At Apple WWDC 2008, Steve Jobs reveals the iPhone 3G with faster download speeds, longer battery life, GPS, a lower price, and a near worldwide release on July 11.
At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference, S. Mark Williams of Modality shows off an iPhone application that gives detailed views of the human anatomy, including the heart and brain
At the Apple WWDC 2008 in San Francisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs demonstrates GPS on the new 3G iPhone. Jobs shows how an iPhone traveling in a car going down San Francisco's famously crooked Lombard Street can be tracked as its user navigates the curves.
At Apple's WWDC 2008 in San Francisco, Sam Altman, CEO of Loopt, previews a new application for the iPhone that uses location-based services. The new app blends social networks with the Maps application, so you can see where your friends are. You can also go to their journals to see what they've been doing today, what pictures they've added, and so on. This app will also be free.
It's a battle between the two touch-screen titans of cell phones! Brian Tong brings you an instant Prizefight classic: the Samsung Instinct vs. the Apple iPhone 3G.
For any home hobbyists or tech lovers, the show "Prototype This" is
going to be your new favorite TV show. In each episode, the four hosts
attempt to turn their wacky ideas into a reality. CNET's Kara Tsuboi spends
a day with the crew on location in the San Francisco Bay Area to learn about
a waterslide simulator, a "pyro pack," and a robot that can climb stairs.
Brian Brushwood stops by to ruin our lunches. He did some crazy crazy tricks like sticking a 4-and-a-half-inch nail in his nose, sticking a smaller nail in his eye, and basically taking over the show and making it awesome. The boys of the 404 might talk about iPod Touches, but who are we kidding? Magic
At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, Mark Terry of Moo Cow Music demonstrates a new music application that enables users to create tunes using various instruments and the phone's touch-screen pad. In the demo, Terry shows how a user can create a few riffs from Pink Floyd's 'Money' with the music app.
After opening up Apple's "Let's rock" event by defending his health,
CEO Steve Jobs immediately got down to the business of announcing the fall
lineup of new iPod software and hardware. As CNET's Kara Tsuboi reports, the company hopes the sleeker bodies in the iPod Nano and Touch lines will add to the 160 million iPods already sold.