Jul 13 2008 9:12PM GMT
Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Apple
 |
Apple just launched K-12 on iTunes U (opens iTunes) that allows schools to use iTunes as a platform to distribute educational content.
Not quite sure why a school would find this easier than just posting the stuff on the web, but I do know Apple would love to get all those students spending even more time in iTunes.
Jon Robinson, Apple’s iTunes U for K-12 Schools |
I can’t think of a single network administrator I know who would recommend putting iTunes on school computers.
Jul 13 2008 8:07PM GMT
Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Technology,
flash memory,
Memory,
Apple
 |
Removable flash applications, such as cards for cell phones, drive the bulk of today’s NAND market.
NAND growth through 2012 will be driven by the computing segment, such as hybrid drives, and solid-state drives going into notebooks, UMPCs, servers, mobile and enterprise storage and data centers.
Ciol, NAND market: Where’s Apple?
|
I had to look up the acronym UMPC. It stands for ultra-mobile personal computer.
Jul 3 2008 12:31PM GMT
Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Apple,
Gps,
Telecom,
Mobile
 |
GPS brings a whole new level of precision to the mobile experience. Cell phones have been required to be location-aware for several years in order to comply with the needs of emergency response agencies in the U.S. However, the primitive triangulation system that basic phones use isn’t very precise. With GPS, a user’s location could be pinpointed to within a few feet.
Paul Gillin, The Promise and Pitfalls of Location-Awareness |
If you do a search on Google for location awareness, you’ll find lot of articles written by people who are excited about the possibilities of mobile devices and location awareness. Advertisers, particularly seem excited. If you look at the dates for a lot of those articles, however, you might be surprised to see they were written in 2001. Will the iPhone really be the tipping point for location awareness 3rd party apps? I’m not going to hold my breath.
Jun 10 2008 7:29PM GMT
Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Technology,
Mobile,
Telecom,
iPhone,
Apple
 |
We have had nearly 24 hours to jump out Steve Jobs’ reality distortion field and put common sense behind the announcements made yesterday – especially the company’s iPhone 3G.
Christian Zibreg, WWDC 2008: Will the iPhone 3G kill the iPhone?
|
Christian Zibreg thinks the money iPhone users shell out to AT&T each month is the deal killer. It is for my family.
Just as I was posting this, Verizon called and offered my whole family free phone upgrades and extra minutes. Coincidence? LOL!
Feb 1 2008 3:48PM GMT
Posted by: Margaret Rouse
Apple,
predictions
Apple’s gains in computer market share reflect as much on the failures of the rest of the industry as on Apple’s success. Apple is challenging its competitors with software integration that provides ease of use and flexibility; continuous and more frequent innovation in hardware and software; and an ecosystem that focuses on interoperability across multiple devices (such as iPod and iMac cross-selling).
Gartner Highlights Key Predictions for IT Organisations and Users in 2008 and Beyond