Chinese language newspaper The Commercial Times reported this morning that another company was selected by Apple to produce the next version of the iPhone. However, this new iPhone won’t be for the US market.
The BackRow Developers’ Kit provides headers, a template, and even a test application to help make development of Apple TV plug-ins easier.
AT&T’s Glenn Lurie drops some hints in this interview about the iPhone, such as Google’s involvement, price, data plans, and web browsing. There’s plenty of fodder for speculation.
Where Gateway failed and Sony struggles, the sky is the limit for the Apple Stores.
MIT is performing some behavioral research in the form of a computer game in order to algorithmically generate another computer game. That game is now available for Mac users, too.
AT&T/Cingular’s old “Unity” plan was a flop, but the company says that it plans to revamp it in time for the iPhone launch.
Security Update 2007-005 fixes 13 issues but fails to protect against zombie attack.
Sources close to our French Mac site buddies say that Apple is wrapping up final preparations to relaunch the entire EMI catalog on iTunes without DRM. With only a few more days until the end of May, we sure hope so.
There are a variety of rumored iPhone release dates floating around out there. Figuring out which ones really seem plausible is a whole ‘nother monster.
Today’s Friday Apple links include the Apple Stores banning MySpace, the Apple TV YouTube plugin, iPhone touchscreen research, Steve Jobs’ secret love for Al Gore, and a way to view your Aperture library online.
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