about 1 hour ago - No comments
What happens when Apple introduces a square-shaped new iPod and adorns it with an analog watch face for a lock screen?
about 1 hour ago - No comments
Apple is relaxing its rules for app developers. The changes allow programmers to use Flash to develop mobile applications for the popular iPhone and iPad. But Apple will still not allow its mobile products to access Flash-based websites.
about 12 hours ago - No comments
We remember it like it was yesterday — pressed against the edge of our seat, speakerphone on 11, listening to Qualcomm preach about how these so-called ” smartbooks ” were coming to take over the world.
about 14 hours ago - No comments
Are you ready for a wave of HDR to crash over the consumer electronics industry, leaving nothing but oversaturated photos and full-to-the-brim Flickr groups in its wake? We’ve got a sneaky suspicion that Apple’s inclusion of HDR in the iPhone is one of those telling warning signs that you ignore at your own risk, and now we’ve got HDR video to cower from behind our fast-aging current gen devices. As you might expect, HDR video looks just like HDR stills (an underexposed and an overexposed image combined into one), except in motion.
about 14 hours ago - No comments
Today’s Wall Street Journal has a few key words from Intel CEO Paul Otellini , with a few comparing his company’s Google TV approach to the refreshed (and now Intel-free) Apple TV . The biggest revelation is a mention that Google TV will start shipping this month (more specific than Google’s own fall prediction of a few days ago) with no word whether that includes products from Sony , Logitech or both
about 16 hours ago - No comments
Stoobalou writes “The people behind VLC, quite probably the most useful media player available right now, have submitted an iPod version to the Apple software police. VLC — which is rightfully famous for having a go at playing just about any kind of audio or video file you care to throw at it — should appear some time next week, if it makes it through the often unfathomable approval process implemented by Apple.
about 16 hours ago - No comments
Apple on Thursday said it will relax some of the restrictions it places on application developers who create tools for its iOS mobile operating system. The company also announced it’s publishing review guidelines for its App Store.
about 16 hours ago - No comments
Apple’s criteria for approving or rejecting a given iPhone or iPad app have long been a perplexing, maddening mystery to developers — but now Apple is abruptly making public its once-secret iOS app review guidelines. Among the highlights: No content that’s “over the line,” nothing “cobbled together in a few days,” and above all, “We don’t need any more Fart apps.”
about 16 hours ago - No comments
Apple Inc is easing restrictions for building iPhone and iPad applications, a move that should allow for the use of third-party tools such as Adobe Systems’ Flash software, a move that could ease the tension between the two companies.
about 16 hours ago - No comments
After Apple put the focus on Mac hardware Tuesday with updates to its Mac Pro and iMac lines, we follow suit on the Macworld Podcast with a 50-minute throw-down… iMac – Apple – MacPro – Macintosh – Hardware