To help you get the most out of your mac!
Macworld Expo San Francisco 2010 kicked off yesterday with a presentation by The New York Times’ David Pogue and guest appearance by actor LeVar Burton. While the Pogue keynote was a huge departure from Steve Jobs’ traditional keynotes, it w…
While the iPad was officially announced in January, the iPad will not be available for purchase until late March. However, it seems some iPads have been seeded into the wild as David Vogler claims to have seen one in a New York City Starbucks (phot…
RBC Capital analyst Mike Abramsky published a research note today regarding a meeting with several Apple executives, including Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer, iTunes VP Eddy Cue, and Mac Marketing VP David Moody, covering a number of topic…
In: General| IT| iPhone| iPhone 3G| iPhone 3GS
15 Jul 2009While writing his new book on iPhone 3GS, David Pogue (nytimes.com) discovered some features he couldn’t wait to talk about, one of which is part of the accessibility features built-in to iPhone. “You’d never suspect,” Pogue remarks, “that the iPhone 3GS, which has no physical keys at all, is one of the easiest smartphones in the world for a blind person to use. But now it’s true, thanks to VoiceOver.”
Use the new iPhone 3G S, and the “speed boost hits you between the eyes,” reports David Pogue (nytimes.com). And Pogue ticks off all the other new features that make the “substantially improved, still elegant iPhone 3G S” even harder to resist: a 3-megapixel camera, voice-control features, “sharp, smooth, 30-frames-a-second” video recording, a built-in Compass, an oleophobic screen, and a “better, beefier battery.”
Use the new iPhone 3G S, and the “speed boost hits you between the eyes,” reports David Pogue (nytimes.com). And Pogue ticks off all the other new features that make the “substantially improved, still elegant iPhone 3G S” even harder to resist: a 3-megapixel camera, voice-control features, “sharp, smooth, 30-frames-a-second” video recording, a built-in Compass, an oleophobic screen, and a “better, beefier battery.”
The outside of the box said "Windows base machine or better", so I bought a Mac.