Launched in May 1998,
 the iMac heralded Steve Jobs triumphal return to Apple. The product was
 a spectacular success, returning the company to profit after many years
 of what seemed to be terminal decline. 
 With its distinctive egg shape, translucent candy-colours, and 
all-in-one simplicity of design, the iMac became ingrained into the pop 
culture of the late 1990s. It was the first piece of Apple hardware to 
use the symbol ‘i' in its name, highlighting its function as a window 
into the new world of the Internet. Once again the Apple brand became 
cool.   
 After the initial Bondi Blue exterior, subsequent years saw
 the iMac come in a wide range of colours including the spectacular 
multi-coloured Flower Power model of 2001 which harked back to the 
hippie movement and its strong associations with San Francisco during 
the late 1960s.
 Photograph shows Wille Shaw holding the Flower Power iMac which was donated to the museum by 'Screenway'.
 The Computer and Communications Museum of Ireland, located at INSIGHT Centre at NUI Galway, 
 is open to the public 10am-5pm Monday to Friday during the summer 
months. For details of guided tours (by booking only) of this great 
technology facility, contact Brendan Smith at brendan.smith@insight-centre.org

 
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