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Your Head Explodes: iPhone in an iPhone [VIDEO]
14 hours ago ago from Dipnip: on the edge of marketing, trends, gadgets & more!
Dipnip on the edge of marketing, trends, gadgets & more RSS Feeds Home About Contact Search OLPC Comes Up With a Beautiful, Thin Tablet Concept Wednesday Fun Video: Mosspuppet’s Last-Minute Gift Guide Your Head Explodes: iPhone in an iPhone [VIDEO] We've seen all sorts of augmented reality applications for mobile devices, with varying degrees of usability, but this one, created ...
Related contentRumor: 4th Generation iPhone to Pack 5 Megapixel Camera?
13 hours ago ago from Dipnip: on the edge of marketing, trends, gadgets & more!
Dipnip on the edge of marketing, trends, gadgets & more RSS Feeds Home About Contact Search Wednesday Fun Video: Mosspuppet’s Last-Minute Gift Guide Rumor: 4th Generation iPhone to Pack 5 Megapixel Camera? Digitimes is reporting that OmniVision has received an order from Apple for 50-45 million CMOS sensors packing 5 megapixels, bound for next year's 4th generation ...
Related contentAndroid OS versions breakdown and updated mobile Google web apps, HTC releases own widgets
13 hours ago ago from HANDPHONES
The Android family keeps growing with more and more handsets, so Google has just launched the device dashboard. Their mobile web apps are also now better, faster, stronger, and HTC released new Sense UI widgets for the Hero and Droid Eris. Android devices graph shows OS versions shares The newly released Android devices graph is based on devices, which have accessed the Marketplace within the last two weeks and will be updated ...
Related contentGoogle Voice Competitor Ribbit Gets iPhone App Approval
18 hours ago ago from Seo Services, LLC - Indiana based search engine optimization consultant
After rejecting Google Voice over the summer , Apple has approved an app for the competition. Ribbit's new iPhone app is now available for download in the App Store on iTunes. The app is free, but you'll need a Ribbit account to use the app. Unlike Google Voice, Ribbit's service is not free. It will cost you a month. Otherwise, the service offered is the same: call management and voice mail which can be transcribed and searched. ...
Related contentGoogle's Acquisition of AdMob Delayed for Further FTC Scrutiny
2 hours ago ago from MostOfMyMac.com
Home iPhone and Mac Accessories Contact Us Submit a topic Consulting Corner About Us Sponsors Archives MostOfMyMac.com To help you get the most out of your mac! Google's Acquisition of AdMob Delayed for Further FTC Scrutiny In: IT | Rumors 23 Dec 2009 Google today announced that the U.S. Federal Trade Commission has requested additional information on the company's proposed acquisition of mobile ...
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Apple planning event for January, with high-res iPhone or small-sized tablet in tow? Maybe just hanging out?
7 hours ago ago from Engadget
Breaking news, everybody: Apple's working on some stuff. The rumors are flying in all directions today, starting out fairly innocently with word from the oft-innacurate DigiTimes of an iPhone-destined 5 megapixel camera sensor. Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster piled on with an investor note saying they're giving an Apple January event a 75% chance of happening, and the tablet is squarely at 50 / 50. The most interesting word, however, comes out ...
Related contentRumor: Apple event in January, possible 10" tablet demoing iPhone apps
7 hours ago ago from The Unofficial Apple Weblog
There's a flurry of rumors this morning that Apple is planning an event as soon as this January , though exactly what they'll be showing us is still in question. Most of the buzz (along with our buddy Gene Munster) says we will finally see the long-awaited tablet , and that after a January showing, it might actually be released as soon as March. Which means, of course, that by August, it'll completely revolutionize whatever industry it ...
Related contentJack Shafer reviews 'Googled' by Ken Auletta
5 hours ago ago from Washington Post - Tech
GOOGLED The End of the World as We Know It By Ken Auletta Penguin. 384 pp. $27.95 I dare you to name a more plugged-in media and communications technology reporter than New Yorker staff writer Ken Auletta. As comfortable interrogating a network executive as he is interviewing a software genius or bottling a human tornado like Ted Turner, Auletta builds his media-technology books the way a mason builds a wall -- upon a firm foundation, ...
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