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  • A shop assistant carries three boxes of Toshiba T1000 Portable Personal Computer laptops in an electronics and tech shop on the Tottenham Court Road, on 3rd March 1990, in London, England. The T1000 was a portable computer manufactured by the Toshiba Corporation from 1987. It had a similar specification to the IBM PC Convertible, with a 4.77 MHz 80C88 processor, 512 kB of RAM, and a monochrome CGA-compatible LCD. Unlike the Convertible, it includes a standard serial port and parallel port, connectors for an external monitor, and a real-time clock.
    toshiba_shop-03-03-1990.jpg
  • A woman employee works at a computer at Allen-Bradley Automation in Milton Keynes, England UK. The factory worker wears blue company overalls and types on the keyboard and a computer that has an industrial screen filter. A variety of electronics equipment is seen in the background. Allen-Bradley is the brand-name of a line of Factory Automation Equipment manufactured by Rockwell Automation (NYSE ROK). The company was initially founded as the Compression Rheostat Company by Dr. Stanton Allen and Lynde Bradley with an initial investment of $1,000 in 1903.
    90s_electronics-20-09-1994.jpg
  • A detail of a first generation (2006) Apple MacPro 4,1 computer on/off power and standby switch. The power symbol is clearly defined on the button, seen universally on all electronic devices and products. The design is also known as IEC 5009.
    mac_detail02-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail of a first generation (2006) Apple MacPro 4,1 computer on/off power and standby switch. The power symbol is clearly defined on the button, seen universally on all electronic devices and products. The design is also known as IEC 5009.
    mac_detail01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of Apple's Mail icon.
    mail_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of the Skype icon.
    skype_icon02-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of Google's Chrome browser icon.
    chrome_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of the Google UK icon.
    google_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of the Google UK icon.
    google_icon02-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from a computer screen of the Skype icon.
    skype_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • An analyst for the Enron Corporation, the American energy company based in Houston, Texas, stares transfixed into two computer monitors in the London office at Grosvenor Place, opposite the Queen's official residence, Buckingham Palace. Two Cross of St George flags perch to the tops of the screens. Informal dress was practised in this Enron company building before its eventual bankruptcy in late 2001, Enron employed around 21,000 people  and was one of the world's leading electricity, natural gas, pulp and paper, and communications companies, with claimed revenues of $111 billion in 2000. Fortune named Enron "America's Most Innovative Company" but has since become a popular symbol of willful corporate fraud and corruption.
    RB-0063.jpg
  • A 1990s banker speaks on the phone and in front of his computer, on the trading floor of credit Lyonnais in the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 20th May 1993, in London, England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    90s_bank-20-05-1993.jpg
  • Seen from a position on Southwark Bridge, we look westwards to see an office worker communicating on the telephone while referring to some paperwork. His computer monitor is on the desk next to him and beyond on the south bank, the evening sky is going purple and another office tower block's lights are on and the water of the River Thames is coloured blue. We see the office as a box, a work place where people are often separated from others by walls and partitions, creating an isolating work environment.
    RB-0040.jpg
  • An interior of office desks and 90s computers in the trading floor of Barclays de Zoete Wedd in the City of London, the capital's financial centre. Screens glow with the most up to date trading figures and news items allowing traders to react instantly on the money markets.  .Employees talk on handsets or stare at their data near large keyboards and hard drives and deep monitors were state of the art technology in the early 1990s.
    trading_floor03-20-04-1993.jpg
  • An interior of office desks and 90s computers in the trading floor of The Chemical Bank in the City of London, the capital's financial centre. Screens glow with the most up to date trading figures and news items allowing traders to react instantly on the money markets. Large keyboards and hard drives and deep monitors were state of the art technology in the early 1990s.
