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Inside the Apple-Google War: It’s Personal [Applegooglewar]

March 13th, 2010

Today’s New York Times has a long, juicy look at what’s been going on behind the scenes with the ever-escalating conflict between Google and Apple. The cause for all the enmity, according to insiders? Ego.

The article draws from “interviews with two dozen industry watchers, Silicon Valley investors and current and former employees at both companies,” all of whom offer a sense of just how personal this battle is and always has been. The writers summarize:

At the heart of their dispute is a sense of betrayal: Mr. Jobs believes that Google violated the alliance between the companies by producing cellphones that physically, technologically and spiritually resembled the iPhone. In short, he feels that his former friends at Google picked his pocket.

The article starts with the good old days, when the two companies were cooperative and when the individuals that ran them were close. Even before the mutually-beneficial industry chuminess between Steve Jobs and Eric Schmidt, Jobs had a personal relationship with those heading Google. In the company’s early days, the article explains, Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin “considered Mr. Jobs a mentor”:

[Sergey] Brin was also known to take long walks with Mr. Jobs near his house in Palo Alto, and in the nearby foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains. According to colleagues, they discussed the future of technology and planned some joint ventures that never came to fruition - like a collaborative effort to develop a version of Apple’s Safari browser for Windows.

Google’s development of Android, however, was the thin end of the wedge, and even in its early stages was a source of tension. The article recounts one Android-related meeting between Jobs and Google that sounds mighty uncomfortable:

At one particularly heated meeting in 2008 on Google’s campus, Mr. Jobs angrily told Google executives that if they deployed a version of multitouch - the popular iPhone feature that allows users to control their devices with flicks of their fingers - he would sue. Two people briefed on the meeting described it as “fierce” and “heated.”

Eventually, we on the outside caught wind of the conflict. As early as January 2008, Jobs was slighting Android, and a year after that we heard that Apple had stopped multitouch on Android altogether. We watched things get publicly uncomfortable when Apple rejected Google Voice from the app store. And soon we saw their acquisitions become undeniably competitive, Apple allegedly feeling that Google “stole” AdMob from them and preemptively gobbling up Lala in return. On the AdMob acquisition, the article’s sources say, “Mr. Jobs speculated that AdMob might have violated its legal obligations, with help from Google.” Apple’s recent patent infringement suit against HTC was just confirmation that the bad blood was turning into a blood bath.

In January we heard that Apple was in talks with Microsoft to replace Google with Bing as the default search engine on iPhones and iPads, and the Times article ends by mentioning that “One Apple employee says that Qi Lu, the president of Microsoft’s online services division, was recently seen visiting Apple’s campus in Cupertino to discuss such a deal.”

The Apple-Google war is waged by relentless corporations, but it is fueled by the bruised egos of individuals. Getting a better picture of how personal the conflict has been all along, it’s hard to imagine the giants reconciling anytime soon. [NY Times]

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          admin Uncategorized Apple, Google, iPhone, Microsoft, PC, software, technology

          A Reminder of How Sad the Internet Can Look Without Flash [Image Cache]

          March 12th, 2010
          New Year's Web Hosting

          When we discussed the iPad and whether it was worth giving in to the peer pressure and pre-ordering it, a commenter decided to remind us of his reason for resisting: No flash. And yes, it can make things look sad.

          Of course these screenshots are from an iPhone, but the iPad presently has the same unfortunate lack of flash support as the iPhone, so the images are a pretty reasonable representation of what we would see.

          Images originally posted by whatNow

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              admin Uncategorized iPhone, PC, software

              Adult content: risqué iPhone apps

              March 12th, 2010
              Star Wars Cookbooks

              Who says you can’t find naughty sex games and some females baring skin in iTunes? More than a few apps have made it past Apple’s content filters. Here’s a selection of adults only apps, from the steamy to the downright absurd.

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              admin Uncategorized Apple, apps, game, iPhone

              This Week’s Best iPhone Apps [IPhone Apps]

              March 12th, 2010
              New Year's Web Hosting

              In this week’s bipolar app roundup: Foursquare, squared! Slow ISPs, tattled on! Videos, easily streamed! Street Fighter fans’ high standards, met! Twitter apps, set free! Your entire life, documented! Your every plan, shared! And more…

              This Week’s Apps

              To view the gallery as a single page, click here.

              This Week’s iPhone News on Giz

              (Video of the upcoming Sword and Sworcery EP)
              • GuitarBud Plugs a Guitar Directly Into an iPhone

              • When iPhone Games Approach Art, and When They Don’t

              • Google Mobile Search Reveals What’s In Stock Nearby

              • iPhone 4.0 Firmware to Bring Multitasking This Summer?

