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Features

  • Developing for the iPhone OS: App Store vs. web apps

    By Ryan Faas | 07 June, 2010 16:35

    Apple's App Store approval process has always been a bit controversial because of the level of control the company holds over what types of applications are allowed in. Initially, there were concerns that Apple rejected apps because they duplicated functionality the company already offered or was planning to build into the iPhone OS -- not because the submitted apps wouldn't run according to the company's specifications.

  • Is Apple's iPhone App Store growing unwieldy?

    By Matt Peckham | 04 December, 2009 04:33

    Research firm IDC says Apple's App Store could stock in excess of a quarter million iPhone and iPod Touch applications, tripling current levels by the end of 2010. That's some number. Contrast with an estimated 10,000 Windows 7-compatible apps, over 700 (released as well as announced) Xbox 360 games, nearly 600 PS3 games, over 1,000 Wii games, over 600 DS games (from September 2008), and over 700 PSP games.

  • Five great iPhone photography apps for the holidays

    By Tom Kaneshige | 02 December, 2009 09:06

    Old friends, family gatherings, homeward-bound travel all go hand-in-hand with the holiday season--and, of course, so does taking photos of these special moments.

  • Apps Store approvals still make no sense, Spotify or not

    By David Coursey | 09 September, 2009 04:36

    Much is being made of supposed improvements to Apple's App Store, but the approval of a music service called Spotify only raises more questions. And the recent approval of Loopt was a major step backward even Phil Schiller may be unable to fix.

  • Can TomTom iPhone app compete with standalone GPS unit?

    By Jeff Bertolucci | 18 August, 2009 09:32

    TomTom's new GPS navigation application for the iPhone may sound appealing, but it's true cost and capabilities are still a mystery. The app costs $100 and allows the iPhone to function as a real-time navigation device that provides turn-by-turn directions.

  • TomTom For iPhone spells an end to standalone GPS

    By David Coursey | 18 August, 2009 03:10

    The new TomTom app that turns an iPhone into a turn-by-turn GPS navigation system spells the beginning of the end for standalone GPS. Not everywhere, but at least on dashboards, where a smartphone can now do everything a GPS can do and cost less than purchasing both.

  • Best of the best iPhone apps: new book rounds them up

    By Tom Kaneshige | 12 August, 2009 03:27

    It's one of the world's most successful retail launches in recent history: the Apple App Store. In only a year since its debut, the App Store now offers some 65,000 different apps. Apple claims more than 1.5 billion apps have been downloaded from its virtual shelves.

  • Apple anger: Our 5 biggest iPhone beefs

    By JR Raphael | 06 August, 2009 09:17

    Well, Apple's done it again. The company has censored yet another app from its precious App Store, this time because it contained "objectionable" words. The app in question: a dictionary.

  • Google Voice for iPhone: Missing in action

    By James A. Martin | 05 August, 2009 23:25

    Big Brother is a little late in arriving, having been expected by 1984 at the latest. But he has shown his face twice recently in the world of mobile technology: First, in the mass removal from Amazon Kindles of George Orwell's 1984 (oh, sweet irony) and Animal Farm e-books. Second, when Apple banished all Google Voice-related apps from its App Store--including one excellent app, GV Mobile, which Apple had approved and which had been available in the iTunes store since early May.

  • App selection secures iPhone lead In smartphone market

    By David Coursey | 08 July, 2009 02:10

    It wasn't always obvious that applications would be as important to mobile users as the iPhone has helped them become. Or that they would be even more important for keeping competitors at bay.

  • Five fab apps for iPhone OS 3.0 and the new 3GS

    By Dan Turner | 06 July, 2009 08:26

    Apple Inc. has an interesting pie-slicing problem coming as far as developers of iPhone (and iPod Touch) applications are concerned. All of those first- and second-generation iPhones run the same operating system -- the just-released iPhone OS 3.0 -- as the new 3GS model. But the latter includes new hardware such as a magnetometer, a faster CPU and faster GPU, as well as more memory. If developers build shiny new apps with only those features in mind, they'll limit their market. What to do?

  • Apple iPhone: It's all about the apps

    By David Coursey | 10 June, 2009 22:03

    If there is a single message from Apple's Monday announcements, it is a simple one: Software sells hardware. Second message? Apple's iPhone has a lot of software available and the Palm Pre, Android, BlackBerry, et al, don't come close.

  • iPhone apps that foretell the future

    By Michael DeAgonia | 05 March, 2009 08:11

    Ah, the Apple App Store. Since July 2008, the month when Apple opened its wildly popular library of applications for the iPhone and iPod Touch, the world has been treated to more than 20,000 apps, with some 500 million downloaded as of February 2009.

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