Apple Store App For iPhone Updated With Express Checkout Feature

Apple Store App For iPhone Updated With Express Checkout Feature

Not content with simply releasing a new version of iOS to beta testers, a new version of Mac OS X that is almost complete and a new line of MacBook Pros, Apple has today added another update to its roster. This time, it’s the Apple Store iPhone app that sees the update magic applied.

Now reaching the version number 2.2, the Apple Store app sees a selection of updates that help to make the app more useful across the board, as well as adding a whole new feature that will make it easier and quicker for customers to part with their hard earned cash.


Express Checkout is exactly what it sounds like. By bypassing the basket portion of the buying process, Apple allows punters to enter their Apple ID and have items billed to the credit card that is already on file for iTunes purchases. The delivery address is also pulled from the account, meaning that data entry is minimal and time is saved for those more interesting pursuits like reading Redmond Pie.

Apple’s USA Galaxy S III ban denied by judge

Apple’s USA Galaxy S III ban denied by judge

This week the preliminary banning of the Galaxy S III from sales in the United States requested by Apple amid an upcoming court case has been denied by judge Lucy Koh. This ban on sales of the Samsung Galaxy S III would replicate what was done via Apple in Germany several months ago with the company’s Galaxy Tab line. Apple is seeking to defend several mobile-minded patents in regards to the iPhone and the Galaxy S III here in the states, with a case scheduled to begin on the 21st of June. 



If the judge had decided to accept Apple’s request for a ban on the Samsung Galaxy S III smartphone here in the United States before its release this summer, Samsung would surely have suffered heavily at the delay of its new hero device. As it stands, judge Koh has let Apple know that a ban would, in this case, cause the court date to be postponed: something Apple certainly does not want.


Thus we now wait until the 21st when the case will begin in ernest and the most recent Apple vs Samsung battle will commence. Have a peek at the timeline below to see how the Samsung Galaxy S III is being launched here in the USA and stay tuned as the law seeks to do justice in all ways mobile, patents, and beyond! Also be sure to have a peek at our full Samsung Galaxy S III review (in its international iteration) and stay tuned for the rest as they hit the USA!

Skype jacks ads into free Internet phone calls


Skype users can make low-cost or free phone calls over the Internet using their computers or smartphones

SAN FRANCISCO — Skype has begun showing callers on-screen ads while they use the globally popular free Internet telephone service.

First Look: MacBook Pro with Retina Display: Hands-on

First Look: MacBook Pro with Retina Display: Hands-on


Samsung Galaxy S3 vs. iPhone 4S Drop Test

Samsung Galaxy S3 vs. iPhone 4S Drop Test 

PocketCloud For iOS Is An Extremely Worthwhile Download For Your Remote Desktop Needs

PocketCloud For iOS Is An Extremely Worthwhile Download For Your Remote Desktop Needs


The remote desktop market has soared thanks to the introduction of tablets, with businesses large and small – as well as individuals – able to use their computers remotely in an easy and convenient manner while on-the-fly.

As with any app for mobile devices, the functionality and overall usability fluctuates from app to app, and unless you do your homework before downloading, you can easily wind up with a laggy, poor representation. With prices often on the tens of dollars, it’s certainly worth researching the market for the very best option before parting with your hard-earned cash.


Apple iPad Smart Case: Unboxing & Review

Apple iPad Smart Case: Unboxing & Review 


Google Chrome for Metro Preview

Google Chrome for Metro Preview

Google this week unveiled its first stab at a Metro-style web browser, and appears to completely ignore Microsoft’s design guidelines, providing just a simple full-screen browser that has more in common with Chrome OS than it does with other Windows 8 apps. Fortunately, it’s just an early, developer-oriented preview, so future user experience changes should be expected.


I previously wrote about Google’s plans to bring Chrome to the Metro environment in WinInfo Short Takes, June 8, 2012. It requires installing the “dev channel” version of Chrome (instead of the more mainstream versions) and updating to the latest build, and doing so on the Windows 8 Release Preview.

It also requires setting Chrome as the default browser, which you do through the hard-to-find Default Programs interface in Windows 8.

Windows 8 Tip: Shut Down, Restart, and Sleep

Windows 8 Tip: Shut Down, Restart, and Sleep

With Windows 8, Microsoft is standardizing a lot of common tasks through new system-level features such as charms, contracts, and settings. But this standardization is causing some users fits, so I’m writing up a series of tips aimed at helping you overcome some common gotcha’s. In this tip, I look at a common source of confusion in Windows 8: How you shut down, restart, or sleep the PC.

It used to be so simple. In Windows 7 and all previous Windows versions dating back to 1995, you would initiate various power management actions via the Start Menu. In Windows 8, however, that interface has been replaced by a new full-screen Start experience, called the Start screen. And those Start Menu-based power management options are no longer available there. So what’s a poor Windows user to do?

