Apple's Secrecy: Unintended Consequences
TheStreet.com - Fri Dec 11, 2:55 pm ETThe company's secrecy opens the door to rumors and market manipulation.
369 Stories, most recent news story added Fri Dec 4, 11:17 am ET
The company's secrecy opens the door to rumors and market manipulation.
Apple has long been a purveyor of cutting-edge, artistic computer and component design. And almost never have they gotten the mouse right. Until now. The Magic Mouse looks beautiful and works so well, the venerable Microsoft Wheel Mouse suddenly seems expendable.
Verizon has launched a new ad for the Motorola Droid, "Pretty."
Much ballyhoo for a 2-wheeled, gyroscopic, expensive scooter. Has it changed the world yet?
It looks like we may soon need an iPhone application that keeps track of all the new iPhone applications.
The Tiger Woods scandal, it turns out, shows that he is only human after all.
With the advent of the media joint venture, Hulu's development may have just hit a wall. Plus, Netflix and iTunes could be competing with a major supplier.
Apple Inc. is one step closer to building a second campus in Cupertino after waiting eight months for city planners to rezone its 7.78-acre property on Pruneridge Avenue to allow office use.
Many fund companies that focus on growth have added value and other styles to the lineup. At Fred Alger Management, the emphasis remains on growth.
Normally whingeing gets you nowhere, but in a heartening turn of events, a developer's late-night email shot off to Steve Jobs yielded some surprising results. Apple didn't approve of the use of a...
Get the low down on the tech scene.
Oh my, a viral video that's actually pro-Microsoft! How did that happen?
Students in Irene Thraen-Borowski’s Graphic Communications class at the Jo Daviess Carroll Area Vocational Center create work around a central theme that is then displayed throughout the community in a rotating exhibit.
The ubiquitous iPhone has more than 100,000 apps that can do everything from tell you the weather in Nome, Alaska to give you headlines from The New York Times to order you a burrito from Chipotle.
Basically I make a living making fun of crazy stuff like this, but give a listen to the University of Michigan's unique orchestra , which uses no instruments other than a few iPhones to make music, and see if you don't have something positive to say about his decidedly unique ensemble. Taught by musician-slash-computer scientist Georg Essl, the class is composed of about 20 people who use ...
Following a settlement agreement with Apple, Psystar's Mac OS-loaded hardware is no longer available on its site.