Apple - Introducing MacBook Pro with Retina display
Apple - Introducing MacBook Pro with Retina display
WWDC Keynote – OSX Mountain Lion Details
WWDC Keynote – OSX Mountain Lion Details
From it’s premier in March 2011, which hardly ran on my G3 PowerBook Wall Street model, to the latest incarnation Lion, OSX has changed desktop computing. It’s fast, secure, and it keeps getting better. So what can we expect from the latest release, “Mountain Lion”, due next month?
Siri is my co-pilot: Apple voice-recognition tech to be built into cars
Siri is my co-pilot: Apple voice-recognition tech to be built into cars
Apple's Phil Schiller talks about Siri with the new Apple iPhone 4S during an announcement at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, Calif. |
Siri, the voice-controlled robotic assistant built into the latest iPhone, will be built into future automobiles, Apple announced at its annual Worldwide Developer Conference Monday.
7 Tips To Toughen Passwords
7 Tips To Toughen Passwords
As this week's LinkedIn and eHarmony--and likely, Last.fm--breaches demonstrate, many website users continue to pick atrocious, easily cracked passwords. Are your passwords safe?
What iOS 6 tells us about the next iPhone
What iOS 6 tells us about the next iPhone
Apple's WWDC may not have resulted in an iPhone announcement, but it provided the next best thing: a detailed look at iOS 6.
It doesn't come out until the fall, and will only work on the iPhone 3GS and models after that, but a lot of iOS 6 features will be welcomed by any iPhone owner.
New versions of mobile software (be it iOS or Android) can often be as feature-packed and exciting as new phone models, and frequently kick a lot of new value down to older hardware.
The question is, can we look into the new features of iOS 6 to peer upstream at what Apple's next iPhone might be like? I'll try. Here are my best guesses.
It doesn't come out until the fall, and will only work on the iPhone 3GS and models after that, but a lot of iOS 6 features will be welcomed by any iPhone owner.
New versions of mobile software (be it iOS or Android) can often be as feature-packed and exciting as new phone models, and frequently kick a lot of new value down to older hardware.
The question is, can we look into the new features of iOS 6 to peer upstream at what Apple's next iPhone might be like? I'll try. Here are my best guesses.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)