Apple is making a version of its iPhone that Verizon Wireless will sell early next year, ending an exclusive deal with AT&T and sharpening the competition with Google Inc.-based phones.
Native data applications, such as those installed on smartphones like the iPhone and devices running Android, now account for 50 percent of all mobile data volume according to a new report.
Applications have evolved as a low cost way for entrepreneurs to experiment and test the startup waters with their own company. In an age where an app developed by two or three people can turn into a $10 million exit, there’s a significant amount of interest in both standalone and derivative app development.
Libraries across the United States are tweeting, texting, and launching smartphone apps as they try to keep up with the biblio-techs, a computer savvy class of people who consider card catalogs as vintage as typewriters. And they seem to be pulling it off.
There are no indications that Google is killing the iPhone, but there is no doubt that the iPhone has a serious fight on its hands. Phones powered by Google’s Android operating system are now the most popular among smartphones in the United States.
The Association of American Publishers recently reported that e-book sales for the first half of the year were up more than 200 percent. Far from being the end of the publishing industry, this number is a sign of a new beginning.
Microsoft's introduction of Windows Phone 7, set to be formally introduced next week, will barely move the needle on the company's dismal share of the smartphone OS market.
Nearly six months after the iPad’s debut, we’re finally starting to see the first Android tablets sneak out, but where are the showcase Windows 7 tablets?
Visibility Corporation announced the availability of VISIBILITY.net ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) on the iPad. VISIBILITY.net is a comprehensive, fully integrated ERP software solution designed to meet the needs of complex manufacturers.
SAP and Sybase, an SAP company, announced the creation of a new Mobile Business Unit, designed to deliver innovation more rapidly across the SAP and Sybase portfolios.
Google's Android has surpassed Apple's iOS and Research In Motion's BlackBerry OS to become the most popular smartphone operating system in the United States, a research firm says.
Microsoft is expected to formally debut its retooled mobile operating system on a gaggle of new smartphones on October 11, 2010. The software giant is teaming up in an exclusive deal with AT&T, which is expected to carry the phones beginning November 8.
Research In Motion recently announced another development to its enterprise mobility offerings, with the new BlackBerry enterprise application middleware to allow enterprise IT departments to develop their own business critical apps.
Developers are now adding more than 17,000 new apps into the Android Market every month. Google has expanded the number of countries where people can sell paid applications, tacking 20 new nations onto the list.