You probably already use your iPhone to get directions, play music, or look up movie times, but did you know you could use it to see whether your favorite restaurant has received a food safety violation?
SAN JOSE, California-Call it the Google challenge: After a few hours with the new Nexus One, would this long-time Apple fan be willing to trade in his iPhone? The short answer: It's very, very tempting.
Apple (NSDQ:AAPL)'s iPhone has the top touch screen - most responsive and accurate - beating out hot rivals including Motorola (NYSE:MOT)'s Droid and Google (NSDQ:GOOG)'s Nexus One, according to an independent testing firm.
To be honest, I don't really care which is the better smartphone (or super-duper phone): the iPhone 3GS, the Motorola Droid, HTC's Droid Eris, Google's Nexus One, Nokia's N900 or the Palm Pre.
ON AN average day in the life of the new economy, the release of a landmark gadget is generally cause for joy. Before resuming a wait for the next tiny, shiny thing, a culture fuelled by innovation is unified by a new consumer toy. That is, until last week.
New app Security Cam from Crowded Road ($0.99 iTunes link) has had a long journey to the App Store. Its creators tell us the app was first submitted to Apple back in December of 2008, where it remained in review purgatory before finally getting approved earlier this week.
We have discussed on a number of occasions that Apple are set to unveil its new Tablet device, the iSlate handheld computer at the end of this month. The latest rumors say that the device will run on the new iPhone OS 4.0, which will then be implemented on its 2010 smartphone.
You don't need a crystal ball, seer stone, scrying pool or any other spooky stuff to guess what one of the most talked-about design projects of 2010 will be. The tech blogs have been buzzing about it for months. It's the iSlate, iTablet, iProd, Magic Slate, or whatever else Apple finally decides to call its new tablet computer.
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.
Roel Schouwenberg of Kaspersky Lab Americas made a number of either intemperate or prescient comments to USA Today. It may take a year to find out if he is a fool or a profit.
Recently Nokia Corp. based in Espoo, Finland has been all over the news for their lawsuit against Apple and the iPhone. The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Wilmington, Delaware with allegations that the iPhone infringes on 10 of Nokia's patents, which are related to Wi-Fi access and phone calls.
Professionals who both own iPhones and are members of LinkedIn are in for a treat. LinkedIn for iPhone 3.0 has been released, and the new app (which remains free) represents an improvement over the old one in almost every way.
Did you spend Christmas day downloading apps for that new iPod touch? If so, you weren't alone. The volume of iPod touch downloads from Apple's App Store skyrocketed almost 1,000 percent on December 25th, findings released Monday show. This year also marked the first Christmas where iPod touch app downloads passed iPhone downloads.
While online dating was popularized in the 2000s, the 2010s will surely give rise to the latest trend in electronic dating: mobile matchmaking services. These services, which usually operate via an iPhone application, locate other singles based on your current location.
Boy Genius scored a sneak peak of a Google Voice client, GV Mobile 2.0, which will be available in the near future on Cydia to anyone with a jailbroken iPhone.