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Promising Hot Toast Makes the Butter Fly, this toaster cover is one of my favorite finds.
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The Mac Mini rumors are flying like toasters in System 7 these days, and this one is particularly robust.
Jefferson Airplane later sued Berkeley Systems in turn for the use of the same flying toaster emblem.
Commenting on the case involving his characters, cartoonist Berkeley Breathed said: "If David Letterman can depict the NBC peacock wearing men's boxer shorts, then Delrina should be able to plug a flying toaster with hot lead".
It was published by the guys behind the ubiquitous flying toaster screensavers that now grace VH1 specials, featured practically no graphics whatsoever, but because of its wiseass humor and fast pace, it and its many sequels were among the most fun, most popular, and most-loved games of the decade.
One of Delrina's screensaver products was based on the licensed Bloom County characters Opus the Penguin and Bill the Cat. The initial Opus 'n Bill screensaver, launched in 1993, landed the company in court as its Death Toasters module depicted Opus taking shots at a number of flying toasters, a well-known emblem in Berkeley System's Flying Toasters module from their After Dark screensaver.
Serious about outer space or a free spirit who favored flying toasters?
But the 15-year-old typeface is also a bit of computing history, a reminder of a time when flying toasters were considered an appropriate screensaver.
For more middle-class activists, there was MoveOn.org, which was started in 1998 by Wes Boyd — the inventor of that once-ubiquitous screen saver of flying toasters — as a response to Republican efforts to impeach President Clinton.
The total cost of the court case and the recalled product was roughly $150,000 U.S. In the court case, it was also cited that the design for winged toasters was not original and that the Berkeley Systems' design was itself derived from the Jefferson Airplane album Thirty Seconds Over Winterland, which also used flying toasters adorned with wings.
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