AppAdvice's Week In Review
Will the next iPhone arrive in June? Will Apple begin offering their own cellular service? The Verizon/Apple love affair over? Steve Jobs as FDR? These and other topics made news in the week that was.
Will the next iPhone arrive in June? Will Apple begin offering their own cellular service? The Verizon/Apple love affair over? Steve Jobs as FDR? These and other topics made news in the week that was.
Just as the iPad 2 was an improvement over the original, the third generation iPad is better than its predecessor. Sometimes, however, iPads from the same generation are superior to those made earlier in the product life cycle, according to AnandTech.
Verizon actively pushing would-be customers to NOT buy an iPhone? Looks that way.
The iPhone rumor mill is heating up again. Today’s speculation comes from iLounge, which believes Apple’s next handset will be thinner and longer than the iPhone 4S/4, and for the first time, include a new aspect ratio.
Are you in desperate need for a new television? Hoping this is the year Apple will finally reveal their long-rumored iTV? Think again. ZDNet is reporting that Apple will wait until 2014 to release their television set. Still, that doesn't mean Apple is sitting around doing nothing.
An intriguing article posted elsewhere suggests the next iPhone will arrive next month. The biggest story here, however, isn't about the iPhone, but what happened to the original report and what this could mean.
Scott Forstall, Apple’s Senior Vice President for iOS Software, is a lot richer this morning. Yesterday, the Apple guru, who some believe could be Tim Cook’s successor as CEO, sold 95 percent of his Apple shares. His take: a cool $38.7 million.
Who didn’t see this coming? One month after the Australian government sued Apple over iPad “4G” claims, the U.K. is ready to take similar steps
Last month, rumors circulated that Apple would use Liquidmetal for the backing of the next iPhone. Now, we’ve got an idea of what that design could look like, courtesy of the French site, No Where Else.
As expected, the new iPad launched today in nine additional countries beginning at 8 a.m. local time. To date, the new iPad is now available in 57 countries across the globe.
The dates are confirmed, the Moscone Center is booked, and the tickets are sold-out. Here's some of the things we'd like to see at this year's WWDC!
The return of the $599 iPhone? Why higher iPhone prices might not be such a bad idea - for carriers and consumers alike.
Sprint is making sure everyone knows they remain the only major iPhone carrier in the U.S. to offer unlimited data plans. In fact, they will still carry that distinction even if Apple’s next handset arrives with 4G/LTE capabilities.
Apple’s Worldwide Developer’s Conference (WWDC) for 2012 has just been announced. The five-day conference will be held from June 11-15 in San Francisco, California.
Those "iPhone nano" rumors are back. Why all the talk is hogwash.
A Chinese supplier is offering what they are calling “iPhone 5 home buttons,” that look slightly different than the buttons on the iPhone 4S/4. Good or bad?
Although Apple has yet to even announce it, the company’s long-rumored “iPanel” could play a significant role in the high-definition television space. In fact, upwards of 25 percent of consumers in the U.S. would purchase a physical Apple television set.
How thin will the next iPhone be? We've got a possible answer.
The latest "iPhone 5" rumor suggests Apple's next handset will include in-cell touch panels. In other words, the handset will be much thinner than the past two models.
Is Apple losing its luster? That is the surprising question many in the investment community are now asking as more bad news has befallen the company.
The back of the sixth generation iPhone could be made of super-durable Liquidmetal alloy, not glass like its two predecessors.
It is becoming more likely Apple is going to announce the launch of an "iPad mini” this year. The rumored 7.85-inch iPad could launch as early as the third quarter and sell for between $249 and $299.
Will Apple be forced to change the name of their latest tablet, the iPad Wi-Fi + 4G? We could soon find out.
Are we getting close to another dot-com tech bubble? Perhaps we are when this week's most interesting (and troubling) stories in technology revolved around companies making huge sums of money. While we're all for folks making money, when they do so by screwing customers, we've got a problem. What's going on here?