    trading_floor04-20-04-1993.jpg
  • An interior of office desks and 90s computers in the currency trading floor of National Westminster Bank PLC in London
    trading_floor02-20-05-1992.jpg
  • An interior of office desks and 90s computers in the currency trading floor of National Westminster Bank PLC in the City of London, the capital's financial centre. Screens glow with the most up to date trading figures and news items allowing traders to react instantly on the money markets. A lady employee stares at her data near a large keyboard and hard drives and deep monitors were state of the art technology in the early 1990s.
    trading_floor01-20-05-1992.jpg
  • The flight-deck crew of a Sri Lankan Airlines A340-300 series Airbus - registration number 4R-ADE - perform a series of pre-flight checks before a scheduled departure, while on the apron at Malé international airport in the Republic of the Maldives. Featuring electronic instruments it is known as a 'glass cockpit' and using a printed checklist manual, they methodically work through dozens of complex systems that require accurate input before the aircraft is ready for take off. Flight navigation computers, fuel and engine settings and radio frequencies all need programming by the two pilots, the captain on the left and the First Officer on the right. These modern airliners have only two pilots in a modern flight-deck as technology superceeded the need for a third member, the flight-engineers of a previous era of aviation.
    maldives452-15-11-2007.jpg
  • Engineering ground staff of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team, consult technical information on Mod computers.
    Red_Arrows436_RBA.jpg
  • An old 'Dumb Terminal' or desktop video display terminal (VDT) awaits bids during a NASA space junk auction on Merrit Island, Florida - part of a sale of space paraphernalia belonging to NASA enginer Charlie Bell, on 10th March 2003, on Merrit Island, Florida, USA. This was common design theme from the 1970s: a rounded plastic shell that housed a monochrome CRT screen and integrated keyboard. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    NASA_junk02-10-03-2003.jpg
  • Affordable laptops on sale at Dixons Digital shop in departures at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1516-19-08-2009.jpg
  • A police officer from the City of Atlanta checks the identity of a suspect on the police car's database during a night shift.
    atlanta_police-05-11-1995.jpg
  • The launch of Microsoft's Windows 95 operating system software, sold at midnight on 23rd August 1995, in Croydon, London, England.
    windows_95-23-08-1995.jpg
  • A detail from an iPad screen of Apple's Mail icon.
    mail_icon02-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from an iPad screen of the BBC News app icon.
    bbc_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • A detail from an iPad screen of the Facebook icon.
    facebook_icon01-21-01-2014.jpg
  • Monitoring logistics by PC at Sainsbury's 700,000 sq ft distribution warehouse depot at Waltham Point, London
    sainsburys_depot182-09-05-2007.jpg
  • A man works alone at a riverside restaurant on Cankarjevo Nabrezje in the Slovenian capital, Ljubljana, on 25th June 2018, in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
    slovenia-351-25-06-2018.jpg
  • Man uses laptop under trees in a summer park in south London.
    park_laptop01-15-04-2015.jpg
  • Glowing cockpit instrumentation of a Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II stealth fighter. The F-35 Lightning II is a fifth-generation, single-seat, single-engine stealth multi-role fighter that can perform close air support, tactical bombing, and air defence missions. The F-35 is descended from the X-35, the product of the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program. Its development is being principally funded by the United States, with the United Kingdom and other partner governments providing additional funding. It is being designed and built by an aerospace industry team led by Lockheed Martin with Northrop Grumman and BAE Systems as major partners. The F-35's first flight took place on 15 December 2006. The US intends to buy a total of 2,443 aircraft for an estimated US$323 billion, making it the most expensive defense program ever.[
    farnborough_airshow45-21-07-2010.jpg
  • Boeing pilot sits in glass cockpit of the 787 Dreamliner (N787BX) at the Farnborough Airshow. On its first flight outside of the US during its testing programme, the newest airliner in the Boeing aviation family, has arrived at the air show for a few days of exhibitions to the aerospace-buying community and the trade press. Later the public will have the chance to see this jet up close too. The Boeing 787 Dreamliner is a long range, mid-sized, wide-body, twin-engine  jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It seats 210 to 330 passengers, depending on variant. Boeing states that it is the company's most fuel-efficient airliner and the world's first major airliner to use composite materials for most of its construction
    farnborough_airshow88-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • Boeing pilot sits in glass cockpit of the 787 Dreamliner (N787BX) at the Farnborough Airshow.
