Yep, Apple Records. Actually, it was founded by Paul Macarthney (however
you spell it) and John Lenon, the Beatles. Their idea was to have people
coming in, and doing what they wanted, getting profits for their records,
and not having to go beg the brass at some corporation. They lost more and
more money, into the 80's, when they were "eaten up" by Capitol records.
The Beatles CD's available now from capitol still feature the Apple logo
(not Apple Computer), and the CD's also have it.
Ciao,
Tim D. Hotze
-----Original Message-----
From: SUPRDAVE <SUPRDAVE(a)aol.com>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Thursday, April 30, 1998 4:10 PM
Subject: Re: The PC's Soviet?
In a message dated 98-04-30 00:39:32 EDT, you write:
<< Heck, wasn't the name "Apple" licensed from the British record
company
of
the same name (Apple the computer company could use
the name as long as
they didn't get into the music business. . .which made things get
interesting when people started doing MIDI stuff with Macs . . .)
>
yea, wasnt it the beatles who had something called apple records or
something
like that? i remember reading somewhere sometime long
ago about the
legalities
of it. obviously, apple records got precedence because
they were there
first.
did apple computer ever have to pay money for the
resolution?
david