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Apple victorious in iphone5.com domain dispute
Apple has apparently won control of the iphone5.com domain, according to changes in a Web record of the URL.
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Apple 'head and shoulders' above phone rivals in satisfaction survey
Apple debuted in the top spot among mobile phone makers in a US customer-satisfaction survey, receiving a record-high score for the category.
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Blogs: MacBook Pro refreshes may be imminent
Hints that Apple will soon refresh its iMac desktop and MacBook Pro laptop lines accumulated today as several Mac-centric blogs revealed new details gleaned from the Web and unnamed sources.
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Is Apple's OS X Mountain Lion on early-release track?
Apple may release OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion earlier than expected, according to a report by a popular blog and clues found within the release dates of the three developer previews of the new operating system.
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Half of all Macs will lack access to security updates by summer
Unless Apple changes its security update practice, nearly half of all Mac users will be adrift without patches sometime this summer.
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Apple rejecting iOS apps that use Dropbox SDK
Developers using the software development kit of cloud storage vendor Dropbox are having their iOS apps rejected by at Apple.
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Opinion: I have seen the future (And it's made of glass)
It's hard to think of glass as an area of rapid technology evolution. But it's one of the central technologies that will bring us incredible innovations over the next couple of years.
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Analysis: Does the iPad cannibalize Apple's laptops?
Is Apple cutting the MacBook's throat with the iPad?
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'Siri, I have some some suggestions for you'
When Apple's new iPad was unveiled last week , one of the features users had hoped for didn't come with it. Siri, the voice-controlled personal assistant that's been such a hit on the iPhone 4S, wasn't among the tablet's new features. (Apple did add a dictation feature, but it has none of Siri's interactivity; all you can do is one-way dictation.)
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FAQ: What you need to know now about the 'new iPad'
Yesterday, Apple pulled off the wraps from the new iPad -- yes, that's the official name -- and spent more than an hour on a San Francisco stage touting what's changed, like the screen, and what hasn't, like the price.
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I dumped my iPhone 4 for the Android Galaxy Nexus
I like a lot of things about my iPhone 4. For starters, the whole "antennagate" thing was overblown. Lots of phones drop bars if you grip them a certain way while in a weak signal area. (My new Galaxy Nexus does.) And although I live in a dead zone for both AT&T and Verizon, right out of the box my AT&T iPhone 4 got noticeably better reception than my original iPhone. A simple iPhone 4 case prevented any loss of signal reception due to hand shielding.
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FAQ: What's what in OS X Mountain Lion?
Last week, Apple took most Mac users by surprise when it released a developers preview of Mountain Lion, the company's newest desktop operating system, and announced it would ship the upgrade later this year.
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OS X Mountain Lion: A big cat for business?
Apple surprised the tech world by unveiling a developer preview of OS X Mountain Lion, the next generation of its desktop operating system set to ship this summer - just a year after OS X 10.7 Lion arrived.
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In crowded tablet market, brand identity will matter
When it comes to the bevy of new tablet computers coming to market, a tablet maker's brand will take on more significance than ever.
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Aberdeen Group: Building Business Resilience Through Active Archive
One of the key data management challenges organizations often face is how to keep their archived data accessible and active, without spending the time and resources associated with primary storage. The amount of data in the archives can range from one half to 10 times the amount of data actively managed in primary storage. How can end-users gain access to historical files in a reasonable amount of time without pulling IT employees from higher priority projects? Aberdeen's research found the answer in the technologies and processes that comprise active archiving.
Market Potential-Strategy Guide to the Active Archive Market
The active archive market is a growing segment where tape is seen as part of a disk or network fileystem. This means that to an end user disk and tape are “blended” and whether file is held on disk or tape is “invisible” to the end user. The active archive market is the fastest growing space in the storage industry and allows direct end user access to tape through a file system front end.

- Microsoft details Windows 8 upgrade program for consumers
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- Wall Street Beat: June starts slow but hope for tech in 2012 remains
- Experts torn on Oracle's chances of appeal in Android copyright ruling
- ICANN finally closes generic TLD applications











