iPhone and iPad sales banned in US after Samsung patent win
Sale of certain Apple iPhone and iPad models have been banned in the US, after Samsung won a significant legal victory last night.
Sale of certain Apple iPhone and iPad models have been banned in the US, after Samsung won a significant legal victory last night.
Apple has just announced that 100 million iPod touch units have been sold since the first model launched in 2007.
iOS 7 likely to feature Street View-style upgrade for Maps, after Apple applies for a '3D position tracking' patent.
Recent Apple patent activity raises hopes of sonar and audio-detecting screen in the iPhone 6
The latest iPad mini rumour doing the rounds is that, in order to keep its price under the $250 mark in the US, it will only be available as as a Wi-Fi model.
That rumour about Samsung paying its fine with 5-cent pieces? Not true
The big Apple-Samsung patent trial begins in the US on Monday. What are the arguments, what's at stake, who's likely to win, and where will this leave the mobile industry as a whole?
Photos of an 'engineering sample' of the Apple iPad mini surfaced yesterday. But are they real or fake?
Today at <a href="http://mail.idg.co.uk/Redirect/www.pcadvisor.co.uk/news/index.cfm?spotlight=26:c">CeBIT</a>, representatives of some of the biggest names in IT came together for a discussion of cloud computing, which <a href="http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/tv/index.cfm?&vid=3262890">organisers have suggested</a> could be the overriding theme of this year's show.
Samsung's components division is pushing the eco-friendly angle at CeBIT this year (just as it did last year). The difference this time around is that the company believes its reduced-power-consumption 30nm DDR memory could hold the key to the future of cloud computing.
Google and Verizon may have moved to quash rumours of a traffic-prioritisation deal, but almost a third of web users would approve of such an arrangement, according to a <a href="http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/poll/index.cfm?action=showresults&pid=3234506">PC Advisor survey</a>.
Of those lucky football fans who are able to follow the World Cup 2010 at work, 16.5 percent are streaming TV coverage over the web, according to a PC Advisor UK poll.