iPhone Allows 3rd-Party Apps, Kind Of
There have been complaints by many in the business sector about the iPhone being all flash and no use — well, Apple wants to change that. The company announced today that it’s aiming for the iPhone to become a corporate email gadget and a portable video game machine for the busy and bored businessman.
The company has even teamed up with a venture capital firm to offer $100 million for developers who can come up with some nifty iPhone applications. The strategy is also known as, “do our work for us” — a common trend in companies who have realized that paying the general public less money to do their job is much easier than actually doing their job.
Apple iPhone Arrives, Messiah Not Far?
The waterfall of gadgetry has just begun and it’s only natural that Apple join the fray. It didn’t happen at CES but it happened because of CES, which is why we won’t only cover Apple’s new gadget — the Apple iPhone — but rate it with our patented, breakthrough R2-D2 rating system.
That’s right! The Apple iPhone is finally here and according to Apple — it’s the most wonderful thing to happen to the world since Jesus took that fall for our sins, except here’s the thing — Jesus didn’t play iTunes.
Apple iPhone - Speculation Continues
Speculation continues about when (note.. its not “IF” it is “WHEN”) Apple will be releasing its lineup of phones. Jesse Tortura, an analyst over at Prudential Equity Group, who covers Apple has added to the speculation by providing some juicy details.
Lurking iPhone Terrifies Competition
It seems like yesterday that the death of Apple was near — Microsoft was pounding the company into the ground, and the little innovative company was a half-step away from plummeting into a grave that Bill Gates so gladly dug for it. Then came the iMacs, and the iPods, and all the lowercase i’s that the development team at Apple could think of — and now Apple reins supreme, so much so, that the rumors of a new cellphone — tentatively titled as the iPhone. of course — is completely terrifying the competition. And why shouldn’t it? It’s Apple — they sell an Mp3 player for twice the price of similar gadgets and still hold most of the market in that field — we’d be terrified too.