              • Irresistible iPhone Apps Fridge Magnets

              • It’s Time to Declare War Against Apple’s Censorship

              • You Will Have the Power of a PS3 In Your Pocket In 3 Years

              • Apple Must Feature PixieTea In Their Next iPhone Ad

              • Case-mate Hug Review: A Wireless iPhone Charging Pad That Actually Works Well

              • Taliban Leader, iPhone User

              • Apple ‘iKey’ Places a Combination Lock on Your Wallet

              • BTW, Wi-Fi Scanner Apps Were Begging to Get Banned by Apple

              • Apple’s Sexy App Purge Was Just the Beginning

              • Tekken Will Come to iPhone

              • Steve Jobs Says “No,” iPad Won’t Tether To iPhone

              This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory. Have a great weekend, everybody!

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                        admin Uncategorized Apple, apps, game, Google, iPhone, PC, software

                        GuitarBud Plugs a Guitar Directly Into an iPhone [IPhone]

                        March 12th, 2010
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                        GuitarBud is a $29 adapter that allows you to plug a guitar right into an iPhone. How is that useful? Well if I ever learned to play that guitar in my closet, I could:

                        • Record riffs
                        • Tune the strings
                        • Play with realtime audio effects
                        • Share riffs in the cloud
                        • …and all of this with direct line-in quality, with the help of a few apps

                        If there’s one, single testament to the App Store’s success, it’s that a simple piece of hardware can immediately add so much extra functionality to the iPhone (because apps like Voice Memos, StompVox, Riff Raters and Guitar FX Deluxe already exist). But then again, if only the iPhone had a fatty 1/4-inch jack or two, we wouldn’t even need the GuitarBud in the first place! [PRSCables via ShinyShiny via DVICE]

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                                admin Uncategorized apps, hardware, iPhone, PC, software, TV

                                Ideal iPhone apps for frequent fliers

                                March 12th, 2010
                                All New Nero 9 - Your Digital Life, Made Easy

                                CNET picks 10 good iPhone apps for frequent fliers.Related External Links

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                                    admin Uncategorized apps, iPhone, PC

                                    Chatroulette! iPhone! App! [IPhone Apps]

                                    March 12th, 2010

                                    Err…you may be disappointed though. Particularly if you were on the look-out for some manbits.

                                    Considering the iPhone doesn’t have a front-facing camera, video-chatting on Chatroulette with your iPhone just wouldn’t work. So it’s no surprise the Chatroulette! (exclamation mark their own) app is a fakey. Developers xhumans describes the app as allowing you to connect “to a random user to chat with.” Text chat, needless to say.

                                    Sooo, you may as well go back to leaving your AIM details on bathroom walls, or just firing up your old ICQ username, if typing weird come-ons to strangers is what you seek. It’ll save you 99 cents, anyway. [Chatroulette! via Mobile-Ent]

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                                            admin Uncategorized Apple, apps, iPhone, PC, software

                                            The iDongle Makes iPhone Jailbreaking Child’s Play [Hacking]

                                            March 11th, 2010
                                            Sending Large Files? Use Box.net!

                                            It used to be that jailbreaking your iPhone was a long, involved process, but worth it for the freedom. We’ve reached a new age, though, where emancipating your phone is as simple as plugging in an iDongle. Liberty!

                                            The iDongle won’t unlock your iPhone directly, but it does allow you to jailbreak a fresh factory unit or, just as importantly, reboot a jailbroken phone on the go. The good news: as you can see in the video below, it’s an incredibly easy hack. The bad news: it’s currently only for 3.1.2 iPhone 3GS and iPod Touch 2G/3G. There also are only a few dozen of them at the moment, but the developer is in the process of raising money to build up production.

                                            I don’t know about you guys, but I’m suddenly feeling miiiiiighty charitable.

                                            [iDongle via Engadget]

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                                                    admin Uncategorized 3g, hardware, iPhone, ipod, ipod touch, jailbreak, PC, software

                                                    More possible iPad camera evidence surfaces

                                                    March 11th, 2010

                                                    More clues are being discovered in hardware and software leading to speculation that the iPad can support a front-facing iSight camera.

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                                                    admin Uncategorized hardware, software

                                                    Springpad Turns Your iPhone Into a Scrapbook for Everything [IPhone Apps]

                                                    March 11th, 2010
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                                                    Are you one of those people who collects stuff? Not material items, but little tiny scraps of information, be they photos, places, products, text snippets, ideas, or plans? Then maybe, maybe, you should try Springpad.

                                                    Springpad is a free iPhone app in the vein of Evernote, except with a broader scope. You can dump just about anything you encounter in here: photos are easily snapped and categorized; barcodes are scanned and filed restaurants and stores are identified by manual or geo-based search; notes are pecked and saved; every input field, nearly, is augmented by a “search” option; and all your material syncs to the service’s desktop web interface.

                                                    Since the app’s promise—to make collecting and organizing little scraps of information super-easy—is so appealing, it’s disappointing to find some interface awkwardness here; there’s never anything missing, really, but you often find yourself pausing to look for the next command longer than you should have to. Regardless, information hoarders and relentless scrapbookers should probably give Springpad a chance—it’s free, and for a first release, it does a lot. [Springpad]

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                                                            admin Uncategorized Apple, apps, iPhone, PC, software