May 13 2009

Red Laser: The First Accurate iPhone Barcode Scanner

Red Laser, which has just hit the iTunes App Store, is the ultimate iPhone barcode scanner, which works just like one of those red-laser scanners at the checkout (hence the name.)


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May 13 2009

AT&T issues official statement on SlingPlayer’s 3G blackout

AT&T’s obviously taking a good helping of heat today over Sling’s rock-and-a-hard-place decision to remove 3G streaming capability from its SlingPlayer Mobile build for the iPhone — a decision that gets at the very heart of several hot-button issues plaguing AT&T and Apple alike — and the carrier understandably felt the need to release an officia


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May 13 2009

Google’s mobile jihad: Support the web, live with the app

Over the last year, it’s become clear that Google has a bigger war on its hands in mobile than it had anticipated. It’s principal antagonist is sexy Apple iPhone, which has seriously disrupted Google’s ambitions to turn mobile industry into a Web-based …


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May 12 2009

Poster on Chinese forum leaks next-gen iPhone specs

A poster on an Chinese Apple site claims to have played with Apple’s next-gen iPhone, and he spills the beans on the specs – More RAM, faster processor, 3.2 Megapixel camera with autofocus and more


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May 12 2009

Man Arrested For Taking Photo of Open ATM

net_shaman writes in with word of a Seattle man who was arrested for taking a photo of an ATM being serviced. “Today I was shopping at the downtown Seattle REI. I was about to buy a Thule hitch mount bike rack. They were out of the piece that locks the bike rack into the hitch. So I was in the customer service line to special order one. It was a long line and while I was waiting, I saw two of guys (employees of Loomis, as I later learned) refilling the ATM. I walked over and took a picture with my iPhone of them and more interestingly of the open ATM. I took the picture because I’m fascinated by the insides of things that we don’t normally get to see. … That was when Officer GE Abed (#6270) spun me around and put handcuffs on me.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 12 2009

Copyright Infringment of Books

Maximum Prophet recommends a NY Times piece on the growing phenomenon of unauthorized digital versions of copyrighted books showing up online. The problem has been growing exponentially, fed in part by the popularity of reading devices such as the Kindle and the iPhone. The article features the odd photographic juxtaposition of Cory Doctorow and Ursula K. Le Guin, who take opposite views on electronic editions, authorized or not. Ms. Le Guin: “I thought, who do these people think they are? Why do they think they can violate my copyright and get away with it?” Mr. Doctorow: “I really feel like my problem isn’t piracy. It’s obscurity.” “Doctorow, a novelist whose young adult novel ‘Little Brother’ spent seven weeks on the New York Times children’s chapter books best-seller list last year, offers free electronic versions of his books on the same day they are published in hardcover. He believes free versions, even unauthorized ones, entice new readers.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 12 2009

University takes my advice, requires iPods

One year ago this week, I wrote a column arguing for the requirement of iPods and other gadgets in the nations schools (“Are iPod-banning schools cheating our kids?: Why iPods and other electronic gadgets should be required, not banned”). Now, the University of Missouri is “requiring” journalism students to buy an iPhone or an iPod Touch.


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May 12 2009

Citrix Demos of a New Kind of Virtual Machine for Mac

Citrix made a number of announcements last week related to Mac and iPhone. While most of these announcements were targeted specifically towards IT/enterprise customers, one announcement has more potential mainstream significance.


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May 11 2009

Rupert Murdoch in a snit over iPhone loophole

The WSJ simply had to release an app for the iPhone if it was going to remain relevant. Unfortunately for the Journal, Apple hasn’t yet figured out a safe or easy way to charge iPhone users for the things they do within apps. So anything from the Journal that you can read on an iPhone (or an iPod Touch) is not charged.


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May 11 2009

Android to grow faster than iPhone in 2009

The number of phones shipped using Google’s Android platform is set to grow much faster than the iPhone this year, estimates from Strategy Analytics maintain today. Devices like the T-Mobile G1 have just a small fraction of shipments today but are expected to grow 900 percent in 2009; iPhones will grow only by 79 percent.


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