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It was used not only in conjunction with the logo, but also in manuals and ads and to label products with model names. Apple has not released the true Apple Garamond font. ITC briefly sold ITC Garamond Narrow—Apple Garamond without the custom hinting—as part of its Apple Font Pack in the 1990s.
Apple Garamond (1983), designed to replace Motter Tektura in the Apple logo. Not included on Macs in a user-available form. New York (1984, by Susan Kare), a serif font. Toronto (1984, Susan Kare) Athens (1984, Susan Kare), slab serif. Hoefler Text (1991, Jonathan Hoefler), still included with every Mac. Four-member family with an ornament font.
Apple's "Think different" logo "Think different" is an advertising slogan used from 1997 to 2002 by Apple Computer, Inc., now named Apple Inc. The campaign was created by the Los Angeles office of advertising agency TBWA\Chiat\Day. [1] The slogan has been widely taken as a response to the IBM slogan "Think".
San Francisco (also known as SF Pro) is a neo-grotesque typeface made by Apple Inc. It was first released to developers on November 18, 2014. [1] [2] It is the first new typeface designed at Apple in nearly twenty years and has been inspired by Helvetica and DIN.
This image or logo only consists of typefaces, individual words, slogans, or simple geometric shapes. These are not eligible for copyright alone because they are not original enough, and thus the logo is considered to be in the public domain. See Wikipedia:Public domain § Fonts or Wikipedia:Restricted materials for more information.
There was a template on that photo said it was a logo that should be vectorized, so I vectorized it. Here is the version, its not exactly like the original, but pretty close. This is my first upload of a picture so if I did it wrong, please change it. Thanks. Date: 31 January 2011, 19:46 (UTC) Source: Apple logo Think Different.png; Images used:
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Apple's Developer CD Series of the 1980s features a dogcow logo on the discs. [7] The latest references to the dogcow came in the documentation for the Swift programming language, which uses the word "dogcow" as an example of the use of Unicode characters to name constants and variables; [8] and in a sticker pack in Messages. [9]