Learn how it works in Windows 8, of course.

As it turns out, there are a couple of different interfaces.

The easiest, perhaps, is to simply use the tried and true CTRL + ALT + DEL keyboard shortcut. This will work from anywhere in Windows 8, including the Start screen, any Metro-style app, or the desktop. When you do this, a full-screen experience appears, with Lock, Switch User, Sign Out, and Task Manager options. But if you click that Power icon in the bottom right, you’ll see a menu with power management options: Sleep, Shut down, and Restart.


Man Spends Decade Playing Epic PC Game

 Man Spends Decade Playing Epic PC Game

Players have to fight wars, develop technology and forge peace treaties with other nations

A man has found out how humanity's final days will be played out in the year 3991 - at least in the world of the computer game he has been hooked on for a decade.


The gamer - known only as Lycerius - posted details online about his epic adventure on the strategy game Civilization II, in which players control a nation through world history.

The detailed game begins at the dawn of civilisation and should end in 2020, but he has continued cultivating his virtual world for another 1,971 years.

He says the three remaining nations have been at war for 1,700 years - and endless nuclear wars have melted the ice-caps and left huge swathes of the world uninhabitable.

"The world is a hellish nightmare of suffering and devastation," he said.


"Roughly 90% of the world's population has died either from nuclear annihilation, or famine caused by the global warming that has left absolutely zero arable land to farm."

Scores of different tribes begin the game, each seeking world domination. The only three superpowers left in his simulation are the Celts - controlled by Lycerius - the Vikings, and the Americans.

The gamer posted a screengrab showing how the world had been carved-up
"Between the three of us, we have conquered all the other nations that have ever existed and assimilated them into our respective empires," he said, adding that the nations had been locked in an "eternal death struggle" for almost 2,000 years.

The #1 Grossing Game On Android And iOS, DeNA’s Rage Of Bahamut, Has Almost Even Revenues From Both

The #1 Grossing Game On Android And iOS, DeNA’s Rage Of Bahamut, Has Almost Even Revenues From Both

Here’s some promising news about Android monetization. DeNA says that Rage of Bahamut, which was the #1 grossing game on both Android and iOS yesterday, is earning about the same revenue per day from both platforms. It’s a single data point, but it goes against recent studies from companies like Flurry that say that Android lags behind in terms of monetization by a factor of 4-to-1. “Contrary to what we read, we’ve been very happy with Android monetization,” DeNA director and Ngmoco CEO Neil Young says. “There is not a big discrepancy between the two now.”


Miyamoto: We're on to the 3DS' successor

Miyamoto: We're on to the 3DS' successor

Nintendo icon Shigeru Miyamoto says that the 3DS is the "best" handheld in this generation, and now the company is thinking about the next handheld it'll launch.


Mountain Lion, what you need to know about Apple's new OS X

Mountain Lion, what you need to know about Apple's new OS X



Apple unveiled its new operating system OS X Mountain Lion at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on Monday. Over 200 new features where added, but some of the biggest highlights include Facebook integration, AirPlay Mirroring and Game Center.

Apple runs out of Retina MacBook Pros

Apple runs out of Retina MacBook Pros

Shipping delay already runs three to four weeks; eBay resellers cash in on shortage


Apple has exhausted supplies of its new $2,200 MacBook Pro that sports a high-resolution "Retina" screen, with the company's online store reporting a wait of three to four weeks by Tuesday's end.

Not surprisingly, someone is trying to cash in by listing the hard-to-find computer on eBay for $1,000 over list.

The 15-in. notebook -- which Apple has taken to tagging with the mouthful "MacBook Pro with Retina display" -- was introduced Monday during the keynote address that kicked off Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC).

Owning Your Content in Search: Google Now Makes it Easier to Link Your Website to G+

Owning Your Content in Search: Google Now Makes it Easier to Link Your Website to G+


Last year, Google announced an initiative to give authors on the Web greater ownership over their content and more visibility in search. Google Authorship, as its known, has changed consistently since launch, as the company experiments with the best ways to authenticate authors and give them proper attribution.

Facebook posts drive sales traffic, comScore study suggests

Facebook posts drive sales traffic, comScore study suggests

NEW YORK — As investors question just how much Facebook is worth, a study from Internet research firm comScore suggests that marketing on the world's most populous online social network can help increase sales.


The report released Tuesday found that people who were fans of Starbucks and Target, or friends of those fans, were more likely to buy something than those who were not fans. People become fans by hitting a "like" button for a brand's Facebook page and receiving updates about that brand mixed in with content shared by their friends.

In the case of Starbucks Corp., those exposed to the company's message on Face book were 38 percent more likely than the typical Facebook user to make a purchase in the four weeks that followed. Target Corp. saw a 21 percent lift in the same time frame.

