Apple Announces iOS 6.0
Apple officially unveils iOS 6.0 for the iPhone/iPod touch and iPad.
Apple officially unveils iOS 6.0 for the iPhone/iPod touch and iPad.
Here's our final Apple rumor prior to the WWDC keynote.
Tired of carrying around a wallet? Soon you may no longer have to thanks to Apple.
Facebook's App Center could launch on iOS tonight. And Apple looks to approve this?
From the famous “Stevenotes” to the announcement that Apple computers would begin using Intel processors, to Steve Jobs last appearance, WWDC has been the place to be over the years.
Cracked? Apple could soon deliver the must-have product of the year, and no it isn't the next iPhone.
There must be something big happening next week at San Francisco's Moscone Center as these photos show.
We've added up the rumors and now present our predictions for what we expect to see at next week's WWDC. Remember, the conference is only six days away!
Apple's iOS 6.0 is starting to look a lot like OS X Mountain Lion and here's how.
By the end of 2013, Apple will have $200 billion sitting around. Here's some thoughts on what they should spend some of it on.
Apple might be gearing up for next week's start of WWDC. However, the big news might not come until September.
Tim Cook visited D10 while we examined skeuomorphs. We discussed the next iPhone, while some of our readers cried foul. What a week it was.
Five days before Apple will probably dump Google Maps from iOS, Google is holding an event on the future of the product. Nice timing, huh.
Want another example of just how difficult it has become to compete with Apple in the mobile phone wars? Consider the dismal profit margins for Nokia’s newest handset, the Lumia 900.
Today, the United States Patent & Trademark Office published a patent application from Apple that reveals a new battery pack with a fault-monitoring mechanism. The system utilizes a conductive instrument that would alert users using a color-changing mechanism, and/or a sensor in the battery pack.
Forget all about Apple's love for secrecy. The stars have aligned and we know what the next iPhone will look like.
Tim Cook’s appearance at D10 is now history. As such, the folks at All Things Digital, the conference’s sponsor, have posted video of the Apple CEO’s appearance in Rancho Palos Verdes, Calfornia.
If Tim Cook's words are to believed, future Apple products could be made in the United States. Would this mean $1,000 iPads? Or $600 iPhones?
Apple is set to demonstrate a brand new version of the Apple TV operating system at the Worldwide Developers Conference, which begins on June 11. This OS is said to be more “feature-complete” than the current OS and also is the one that could run on Apple’s long rumored iTV.
Our friends at 9to5Mac are out with what they are calling leaked images of the next generation iPhone. As each image suggests, the sixth-generation handset might include a taller screen and a unibody enclosure, plus other changes.
Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference begins in less than two weeks. Today, Apple has posted more information on the conference including a day-to-day schedule and an official WWDC app.
The next iPhone could include a new camera, a larger screen, and maybe, an A6 chip. Apple’s sixth-generation handset might also include something even more important: Thunderbolt technology, according to a new report from CNet.
Will the iTV not be a television? When again will the next iPhone be released? And, what’s up with Facebook releasing a Camera app? What will happen to Instagram? These questions and more were explored in the week that was.
Remember Apple's Siri ads? They might not be accurate.