One iOS Geek Oddly Installed Windows '95 on his Apple Watch
Tendigi started The Brooklyn iOS Developer Meetup and The Brooklyn Mobile Designer Meetup to connect like-minded creatives and technologists working in our industry. Each month, they invite developers and designers to build skills through guest speakers, networking, and socializing. The company loves pushing limits, bringing people together and building with passion. Whether it's software, hardware, or emerging technologies, their team is dedicated to creating beautiful, human experiences in the mobile market. Some of their clients include Viacom, Comedy Central, IBM and Ford.
Nick Lee is a partner and CTO of Tendigi. This talented geek and jazz pianist loves his Apple Watch and decided one day to install Windows '95 on it. You certainly have to be a geek to want to do that. On paper, the Apple Watch packs a lot of computing horsepower into a very small package; its processor alone is about twenty-five times faster than the average 386 PC.
If you're a super geek and want to reproduce this strange Windows '95 anomaly on your Apple Watch, then feel free to check out Tendigi's webpage here outlining how it's done. Last year Nick Lee ported Mini vMac to the Apple Watch after he updated to watchOS 2.0.
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