The comScore study came a day after the research firm said that the number of unique visitors to Facebook's website is growing at a slower pace. The Associated Press

First Apple computer to be auctioned

First Apple computer to be auctioned


A still-working model of the Apple l, the first Apple computer made by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in 1976, is set to be auctioned by Sotheby's on June 15, 2012 and is expected to earn between $120,000 and $180,000.

New Internet suffix bids include '.lol,' 'bank.'

New Internet suffix bids include '.lol,' 'bank.'

NEW YORK (AP) — If Google has its way, you won't need to type "Google.com" any more to do your searches. You can simply access the search engine at ".Google."

Apple kicks Google Maps off iPhone, adds Facebook

Apple kicks Google Maps off iPhone, adds Facebook

Apple iOS 6 Maps
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Steve Jobs' vendetta against Google remains alive, eight months after the Apple co-founder died feeling betrayed by a company he once embraced as an ally.

Apple is escalating the feud between two of the world's most influential companies by dumping Google's mapping service as a built-in feature on most iPhones and iPads. Apple is also making it easier for users of those devices to share their lives on Facebook instead of Google's competing social network.

The snubs are part of an upgraded mobile operating system that Apple previewed Monday to kick off its 23rd annual developers conference in San Francisco.

Google's mapping service will be replaced by an Apple-designed alternative when the new software for mobile devices, iOS 6, is released this fall. Those who want to continue using Google Maps will have to go through additional hurdle, such as finding and installing its app.

It represents a major blow for Google Inc., which stands to lose mobile advertising revenue and valuable insights about people's whereabouts if users of the popular iPhone and iPad devices switch to Apple's mapping service.

Apple and Google are locked in a fight for the attention of hundreds of millions of mobile device users. The battle has been building since Google's 2008 release of its Android operating system to compete against the iPhone.

Android smartphones from companies such as Samsung Electronics Co. and Google's own Motorola division are the chief alternatives to the iPhone. Apple has sued those manufacturers, accusing them of ripping off the iPhone's ground-breaking features.

Google's Maps application has resided on the iPhone since the device's 2007 debut. At that time, the companies were so close that Eric Schmidt, then Google's CEO, appeared on stage with Jobs to hail their kinship.

Android destroyed the relationship. Before he died last October, Jobs told his biographer, Walter Isaacson, that he viewed Android as a form of "grand theft" from Apple and declared "thermonuclear war" against his former ally.

"This is a slap in Google's face," said Tim Bajarin, a Creative Strategies analyst who got to know Jobs well during his 32 years following the company. "I don't think Apple is ever going to be able to bury Android, but this is making it clear that they aren't going to send any more ad revenue Google's way, if at all possible."

Apple updates its iOS software every year, to coincide with the launch of a new iPhone. Google is scheduled to show off the latest developments in Android at a conference that will be held at the same San Francisco venue beginning June 27.

In a statement Monday, Google said it is "looking forward to continuing to build the perfect map for our users in the months and years ahead." In anticipation of Apple's announcement, Google last week previewed a series of upgrades to its mapping service in an effort to make it more convenient and compelling.

In another jab at Google, Apple also said it's building Facebook into iOS 6. That threatens to make it more difficult for Google to drive traffic to its Google Plus social network, a high priority for the company. As it is, Google has more than 170 million users while Facebook has more than 900 million users.
Tim Cook at WWDC 2012


Among other things, users of Apple's new software will be able to update their Facebook status by talking to their phones and declare that they "like" movies and apps in Apple's iTunes store.
The tie-in with Apple's mobile devices could be a boon for Facebook Inc., based on the usage of Twitter since that online messaging service became part of the current mobile system, iOS 5. Apple says more than 10 billion tweets have been sent from its mobile devices since last year's upgrade to iOS 5.

Facebook, though, has warned investors that it still hasn't figured out how to make a lot of money from mobile devices, where so far it has proven more difficult to bring in as much ad revenue as on traditional computers.

The iOS 6 also will highlight more features from online business review service Yelp Inc. and online restaurant reservation service OpenTable Inc. Both of those companies are competing against Zagat, a review service that Google bought last year for $151 million.

Besides the upcoming iOS, Apple also showed off updated laptops and new features in its software for Mac computers.

Investors appeared to be expecting something more revolutionary, such as more hints about Apple's ambition to expand into making TVs. Analysts had speculated that Apple would at least update the software on the Apple TV, a small box that connects a TV set to iTunes for movie downloads, as a prelude to perhaps launching a fully integrated TV set.

Apple Inc. shares closed down $9.15, or 1.6 percent, at $571.17. Google shares shed $11.95, or more than 2 percent, to close at $568.50.

Apple CEO Tim Cook delivered the keynote Monday at an event that last year turned out to be Jobs' farewell appearance. In a contrast to Jobs' showmanship, Cook spoke only briefly during a nearly two-hour presentation orchestrated by his top lieutenants.

