboards and magazine covers, as well as numerous TV and print ads. Bundchen is currently the face of more than 20 brands from different countries such as United States, Russia, Brazil, Italy, France, Mexico, Spain, Turkey, … - Justin Long
Justin Jake Long (born June 2 1978) is an American actor, best known for his performances in the films "Jeepers Creepers", "Waiting...", "Accepted", "Dodgeball", "Live Free or Die Hard", the TV series "Ed" and his personification of a Macintosh computer in Apple's 2006/2007 "Get a Mac" advertisement campaign. - David Pogue
David Pogue is a technology writer, journalist and commentator. He is a personal technology columnist for the "New York Times" an Emmy-winning tech correspondent for "CBS News Sunday Morning", and tech guest reporter for NPR's "Morning Edition." He has written or co-written seven books in the "...for Dummies" series (including Macintosh computers, magic, opera, and classical music); in 1999, he launched his own series of computer how-to books, … - Arctic Hospital
Arctic Hospital (Eric Patterson Bray born January 11, 1978 in Madison, Wisconsin) is an American DJ and record producer. He began DJing industrial and EBM at age 14, and began producing urban techno on a Macintosh using the software sequencer Logic when he was 17. In 2004, Eric Bray received his big break when Narita Records owner Gabe Koch saw him open for seminal techno DJ John Digweed and immediately signed him to his record label. - Glenn Wichman
Glenn R. Wichman (born in 1960 in Bay City, Michigan) is a software developer who is best known as one of the original authors of the computer game "Rogue", along with Michael Toy, Ken Arnold and Jon Lane. Mr. Wichman has also contributed to many other commercial software programs, including Microsoft Bookshelf, Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing and Quicken. He is the creator of the Macintosh shareware games "Toxic Ravine" and "Mombasa" - Phill Niblock
Phill Niblock (born 2 October 1933, in Anderson, Indiana) is a minimalist composer, filmmaker, videographer, and director of Experimental Intermedia, a foundation for avant-garde music based in New York with a parallel brach in Ghent, Belgium. After an early period studying economics, Niblock came to New York in 1958. Initially he worked as a photographer and filmmaker; his first musical compositions date from 1968. - Robin Casady
Robin Casady founded Casady & Greene, a Macintosh software publisher and developer, in 1984 to publish fonts for the Macintosh 128K, the original Macintosh. After the closure of Casady & Greene, Casady worked with Mike Wright on updating and publishing the iData freeform database. Robin Casady is also involved in design and mfg. of high-end amateur astronomy gear, and pursuing a life-long hobby in fine arts photography. His personal web page is RobinCasady.com. - Michael Jantze
Michael Jantze is an American comic strip writer, best known as the author of "The Norm", a comic strip syndicated internationally to newspapers. Born in 1962 in Middletown, New York, he grew up in Normal, Illinois. He attended Goshen College and California State University, Northridge, then worked as an art director, first in newsrooms and then at ILM, while working on his strip. He now lives in San Anselmo, California. - Nick Baines
Nicholas Matthew "Peanut" Baines is the keyboardist of the English indie-rock band Kaiser Chiefs, and has been described as quiet and sensitive. Prior to and during the promotional period following the release of the album Employment, Peanut was never seen "on-duty" without his distinctive hat, but has chosen to discard it following the release of Yours Truly, Angry Mob. - Steve Linford
Steve Linford is a British anti-spam activist best known for founding The Spamhaus Project. Linford was born in England. His parents moved to Rome where his father ran an industrial platinum factory. After dropping out of photography school, Steve purchased a motor home shipped over from the US, parked it on beaches around the Mediterranean, and made his living writing music and playing guitar in clubs. When artists such as Pink Floyd and Michael Jackson toured Italy, … - Michael Weikath
Michael Ingo Joachim Weikath is the guitarist of the Power metal band called Helloween. He was born on August 7, 1962 in Hamburg, Germany. His name is a reference for the term melodic metal or power metal, since he contributed much to the innovations that occurred in the heavy metal sound in the beginning of the 1980s. "Weiki" is one of the Helloween founding members, and along with the musicians Kai Hansen (vocals/guitars), … - Stieg Hedlund
Stieg Hedlund (born 1965 in Portland, Oregon) is a computer and video game designer, artist, writer, game producer and level designer. Although he is probably best known for his work in action RPGs, he also has contributed iconic games to each of the real-time strategy, tactical shooter, beat-'em-up and action-adventure genres. As design director at Perpetual Entertainment, he now works on the MMORPG "Gods & Heroes" slated to release in the summer of 2007. - Robert Woodhead
