Here comes that Bing taking over iPhone search rumor again. Techcrunch says, “we
Bing to take over iPhone/iPad/iPod touch search?
Here comes that Bing taking over iPhone search rumor again. Techcrunch says, “we
BGR has the details. As of yesterday, May 27th, AT&T is rolling out a new insurance plan for iPhones called Mobile Protect. You must enroll in the plan within 30-days of upgrading/purchasing a new iPhone. AT&T is launching this service as:
I’m not sure why we’re even mentioning this, the Street’s record is pretty poor on Apple rumors. But, for the sake of Argument, they are saying that the Verizon iPhone is heading out of Pegatron ‘as early as November’.
Remember, 17% of Verizon customers are supposed to move to the iPhone when it becomes available so hopefully Pegatron can be counted on to produce a good supply of the devices.
Engadget got the goods (and it sounds exactly right to us) on AppleTV, Take 3:
..the device will be based directly on the iPhone 4, meaning it will get the same internals, down to that A4 CPU and a limited amount of flash storage — 16GB to be exact — though it will be capable of full 1080p HD (!). The device is said to be quite small with a scarce amount of ports (only the power socket and video out), and has been described to some as “an iPhone without a screen.” Are you ready for the real shocker? According to our sources, the price-point for the device will be $99.
Apple is moving away from the model of local storage, and will be focusing the new ATV on cloud-based storage (not unlike Amazon’s streaming scheme). For those still interested in keeping their content close, there will be an option to utilize a Time Capsule as an external storage component, but the main course will be all about streaming
Google’s TV is thankfully forcing Apple hand here and man are we glad to hear about some movement in this category. Engadget wasn’t sure if the 200,000 apps would be ‘coming along for the ride’ but with the GoogleTV pulling in 50,000 Android apps, it would seem pretty tempting even if the touch interface made a lot of these apps cludgy.
We’re really loving this new Apple-Google competition. The obvious winners are consumers.
Shaw Wu is telling clients that he expects to see iTunes going to the cloud as well as Mac Pro and MacBook Air updates at WWDC next month. We are 100% behind his iTunes going to the cloud – iTunes.com service. In a lot of ways it is already heading there with the iTunes Store having its own web pages that auto open iTunes.app. Seems like an unfinished migration to us.
As far as New Mac hardware? You know us…we are always up for some new Mac hardware…and Mac Pros and MacBook Airs are definitely due. We just wonder if there will even be time to talk about the Macs at this year’s WWDC as even the Apple design awards are excluding Macintosh applications.
Shaw Wu isn’t terribly accurate in his predictions historically so grain-salt…also consistency is…lacking:
Knocking did knock down some doors at the App Store for apps like Fring/Ustream/Qik, etc. But, who wants to be the one to tell him that iChat on the iPhone 4/HD is going to make his app and others obsolete?
There is always cross platform/Android I guess.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6YKBStJayYc&w=700&h=550]
We know we’ve reported some of this, but the level of manic iPad excitement captured in this video filmed outside Apple’s Munich retail store has to be seen to be believed. iPad mania truly has hit the planet. More video here (and just one more from Spain after the jump).
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNusM-yVpm4&w=640&h=505]
There’s a few days to go until Apple’s annual WWDC event in San Francisco, and it looks more likely than ever the company will use the event to introduce the iPhone 4HD and to reveal more of its wider product strategy — as this morning we learn that Spanish mobile network, Telefonica, has removed both the iPhone 3G and 3GS from its catalog of available models. Read on.
Hon Hai/Foxconn is to raise the wages of around 420,000 factory workers following a string of suicides across its plants.
Workers at these plants, which manufacture electronic devices for the likes of HP, Dell and Apple, will see their wages rise by 20 percent, the company has announced.
The company claims the pay hike had been planned for some time, but declined to give a schedule for the increase, which will see around $26 more per month land in the hands of workers who currently earn $131 per month.
An update on yesterday
Something we’ve suspected all along: It isn’t that Foxconn has an abnormally high suicide rate. The suicides are actually, per capita, less than the average in China.
The issue here is that Foxconn is mind-bendingly big. It has 500,000-800,000 employees overall and 300,000 alone in that plant in Shenzen that makes all of those iPads that we love so much.
We can’t possibly imagine how many people that is.
To put it in perspective, Foxconn is 1/5th the size of New Zealand. The country.
Four US states, Alaska, Wyoming, Vermont, and North Dakota are smaller than Foxconn. That means that there are more people going to work at Foxconn than every man, woman, child and elderly person in four US states.
If you’ve ever seen a Michigan-Ohio State game, Foxconn employees could fill one of those stadiums eight times over!
OK, you get the point. They have a lot of employees. And the suicide rate is high in China in general. So these suicides aren’t abnormal. In fact, they are below average. However, since they are high profile, they are followed closely.
Any suicide is incredibly tragic and it seems China’s rate could certainly be improved. It’s only slightly less tragic from an American point of view that people sign up by the thousand to work 80/hours a week doing mundane jobs that often involve hazardous conditions for $130/month.
You have to wonder how bad their alternatives are.
In a number that seems artificially high, AT&T exec Ron Spears said that 4 out of every 10 of their iPhone purchases were coming from business users.
Four out of 10 sales of the iPhone are made to enterprise users. When the iPhone came out, what most people heard in the first year from
Apple continues to face challenges getting European publishers to reach a deal for the iBookstore here.
As it is today, the only titles available to Europe
Yet more workers have jumped to their deaths at the Foxconn factory today, with a series of Twitter posts allegedly claiming another unhappy worker has climbed the roof to make a jump.
Despite investigations by Apple, HP and Dell and serious efforts on behalf of Foxconn management to mitigate the depressed and suicidal state of many of the company
http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9/63890987001?isVid=1&isUI=1
We know him as the great critic, the man who lambasted Apple last week for being the new dictator of mobile, but he
Thursday and time for the latest Stevenote – and this time Apple CEO Steve Jobs has shared a paen of love for Adobe, saying,
Bookseller Barnes and Noble have introduces the Nook app for the iPad, the bookseller

Apple