    farnborough_airshow87-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • Boeing pilot sits in glass cockpit of the 787 Dreamliner (N787BX) at the Farnborough Airshow. On its first flight outside of the US during its testing programme, the newest airliner in the Boeing aviation family, has arrived at the air show for a few days of exhibitions to the aerospace-buying community and the trade press. Later the public will have the chance to see this jet up close too. The Boeing 787 Dreamliner is a long range, mid-sized, wide-body, twin-engine  jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It seats 210 to 330 passengers, depending on variant. Boeing states that it is the company's most fuel-efficient airliner and the world's first major airliner to use composite materials for most of its construction
    farnborough_airshow85-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • From a high vantage point looking across the atrium of British architect Sir Richard Rogers' Lloyds building, we see the zig-zag-shape stripes of escalators, beyond which we see the desks of insurance underwriters at the Lloyd's building, home of the insurance institution Lloyd's of London which is located in Lime Street, in the heart of the City of London. Lloyd's is a British insurance market. It serves as a meeting place where multiple financial backers or "members", whether individuals (traditionally known as "Names") or corporations, come together to pool and spread risk. Unlike most of its competitors in the reinsurance market and is neither a company nor a corporation. The City of London has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000. The City of London is a geographically-small City within Greater London, England. The City as it is known, is the historic core of London from which, along with Westminster, the modern conurbation grew. The City's boundaries have remained constant since the Middle Ages but  it is now only a tiny part of Greater London. The City of London is a major financial centre, often referred to as just the City or as the Square Mile, as it is approximately one square mile (2.6 km) in area. looking across
    RB-0142.jpg
  • An actor plays the part of an office worker, toiling away at a desk-top PC while outside in the courtyard of the Z33 art gallery in Hasselt, Limburg Belgium. The lady artist sits typing at an imaginary work station with jackets hanging on a coat stand and with her area marked out in sand on the gravel. This incongruous scene is played out during the gallery's 'Werk Nu' (Work Now) exhibition that reflected upon the concept and meaning of 'work' in our present society, with issues such as flexibility, mobility, motivation, significance, and the work-life balance are dealt with. The art works in 'Work Now' are direct or ambiguous, whimsical.
    hasselt019-27-06-2009.jpg
  • Real-time flight tracking over US airspace seen at the British Airways' operations centre at their Waterside corporate HQ.
    heathrow_airport1616-20-08-2009.jpg
  • The captain of a Sri Lankan Airlines A340-300 series Airbus prepares his aircraft for departure to Colombo.
    maldives460-15-11-2007.jpg
  • A man tucks in to his in-flight meal on-board an Air France Boeing 777 flight from Paris Orly to Cayenne, French Guiana. Putting more food into his mouth while watching an in-flight movie, the male passenger has an aisle seat on this airliner. We also see on another seat back, the progress of this journey across the Atlantic Ocean towards the mainland of South America, seen on the moving map system screen which reveals statistics such as altitude, airspeed, distance to destination, distance from origination and local time. Using GPS avionics, the capital Cayenne is seen as the destination as well as Caracas, Georgetown, Kingstown and San Juan in the Caribbean. On the viewer's lowered tray is a light lunch of fruit, natural yoghurt, bread roll, orange juice and empty up. This is the best of Economy class.
    esa_guiana02813-08-2007.jpg
  • Three men in decreasing sizes wearing matching grey suits are about to cross a busy street in central London.
