Open Apple
A podcast by Mike Maginnis & Quinn Dunki
Categories:
95 Episodes
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Open Apple #29 (July 2013): Mike Willegal, Apple-1, cons, and films
Published: 7/4/2013 -
Open Apple #28 (June 2013): Lon Seidman, BBSs, Steve Wozniak, and documentaries
Published: 6/5/2013 -
Open Apple #27 (May 2013): Daniel Kruszyna, demoparties, iSteve, and clones
Published: 5/8/2013 -
Open Apple #26 (Apr 2013): Earl Evans, Z80, Zephyr, and LucasArts
Published: 4/15/2013 -
Open Apple #25 (Mar 2013): Egan Ford, 8088, Voyager, and abandonware
Published: 3/12/2013 -
Open Apple #24 (Feb 2013): Jimmy Maher, book publishing, jOBS, and C64
Published: 2/8/2013 -
Open Apple #23 (Jan 2013): 2012 year-end roundtable
Published: 1/2/2013 -
Open Apple #22 (Dec 2012): Kay Savetz, 10 PRINT, Polaroids, and Microzine
Published: 12/7/2012 -
Open Apple #21 (Nov 2012): Geoff Weiss, SIS, Apple-1 auctions, and Web hosting
Published: 11/12/2012 -
Open Apple #20 (Oct 2012): Ewen Wannop, Spectrum, the next Apple II, and Mac Mini
Published: 10/11/2012 -
Open Apple #19 (Sep 2012): David Schmidt, iOS games, Apple III, and IMSAI
Published: 9/3/2012 -
Open Apple #18 (August 2012): Wayne Arthurton, Paul Hagstrom, Jeremy Rand, and KansasFest
Published: 8/14/2012 -
Open Apple #17 (July 2012): Rich Dreher, Apple-1, Atari, and Robert Tripp
Published: 7/8/2012 -
Open Apple #16 (Jun 2012): Martin Haye, demoparty, Leisure Suit Larry, and clones
Published: 6/4/2012 -
Open Apple #15 (May 2012): David Finnigan, new books, CRPGs, and prototypes
Published: 5/7/2012 -
Talking with Brutal Deluxe
Published: 4/30/2012 -
Open Apple #14 (Apr 2012): Brian Picchi, GameFest, Prince of Persia, and gadgets
Published: 4/5/2012 -
Open Apple #13 (Mar 2012): Andrew Roughan, Marinetti, Karateka, and e-books
Published: 3/7/2012 -
Open Apple #12 (Feb 2012): Michael J Mahon, chiptune, source code, and demodulation
Published: 2/6/2012 -
Open Apple #11 (Jan 2012): David Greelish, Steve Weyhrich, John Sculley, and Steve Jobs
Published: 1/11/2012
Welcome to the Open Apple podcast, where we share news and memories of the Apple II, Steve Wozniak's most famous personal computer.