Robert J. Woodhead is a entrepreneur, software engineer and former game programmer. Some would says a common thread in his career is "doing weird things with computers". Along with Andrew C. Greenberg, he created the Apple II game "Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord", one of the first role-playing games (RPGs) written for a personal computer. Later, he authored Interferon and Virex, two of the earliest anti-virus applications for the Macintosh, … - Patrick Delahanty
Patrick Delahanty (born March 6 1973 in Lewiston, Maine) is best known as the creator of the infamous web site known as The Chibi Project where he is responsible for conducting hideous, violent acts upon unsuspecting little toys. Patrick is also the webmaster of AnimeCons.com, a growing web site specializing in anime convention information. He is also a highly visible and award-winning cosplayer and anime music video creator. - Nicola Pellow
Nicola Pellow was a member of the "WWW Project" at CERN, working with Tim Berners-Lee. She joined the project in November 1990, while an undergraduate maths student at Leicester Polytechnic (now De Montfort University). Almost immediately after Berners-Lee completed the WorldWideWeb browser for the NeXT platform, Pellow wrote a generic Line-mode browser called WWW that could run on non-NeXT systems. The WWW team ported the browser to a range of computers, from Unix to Microsoft DOS, … - Jerry Manock
Jerry Manock is an industrial designer, known for creating the enclosures of the Apple II and Macintosh personal computers. Manock worked for Apple Computer from 1977 to 1984, contributing to the case design of the Apple II, Apple III, and Macintosh. Manock was a Stanford graduate and design consultant when he joined Apple. Today, he teaches product design at the University of Vermont.* - Aaron Hillegass
Aaron Hillegass (born 1969) is the author of "Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X", the most popular introductory text for Cocoa developers, and the proprietor of the Big Nerd Ranch, a provider of Macintosh software developer training. After working with the NEXTSTEP operating system as a university graduate, he developed NEXTSTEP application software for Wall Street. This led to teaching others how to develop software for NEXTSTEP and a job at NeXT. - Graham Robertson
Graham Robertson is an American filmmaker and author. A native of Denver, Colorado, Robertson studied film at the College of Santa Fe in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Shortly thereafter, he found his way into the motion picture industry via set decoration and the art department working on numerous television series and feature films. In 2000, Robertson, along with co-creator Philip Stark unleased a viral internet spoof, … - Kinuyo Yamashita
(born December 31) is a Japanese video game music composer and sound producer born in Amagasaki, Hyōgo. Her most famous work is Konami's "Castlevania", which she composed shortly after graduating from college, for the Nintendo Entertainment System (Famicom Disk System in Japan). All of the credits for the Western versions were fictional, and notably included misspellings of Bela Lugosi and Bram Stoker, the original author of Dracula. - Bud Tribble
Guy L. "Bud" Tribble, MD, PhD, is Vice President of Software Technology at Apple Inc. Tribble served as the manager of the original Macintosh software development team where he helped to design the Mac® OS and user interface. He was among the founders of NeXT computer, serving as NeXT's vice president of software development. - Aaron Giles
Aaron Giles is an American software engineer and Macintosh software emulation pioneer. Giles graduated from the University of Chicago in 1992. He is currently the lead maintainer of the MAME project. Giles initiated and was the lead programmer for Connectix Virtual Game Station, a commercial Sony PlayStation emulator for the Macintosh. - Jin Katagiri
is a comedian, actor, sculptor, and potter born on 1973-11-27 in Saitama Prefecture, Japan. He graduated from Kasukabe High School and Tama Art University. He is most well known in the United States for playing the PC (opposite Kentarō Kobayashi who plays the Mac) in the "Get A Mac" advertising campaign in Japan. He is a member of the Rahmens owarai comedy duo. - Danny Goodman
Danny Goodman is a computer programmer, technology consultant, and a well known award-winning author of over three dozen books and hundreds of magazine articles on computer-related topics. He is best known as the author of "The Complete Hypercard Handbook" (1987, Bantam Books, 650,000 copies in print), "The JavaScript Bible" (1996, IDG Books, 500,000 copies in print), and "Dynamic HTML" (1998, O'Reilly & Associates, 100,000 copies in print). - Eagle Berns
Eagle Berns (September 19, 2004) worked for over thirty-five years in the computer software industry at Apple Computer, Oracle Corporation, and Software Publishing Corporation (SPC). During his tenure at those companies he established a reputation for forming strong R&D teams, and focusing their energies on producing high quality software products in a timely fashion. After obtaining his BS and MS in computer Science at Washington University, … - John MacIntosh
- Jay MacIntosh
Had 3 children, 1 daughter (Tracy) and 2 sons (Craig and Blake) with her late husband, Darrell William MacIntyre.
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