    matching_suits02-04-03-2011.jpg
  • Glowing cockpit instrumentation of a Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II stealth fighter. The F-35 Lightning II is a fifth-generation, single-seat, single-engine stealth multi-role fighter that can perform close air support, tactical bombing, and air defence missions. The F-35 is descended from the X-35, the product of the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program. Its development is being principally funded by the United States, with the United Kingdom and other partner governments providing additional funding. It is being designed and built by an aerospace industry team led by Lockheed Martin with Northrop Grumman and BAE Systems as major partners. The F-35's first flight took place on 15 December 2006. The US intends to buy a total of 2,443 aircraft for an estimated US$323 billion, making it the most expensive defense program ever.[
    farnborough_airshow48-21-07-2010.jpg
  • Glowing cockpit instrumentation of a Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II stealth fighter. The F-35 Lightning II is a fifth-generation, single-seat, single-engine stealth multi-role fighter that can perform close air support, tactical bombing, and air defence missions. The F-35 is descended from the X-35, the product of the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program. Its development is being principally funded by the United States, with the United Kingdom and other partner governments providing additional funding. It is being designed and built by an aerospace industry team led by Lockheed Martin with Northrop Grumman and BAE Systems as major partners. The F-35's first flight took place on 15 December 2006. The US intends to buy a total of 2,443 aircraft for an estimated US$323 billion, making it the most expensive defense program ever.[
    farnborough_airshow46-21-07-2010.jpg
  • Boeing pilot sits in glass cockpit of the 787 Dreamliner (N787BX) at the Farnborough Airshow.
    farnborough_airshow86-19-07-2010-1.jpg
  • A pilot logs-on to access flight documents in the British Airways Crew Report Centre at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1041-11-08-2009.jpg
  • iXPLOR moving map technology gives the air traveller real-time geographical positions on an economy class airline seat.
    maldives507-16-11-2007.jpg
  • Girl working in the stationery supplies office of an auditing company at their London headquarters
    ernst+young080-09-08-2007.jpg
  • Two people of east Asian-descent look at Toshiba laptops displayed in a computer specialist in Tottenham Court Road - the centre for technology, gadgets and computing in central London. It is 1990 and the smaller, more portable laptop market is just taking off. The man takes notes on paper, writing prices, technical  specifications and offers for these Japanese-made items. Vying for sales with Toshiba in this particular window is Psion, Epson and Canon - all players in the early 1990s.
    toshiba_buyers-03-03-1990.jpg
  • In Europe's largest currency trading floor at National Westminster Bank, a 1990s female banker works at her computer at  in the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 20th May 1993, in London, England.
    90s_banker-20-05-1993.jpg
  • Receptionists work behind computer screen in a central Lndon art gallery.
    gallery_reception01-12-12-2014.jpg
  • City workers carry office possessions including computer hard drives and files that were damaged by the IRA bomb that devastated the City of London's Bishopsgate area in 1993. Allowed to return to their desks to recover their data and working paperwork, they walk through the ancient streets en route to new emergency office elsewhere in the capital. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged with one and a half million square feet (140,000 m) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Repair costs reached approx £350 million. It was said that Roman remains could be viewed at the bottom of the pit the bomb created. One person was killed when the one ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburga's church.
    bomb_damage02-26-04-1993.jpg
  • Flight Lieutenant Dave Slow of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, is seated in a BAE Systems Hawk jet aircraft simulator at the fast-jet flying training centre, RAF Valley, Anglesey, Wales. Like all fast-jet pilots, Flight Lieutenant Slow is required to complete this emergency drill every six months. The pilot is seated in his ejector seat as if in a real jet using back-projected computer graphics representing a generic landscape below. Each aviator proves they can cope with a series of failures that operators select: Engine, hydraulic failure or bird strike.  Apart from the aircraft fuselage, the high-tech facility loads malfunctions on a pilot that he could experience in reality. The version of Hawk that the Red Arrows fly is actually a primitive piece of equipment, without computers or fly-by-wire technology.
