Apple's original logo showed Sir Isaac Newton sitting under an apple tree, representing his famous theories about gravity. However, it looked more like a picture rather than a logo. Thus, the company created the much simpler bitten-apple logo that continues to be used today.
Because Apple is short for Apple Macintosh. In other words a mac is an apple.
because it is the favourite fruit of the founder of the company, Steve Jobs.
It isn't silver it is also black and white.
adobe
Steve jobs
because competitors have bitten off a piece:)
If you mean the one for apple computers it's because Steve Jobs worked at an Apple Farm when he made his first computer.
Apple's original logo showed Sir Isaac Newton sitting under an apple tree, representing his famous theories about gravity. However, it looked more like a picture rather than a logo. Thus, the company created the much simpler bitten-apple logo that continues to be used today.
* When Jean Louis Gassée was asked about his thoughts to the Apple logo he answered: "One of the deep mysteries to me is our logo, the symbol of lust and knowledge, bitten into, all crossed with the colors of the rainbow in the wrong order. You couldn't dream of a more appropriate logo: lust, knowledge, hope, and anarchy." (from The Apple Museum, linked below) There is also a great article on the Apple logo at LogoBlog, linked below.
it means you ate an apple Well I'm assuming you heard that on TV or something... Did they refer to someone's body/self as bitten apple? Did they say that they didn't want the "apple" because it was bitten? Generally when someone refers to something(or SOMEONE) as a bitten apple; they mean that they have been bitten, in other words, "used" -bitten apple=non-virginal/used body
Because an apple is the perfect logo to represent a company named Apple.
It could be Twilight, although that is just two hands holding an apple and it is not bitten.
A bitten apple
love of apple computers?
If neither has been peeled/bitten, the banana. If they've been peeled/bitten, the apple.
The past participle of the word "bite" is "bitten."