Posts Tagged ‘companies

Silicon Alley Insider reports that Apple has been told to pay a $21.7 million patent infringement judgment to OPTi Inc., a former semiconductor company that abandoned its business to focus on pursuing patent claims against other companies.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that Apple has approached several Australian media companies about offering their content on the company’s much-rumored tablet computer. Understandably, none of the companies have been willing to speak about the dev…

CNET reports that Apple, Google, and twenty other companies have been sued by Eolas Technologies for patent infringement related to the use of browser plug-ins and Ajax to offer interactive content in Web browsers. The move comes several years after…

In a brief note, DigiTimes reports that Taiwanese firm Foxlink is currently developing micro projectors for use in mobile phones, with Apple being one of the companies expected to launch devices with built-in projectors later this year. The projecto…

Fudzilla has heard from industry sources close to NVIDIA that a recent report claiming that Apple will be dropping NVIDIA-based designs for future Macs is false and that the companies’ relationship is “just fine.” Apple is still buyin…

Filed under: Analysis / Opinion , Apple Robert Brunner over at Design Matters brings up an interesting question with his latest entry : Has Apple’s definition of good design skewed consumer perception? Brunner, who admits right off the bat that he is a loyal Apple fan, makes a very good observation about design in the Apple-inspired world: Here’s the gist: Apple has been so successful in design, that to many people if something does not resemble an iPhone, iPod, MacBook, etc., it is not “good design.” If it is not an uber-simple, highly-rationalized, single-buttoned, machined-from-a-solid-block-of aluminum thing, it can’t be good, right? It’s become a pretty common undertone in articles, reviews, blogs, and user commentary

Apple authorizes the companies listed in this article to train Apple Authorized Service Providers, dealers, and customers, to repair Apple products. The Apple Authorized Training Centers (AATCs) deliver training and administer tests within the Apple Certified Service Technician Program, using Apple developed training materials and certification tests

Learn how to correctly remove or install a battery in your MacBook Pro portable computer. This applies to any model of MacBook Pro with a battery you can remove on your own, in both 15-inch and 17-inch configurations.


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