    Red_Arrows043_RBA.jpg
  • Joystick controller at BAE Systems Hawk jet aircraft simulator test a Red Arrows pilot at the fast-jet flying training centre, RAF Valley, Anglesey, Wales. All fast-jet pilots are required to complete an emergency drill every six months. The pilot is seated in his ejector seat as if in a real jet using back-projected computer graphics representing a generic landscape below. Each aviator proves they can cope with a series of failures that operators select: Engine, hydraulic failure or bird strike.  Apart from the aircraft fuselage, the high-tech facility loads malfunctions on a pilot that he could experience in reality. The version of Hawk that the Red Arrows fly is actually a primitive piece of equipment, without computers or fly-by-wire technology.
    Red_Arrows256_RBA.jpg
  • City workers carry office possessions including computer hard drives and files that were damaged by the IRA bomb that devastated the City of London's Bishopsgate area in 1993, on 26th April 1993, in London, England. Allowed to return to their desks to recover their data and working paperwork, they walk through the ancient streets en route to new emergency office elsewhere in the capital. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged with one and a half million square feet (140,000 m) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Repair costs reached approx £350 million. It was said that Roman remains could be viewed at the bottom of the pit the bomb created. One person was killed when the one ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburga's church.
    city14-26-04-1993.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death7-06-10-2011.jpg
  • An Apple fan uses an iPad2 to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death6-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Looking up at the corporate flag of Apple's logo on a banner high above street level at Regent House (1898) in London's Regent's Street. This Apple Store was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Steve Jobs (1955-2011) who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death4-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Looking up at the corporate flag of Apple's logo on a banner high above street level at Regent House (1898) in London's Regent's Street. This Apple Store was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Steve Jobs (1955-2011) who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death3-06-10-2011.jpg
  • A detail portrait of Apple's creator Steve Jobs at a  makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Covent Garden, one of the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death25-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Customers walk past the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Covent Garden, one of the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death23-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death21-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Youths from inside London's Apple store look at the  makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death20-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Looking up at the corporate flag of Apple's logo on a banner high above street level at Regent House (1898) in London's Regent's Street. This Apple Store was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Steve Jobs (1955-2011) who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death2-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death19-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death18-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death14-06-10-2011.jpg
  • A detail portrait of Apple's creator Steve Jobs at a  makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death11-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death10-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Looking up at the corporate flag of Apple's logo on a banner high above street level at Regent House (1898) in London's Regent's Street. This Apple Store was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Steve Jobs (1955-2011) who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death1-06-10-2011.jpg
  • A detail portrait of Apple's creator Steve Jobs at a  makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Covent Garden, one of the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death24-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Customers walk past the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Covent Garden, one of the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death22-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death17-06-10-2011.jpg
  • A londoner lays more flowers at the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death15-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death13-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Fans use smartphones to photograph the makeshift shrine, where Londoners commemorate Apple's creator Steve Jobs the morning after hearing of his death overnight from pancreatic cancer  at the age of 56 on the 6th Oct 2011. This Apple Store in the capital's Regent's Street was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Jobs who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death12-06-10-2011.jpg
  • Two children play on interactive computers in an upper floor of the National Portrait Gallery, the well-known art museum on Trafalgar Square in Central London. The institution's IT Gallery allows young users to search and discover for themselves great works of art from its extensive database including this image of the Tudor Queen Elizabeth I whose painted portraits are on view elsewhere: Her face seen on the far right screen. From a personal documentary project entitled "Next of Kin" about the photographer's two children's early years spent in parallel universes. Model released.
    ella+sam27-09-08_2002.jpg
  • A passenger stoops to inspect travel adapters and plugs at Dixons Digital in Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport979-10-08-2009.jpg
  • A sales assistant with Dixons Digital replenishes shelves with travel adapters and plugs at Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport977-10-08-2009.jpg
  • Delivery men organise Apple Mac screens in the street, on 27th October 2017, in the City of London, England.
    city_people-07-27-10-2017.jpg
  • Delivery men organise Apple Mac screens in the street, on 27th October 2017, in the City of London, England.
