Microsoft's new Bing app makes its debut in the App Store on Wednesday, bringing the many facets of Web search supported by the company's Bing search engine to the tips of your fingers.
The mobile division of Electronic Arts recently launched a Rock Band for iPhone/iPod Touch App without much fanfare. We thought we'd be treated to a host of pre-release hype, but no, none of that.
GigaOM interviewed Mozilla CEO Jon Lily at the Play conference, an event at the Haas School of Business at the University of Berkeley. There, Lily hinted that Mozilla would be submitting an app to the App Store.
The Zune HD has piqued our interest as an iPod touch competitor, but it seems Microsoft's plans to take on Apple in the portable multimedia player market run deeper.
Apple has won the right to say that its apps are available "only on the iPhone" in the UK despite complaints that other handsets such as Google's G1 phone also offer similar ranges of software.
Etisalat will lower the prices of its Apple iPhone packages if given approval by the Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (TRA), according to a media report today.
It seems that not a week goes by in the world of mobile technology where a new competitor to the Apple iPhone is unveiled to the world. This week is no exception.
OK, so Dell and Apple have been locked in a marketing war for years. Dell has long been considered the default PC for enterprise, while Apple has positioned itself as the most influential consumer computer brand in the world. But Apple has branched out from computing with the iPod and, of course, the iPhone.
Google's iPhone competitor Android may be doing gangbusters in pre-order sales (1.5 million and counting), but that's not going to stop the search giant from making a few dollars from Apple's competing smart phone. Google today announced the launch of iPhone specific ad capabilities.
Hop-on today announces that its GSM cell phone, the HOP1811, will be available in the United States for $13.99 with a Graffiti Wireless Airtime Plan. Anti-iPhone?