Among other updates in iOS 6, Apple's voice-command application Siri will add a host of languages, including Spanish, Korean and Mandarin Chinese. "She" will also be able to launch applications and movies and will run on iPads for the first time.

Apple's new version of its Mac operating system, Mountain Lion, will go on sale next month for $20. The update brings features from Apple's phone and tablet software to the Mac. That includes the iMessage texting application, which will replace iChat.

Microsoft Corp., Apple's competitor when it comes to computer software, is also making Windows more like its phone software, with the release of Windows 8 later this year. A key difference is that Microsoft is betting that PCs will have touch screens, while Apple is betting they won't.

Mountain Lion will also bring dictation to Macs. Users will be able to input text by talking to the computer, in any program. This is already a feature in Windows.

Apple showed off a laptop with a super-high resolution "Retina" display, setting a new standard for screen sharpness.

The new MacBook Pro will have a 15-inch screen and four times the resolution of previous models, Apple executive Phil Schiller said.

Apple already uses "Retina" displays — with individual pixels too small to be distinguished by the naked eye — in its latest iPhones and iPads.

On the phones and tablets, the Retina display is a standard feature. On the MacBook, it's an expensive upgrade. The new MacBook will cost $2,199 and up, $400 more than the non-Retina MacBook with the same-sized screen.

Despite the high price, Forrester Research analyst Charles Golvin predicted the souped-up MacBook will be a hit. "It's a sexy machine," he said. "Any self-respecting gadget lover is going to be drooling over this thing."

The new MacBook borrows features from the ultra-slim MacBook Air. It's only slightly thicker, and like the Air, lacks a DVD drive. Instead of a spinning hard drive, it uses flash memory for storage. In the most radical departure from past PC designs, it lacks an Ethernet port. Those who don't want to use Wi-Fi to connect to the Internet will have to buy an adapter that goes into the MacBook's "Thunderbolt" port.

Apple's other MacBooks are being updated with the latest processors from Intel Corp. Apple will still sell a more traditional 15-inch MacBook Pro, with a standard display.

With no new iPhone, this could be the summer of Samsung

With no new iPhone, this could be the summer of Samsung


As you'd expect, today's Apple WWDC keynote drew big crowds of Apple fans eager for hardware and software news. Yet, you might be surprised that even the most devout Android enthusiasts were watching along to see what the "competition" was doing.

Seen that privacy chain letter on Facebook? Ignore it

Seen that privacy chain letter on Facebook? Ignore it

A city's history, made mobile

iOS 6 vs Android 4.x ICS vs Windows Phone 7.5 Mango – Head-to-Head Feature Comparison

iOS 6 vs Android 4.x ICS vs Windows Phone 7.5 Mango – Head-to-Head Feature Comparison

Well, it appears that it is once again time to pen a comparison post, this time following up with the one published in October of last year – about 8 months ago – that compares a few of the important factors between the three important mobile platforms of our time. With iOS 6 freshly unveiled, along with a few developments that have transpired over the past 8 months, there are a few changes to make.


Here are a few of the noteworthy changes that I have observed in creating the comparison chart: iOS will now have Facebook integration baked into the OS itself, Google has its own music store now (in the form of Google Play), all three platforms have seen substantial growth in their respective app ecosystems, and Windows Phone (sort of) has its own voice assistant functionality now in the form of Tellme. While we’re on the note of Windows Phone, something that I didn’t mention was that the Zune brand is being phased out, and its functionality as far as music and movie sales will be replaced with Xbox Music, and, well, perhaps something else for movies.

iPhone 5: 15 most-wanted features

iPhone 5: 15 most-wanted features

Still waiting for an iPhone 5? So are we. Here's an updated look at some of the feature and design upgrades we'd most like to see, including the odds of their implementation.

How iOS 6 changes the iPad

How iOS 6 changes the iPad

The latest version of Apple's iOS has some significant new features that just might change how the iPad is used, and the value of iPads with built-in 4G.

Every year, we engage in the same dance: Apple announces a new version of iOS, and we instantly start wondering how our devices will change as a result.

Apple, Google, Amazon: Give us our own domains

Apple, Google, Amazon: Give us our own domains

Get ready to be a bit more confused about website addresses.

ATMs to operate without a card

ATMs to operate without a card 


The RBS system requires users to enter a six-digit number sent to their phone

Skout dating app suspends teen service after rape allegations

Skout dating app suspends teen service after rape allegations

Skout says it is working with a risk management advisor to strengthen its security measures

Linux creator Linus Torvalds shares Millennium Technology Prize

Linux creator Linus Torvalds shares Millennium Technology Prize


Mr Torvalds has worked on the Linux kernel for more than two decades

Linus Torvalds, creator of Linux, has been named joint winner of the 2012 Millennium Technology Prize.