Folder Lock for iPhone and iPad transfers your files from PC, MAC or the internet and hides your sensitive files, pictures, videos and documents stored on your iPhone
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.
Since the release of the iPhone, people have worked to get out of the locked shell the phone normally boots in. The principal reason behind this is to install and run software that Apple doesn't endorse or approve of, which given their rather draconian App Store entrance rules, is a considerable amount.
Potentially bad news now if you happen to be an avid tech consumer in the United States holding back on an iPhone purchase while waiting for AT&T's current exclusivity deal and its lock-in policy to come to an end.
Barnes and Noble is the top bookseller in the United States, operating about 770 superstores across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. But the venerable chain is locked in mortal combat with Amazon.com, whose Kindle e-book reader is eating away at Barnes & Noble's customer base. Online, Amazon rules. But Barnes & Noble is making a serious play to remain relevant.
No one can deny the business sense that AT&T used when it locked up the iPhone from Apple as an exclusive back in 2007 when the phone first debuted. The iPhone has helped AT&T grow significantly since it debuted.
iPhone users certainly seem to be a lucky lot with several apps and software updates being launched for them everyday. This one is sure to get the town buzzing abut it for quite some time.
The Chronic Dev Team has released the greenpois0n untethered jailbreak for iOS 4.2.1. It took an extra 48 hours for the jailbreak to be released for those using Windows systems (meaning, most of us), but that's now here as well.
The new iPhone 3GS includes hardware-based encryption, giving the impression that your data is more secure than on previous models. A well-known iPhone security expert shows, however, that the data is just as easy to grab using simple hacking tools.
Over the weekend, burglars in Belgian used a ladder to climb onto the roof of a warehouse in Willebroek, Belgium, cut a hole in the roof, and stole $3 million worth of iPhones. That's a lot of iPhones.