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Analyst: Apple May Ship 18 Million 3G IPhones This Year
Apple could sell 18 million iPhones this year, forecasts one analyst.
PC World |
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Apple's iPhone reloaded: New outruns old
Y�ou want one. That just about sums up Apple's approach to product announcements, and yesterday was no exception. If you've been holding off on buying an iPhone, thinking the company would cut the price and add faster web access through 3G wireless networks, then you got your wish.
The Star-Ledger |
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Microsoft Premieres RPG Raft [News]
Star Ocean 4 subtitled, The Last Remnant heading to Xbox 360 first, and an early September release for Infinite Undiscovery...
Total Video Games |
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Iliad to acquire Telecom Italia French internet arm
The acquisition of Alice will be Iliad's biggest ever purchase. It will enable the company to regain its second position in the French market that it lost to its rival Neuf Cegetel last year.
Computer Business Review |
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T-Mobile sues Starbucks over free Wi-Fi service
T-Mobile USA has filed a lawsuit against coffee chain Starbucks alleging the company has breached an agreement for T-Mobile to provide Wi-Fi access in its cafes.
Computer Business Review |
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FTC probes Intel
Intel claimed its practices are well within US laws. The company is also facing tough scrutiny from regulators in Europe and Asia. Last week, South Korea's antitrust watchdog fined Intel $25m for abusing its dominant market position to discourage customers from defecting to AMD.
Computer Business Review |
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Apple launches 3G iPhone at half price
Apple Inc. on Monday introduced its latest iPhone version which will run on third-generation (3G) wireless networks and include GPS navigation capability.
Vietnam Net |
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Programmers to get a cut of AOL's revenue
AIM 6.8 includes interfaces programmers can use to build instant-messaging plug-ins, sharing in related ad revenue
ZDNet UK |
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Cybercrime syndicate swindles govt out of R199m
The government has identified at least 27 cases where a syndicate has swindled more than R199-million from government departments in four provinces over the past three years -- using cyber-spyware.
Mail and Guardian |
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HP Pavilion dv7, Pavilion dv5, Pavilion dv4 multimedia notebooks
The HP Pavilion dv7, dv5 and dv4 notebooks are geared for budget conscious multimedia enthusiasts.
infoSyncWorld |
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Japan questions suspect of knifing rampage
The suspect in a knifing rampage that left seven dead in Tokyo was handed over to prosecutors Tuesday, as media reports pulling together Internet postings and police statements drew a picture of an angry, lonely young man who meticulously planned the deadly attack.
Pravda Ru |
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Citrix adds secure virtual desktop access to its roster
Application delivery infrastructure developer Citrix has announced updates to its Access Gateway Appliance.
VNU Net via Yahoo! UK & Ireland News |
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Apple aims 3G iPhone at firms
Apple is targeting enterprise customers with the much anticipated update of its iPhone mobile device, which adds ActiveSync support for Microsoft Exchange servers and is now backed by an SDK for application development.
VNU Net via Yahoo! UK & Ireland News |
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Symmetry Direct Corp. Now Live on MyECheck's Check Payment Processing Platform
MyECheck Inc., an electronic transaction processor and provider of alternative payment solutions, is pleased to announce that Symmetry Direct Corporation is now processing though MyECheck's Check 21 Software.
Marketwire via Yahoo! Finance |
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Asus floors it with Lamborghini laptop revamp
Pedal, as they say, meets metal Asus has formally announced the anticipated successor to its Lamborghini laptop line, the compact, 12.1in VX3 - intended to bring a little... luxury to the sub-notebook arena. And integrated HSDPA 3G connectivity.…
The Register |
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Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Tue 2nd Aug 2005 00:02 UTC
It seems as if Microsoft is going the software DRM route for the time being and Apple is going the hardware DRM route. I'm sure this is because the encryption of content via a hardware chip is a higher guarantee that content cannot be decrypted unofficially, then a software guarantee.
New Mobile Computing |
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Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Tue 27th Jun 2006 17:27 UTC
Alex Graveley introduced the Gimmie user interface and panel for GNOME a few days ago. In it, Alex is grouping the most used parts of a modern UI, e.g. Documents, Applications, People, and Computer (network connections go under it too).
New Mobile Computing |
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Auction Lets Fans Play With Dodgers, Stars
An Internet-based auction that will allow the public to partake in pregame and game activities of the Los Angeles Dodgers' Hollywood Stars game starts on Tuesday and continues through June 17.
CBS 2 Los Angeles |
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Video Recap of Weekly Search Buzz :: June 8, 2008
SMX Advanced was the topic of this week, but included in that was discussion on many other search topics. I chatted about using the Google News first click free program for web search, Google's new SEO documentation and the cloaking debate. I also showed how the Yahoo Directory has no PageRank. Yahoo changes the TOS on the advertiser. Google AdWords phishing email scams are still swarming ...
Search Engine Roundtable |
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Help! column: Check out library for computer access
Wednesday's column -- the one headlined "Computerless readers struggle to stop junk mail" -- gave rise to follow-up commentary of likely interest to some in the audience.
Florida Today |
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Amazon.com site hit with outages
New York (AP) - Amazon.com Inc.'s Web site suffered sporadic outages Monday, just days after unspecified system issues knocked the online retailer offline for more
New London Day |
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Apple to introduce faster new iPhone
San Francisco - Apple Inc. has unveiled an upgraded iPhone with a faster Internet connection and GPS capabilities. Analysts have said Apple needed to upgrade the
New London Day |
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New Xerox Print Driver Makes it Easy to Print On the Go
For office workers who bring their laptop computers to meetings in a variety of locations, on-the-spot printing has long been a frustrating challenge.
Centre Daily Times |
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Upgrading Embedded Design Firmware via USB
The ubiquitous USB communication medium that was intended to connect a mice or keyboard to a computer has spawned to work wonders with speakers, cameras, printers and many other devices.
Embedded Systems Programming Magazine |
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Beer makers try online-only ads
Anheuser-Busch is generating buzz with an ad equal parts bawdy and hilarious, but you won't see it on television, and it barely mentions the beer it's advertising. Dubbed “Swear Jar,” the too-risque-for-TV ad debuted on the Internet in 2007. A minute long, it begins with an office worker asking about a jar at the reception desk. It's a “swear jar,” he's told: Anyone who swears puts in a ...
The Charlotte Observer |
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