    city_people-06-27-10-2017.jpg
  • Display boxes at the launch of Microsoft's Windows 95 operating system software, sold at midnight on 23rd August 1995, in Croydon, London, England.
    windows_95-23-08-1995_1.jpg
  • 1990s traders look stressful on a city trading floor, on 29th March 1996, in London, England.
    cable_and_wireless-29-03-1996_5.jpg
  • 1990s traders look stressful on a city trading floor, on 29th March 1996, in London, England.
    cable_and_wireless-29-03-1996_4.jpg
  • Active trading inside the London Stock Exchange in the City of London during the late-eighties. We see an aerial view of the 1980s-era options trading floor, looking  down from a high vantagepoint on to the traders as they go about their business. Three years after the so-called Big Bang in 1986 , this location at the old Stock Exchange Tower  became redundant with the advent of the Big Bang, which deregulated many of the Stock Exchange's activities as it enabled an increased use of computerised systems that allowed dealing rooms to take precedence over face to face trading. Thus, in 2004, the House moved to a brand new headquarters in Paternoster Square, close to St Paul's Cathedral.
    stock_exchange02-02-05-1989.jpg
  • A detail of 1990s technology at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), Reading, UK. ECMWF  is an international organisation supported by 31 States, its role is “to provide monthly and seasonal-to-interannual forecasts; to deliver real-time analyses and forecasts of atmospheric composition; to carry out climate monitoring through regular re-analyses of the Earth-system and to contribute towards the optimization of the Global Observing System.”
    meteorology_90s1-16-09-1991.jpg
  • Royal Air Force weather forecaster passes on airfield met news to the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team.
    Red_Arrows407_RBA.jpg
  • Communal leisure area at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus.
    met_london_university32-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Offices of Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly15-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Creatives and gaming designers put the finishing touches to Empire at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly14-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Battle Programmer Ingimar Gudmundsson (from Iceland, correct spelling with 'd') put the final touches to Empire, at the latest at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly13-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Battle Programmer Ingimar Gudmundsson (from Iceland, correct spelling with 'd') put the final touches to Empire, at the latest at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly12-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Battle Programmer Ingimar Gudmundsson (from Iceland, correct spelling with 'd') put the final touches to Empire, at the latest at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly11-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Battle Programmer Ingimar Gudmundsson (from Iceland, correct spelling with 'd') put the final touches to Empire, at the latest at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly10-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Battle Programmer Ingimar Gudmundsson (from Iceland, correct spelling with 'd') put the final touches to Empire, at the latest at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly09-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Associate Producer Mark Southerns records audio in an in-house studio at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly07-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Battle Programmer Ingimar Gudmundsson (from Iceland, correct spelling with 'd') put the final touches to Empire, at the latest at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly05-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Historical designers put the final touches to Empire at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly04-19-02_2009.jpg
  • Historical designers put the final touches to Empire at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. .Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst). ..
    creative_assembly03-19-02_2009.jpg
  • The driver of a van full of metallic items to be recycled, uses a delivery device at the rear of his vehicle, on 30th July 2020, in London, England.
    fuji_test29-30-07-2020.jpg
  • Display boxes at the launch of Microsoft's Windows 95 operating system software, sold at midnight on 23rd August 1995, in Croydon, London, England.
    windows_95-23-08-1995_2.jpg
  • Communal leisure area at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus.
    met_london_university33-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Associate Producer Mark Southerns records audio in an in-house studio at Creative Assembly, the PC gaming brand Total War 's Horsham offices in West Sussex, England. Up to 65 designers, artists and animators have worked on Empire: Total War (about the formation of the United States - the road to independence) for 3 1/2 years. Historical accuracy is such that research into weaponry, ships and events is as realistic as possible with the employment of historians with PHDs and degrees. (Note to editors: High-resolution screen grabs of Empire are in the possession of writer Nina Ernst).
    creative_assembly08-19-02_2009.jpg
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