Pages is a word processor and page layout application developed by Apple Computer and a part of the iWork productivity suite sold by Apple for dollar|US$" target="_blank" >*79 in North America (£55 GBP in United Kingdom, €79 in Ireland). Pages 1.0 was announced at the beginning of 2005 and started selling in February 2005. As with most of Apple's other recent software, Pages runs on Mac OS X only. Pages 2, part of iWork '06 was introduced at the 2006 MacWorld Expo.
History
Pages on Mac OS X is the successor of Apple's multipurpose office suite AppleWorks. The first rumors of a new Apple word processor to replace AppleWorks circulated the Internet through Mac rumor websites in 2003, suggesting a new software package to be released by Apple called "iWorks" or "iWork". Many Mac users were expecting the new program (which rumor sites then claimed would be called "Documents") in 2004 after reading the rumors. Steve Jobs, Apple CEO finally announced iWork '05 along with iLife '05 at the beginning of 2005.
There was a program of the same name made for NeXT computers by Pages Software, Inc., including similar WYSIWYG page layout features as Pages for Mac OS X. Since Apple acquired NeXT in 1997, this has led to suggestions that these programs are based on the same codebase. Apple has not commented on this issue. However, since Pages Software's NeXTSTEP assets seem to have been acquired by a Chicago-based IT solutions company, this speculation appears to be unfounded. It is known that Pages for OS X was developed by the same team that developed Keynote 2, a presentation program included in iWork.
Good news on the Dell netbook front Fri, 05 Sep 2008 18:47:52 -0700 Just a quick update now that I have a minute to sit down tonight. I heard from my Dell rep this afternoon that, although it's not available on the Dell K-12 education pages, the Inspiron Mini 9 is available to all education customers in quantity. Here's... The Linux laptop goes to school Fri, 05 Sep 2008 18:45:28 -0700 This is not a PC you load with additional hardware, or much additional software. This is more like a cell phone, something you toss in your backpack and use on-the-run. by Dana Blankenhorn Yes, we know it's a problem. No, we have no budget. Fri, 05 Sep 2008 14:13:44 -0700 A survey by data center infrastructure company Voltaire indicates that while a vast majority of data center professionals believe that running a green data center will become a mission-critical agenda item, they haven't set aside the money to support it. Close to 90 percent of the executives... Possible AMD Q4/08 desktop processor roadmap surfaces Fri, 05 Sep 2008 10:46:19 -0700 CHW.net has published what seems to be on the face of it a convincing looking AMD Q4 08 processor roadmap that gives us a glimpse into what AMD has in-store for us over the coming months. by Adrian Kingsley-Hughes Red Hat buys Qumranet, adds gasoline to the spreading VDI bonfire Fri, 05 Sep 2008 07:56:36 -0700 VDI, somewhat ironically, may also work well for market mover Microsoft as it seeks to slow the momentum to outright web-based and OSS/LAMP-supported applications and services for large businesses. Microsoft must realize that enterprises have had it with the high cost of maintaining and managing the traditional Windows OS in... Microsoft exec rebuts hypervisor security claims Fri, 05 Sep 2008 07:28:40 -0700 Microsoft security strategist Steve Riley has answered claims that the company's hypervisor software could be maliciously replaced on PCs without administrators knowing. SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA--Senior Microsoft security strategist Steve Riley has used the vendor's TechEd conference in Sydney to rebut claims by a Polish researcher that Microsoft's hypervisor software could...
Mel McGee's Wearable Site - describes a wearable based on a small off-the-shelf Pentium PC and self-developed software for e.g. sales force support.
TechWearable - Brian Rudy describes his self-made wearable with lots of photos.
WearComp.org - Steve Mann's somewhat chaotic personal page features his books and articles on the topic, wearable cameras, pictures from his worn camera, a movie and links to other wearables sites.
Wearwulf Project - Duncan Entwisle provides a complete hardware description on how he intends to build a wearable for less than $200.
Meta Description: [ Duncan Entwisle's Homepage ]
Making a bun without the use of hair accessories. Visit my personal hair page: http://jjjlonghairphotopage.zoomshare.com ...