![]() Reuters |
Week in Microsoft: more Windows Phone 7 Series details
Ars Technica By Emil Protalinski | Last updated February 27, 2010 9:00 AM Let’s look back at the week that was in Microsoft news. Here were the top stories: Leaked: WinPhone 7 Series dev to use almost all managed code: More details are emerging about the … Are you kidding me Microsoft? Why confuse with Windows Phone Starter Edition? ZDNet (blog) LG Windows Phone 7 prototype shown off to Engadget Recombu Developers, save us from the Microsoft undead BetaNews Register - Microsoft Watch - eWeek all 424 news articles » |
Archive for February, 2010...
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![]() Redmond Pie |
Apple to give next-gen iPhone the finger?
CNET Now that rumors of an Apple tablet have manifested themselves in the iPad, speculation about the next iteration of the iPhone can begin in earnest. In a research note published today, Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty … Mike Elgan: 15 iPad mysteries remain Computerworld Inside Apple’s iPad: iPhone OS vs Mac OS X Apple Insider Analyst: After iPad New iPhones With New Functionalities Appmodo BusinessWeek - ChannelWeb - I4U all 131 news articles » |
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The double edge sword,is cancer killing us or is it the therapy from radiology ?
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![]() Bleeding Edge TV |
Apple exec Tim Cook talks Apple TV, iPad A4 processor, more
Apple Insider By AppleInsider Staff Speaking in San Francisco Tuesday, Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook explained why the Apple TV is still considered a “hobby,” and talked about custom-built chips in future products. Cook said he believes the Apple TV is an … Survey: iPad demand beats early iPhone demand CNET Tim Cook: Apple Is “A Mobile-Device Company” Washington Post Pre-Launch Interest for the iPad Higher than for the Original iPhone Brighthand Seattle Times - MacNN - FierceOnlineVideo all 271 news articles » |
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Apple has dominated tech headlines this week, as the company has created quite an uproar by unexpectedly removing over 5,000 apps from its App Store. The apps removed have been deemed “too sexy”, but much of said uproar has been more about Apple’s definition of sexy, and its double standard. Apps containing women in bikinis and even workout clothes have been eliminated while apps from Playboy, FHM Magazine, and the Sports Illustrated Swim Suit Issue have remained available, and even promoted on Apple’s App Store home page.
Do you agree with Apple’s decision to pull some “sexy” apps, while leaving others? Tell us what you think.
After much of the ruckus had been raised, Apple SVP of Worldwide Product Marketing Phil Schiller talked to the New York Times, saying, “It came to the point where we were getting customer complaints from women who found the content getting too degrading and objectionable, as well as parents who were upset with what their kids were able to see.” He also indicated that the difference with the Playboy, Sports Illustrated apps, etc. were that they were from well-known companies that were already available in “well-accepted” formats.
Obviously, the developers of such apps that have been pulled are not happy. It’s not hard to understand their beef, as many of them have likely put a significant amount of time and money into creating and maintaining their apps, only to have them yanked without warning (other than the emails they got from Apple as they were being pulled). Apple’s reasoning for allowing the well-knowns only adds fuel to their fire.
Apple reviews apps on a case-by-case basis. “Whenever we receive customer complaints about objectionable content we review them,” Apple has said. “If we find these apps contain inappropriate material we remove them and request the developer make any necessary changes in order to be distributed by Apple.”
Some have raised the question: why is Apple suddenly going “puritanical” (one of the apps was removed because of a cartoon character in a bikini)? They have blocked apps in the past, but just to yank so many that have already been accepted into the store seems like a sudden change in attitude. Is it coincidence that the company is readying the release of its much-publicized iPad device, which will run apps from the app store?

Many think these two things are strongly connected, and some even consider Apple’s choice to pull “sexy” apps to be a “smart business decision.” For example, PC World’s Jeff Bertolucci writes:
As for the iPad, it’s clear that Apple will position its new tablet not only as a consumer device for the home, but also as an educational tool. Software developers are already designing interactive textbooks for the iPad, according to reports. Again, Apple must squash the impression that the App Store is a haven for smut to increase the odds of classroom sales. A few negative news stories about wobbly-boob apps could very well spur many school districts to think twice about adding the iPad as a study tool.
Bottom line: The porn purge is a smart business move on Apple’s part, even if it appears prudish to outsiders.
Beyond the classroom, Apple may be worried families will be less likely to purchase the iPad as well. The company’s comments regarding complaints from parents seems to suggest this very notion.
Not all complaints have come from concerned parents though. Even some developers have complained about apps such as those which have been removed. “Developers have been making similar complaints to Apple, but their concerns are also related to the volume of sexually-themed apps, which can represent as many as a third of the apps in certain iTunes App Store categories,” says InformationWeek’s Thomas Claburn. “The spam-scale proliferation of these apps ends up making other apps less discoverable.”
Others have pointed out, however, that there is plenty of R-rated content available through iTunes in the form of both movies and music, and Apple is keeping that stuff around, although that likely goes back to the same point Apple made about “well-known” and “accepted” sources. Many have also pointed out that users can always go to the web browser on their device and access all kinds of “nasty” stuff, but Apple doesn’t own the web, so unless Apple wants to start censoring the Internet, it is going to have a hard time keeping “sexiness” off its devices, even from lesser known sources. Apple can’t control that though, but it can control its own App store, and it is doing so.
Meanwhile, Google’s Android Market is growing significantly, and is currently in second place behind Apple’s App store in mobile application stores. Google has a significantly greater percentage of free apps as well, which could continue to fuel its growth. Perhaps another question is: can Apple afford to yank so many apps at a time when its competition is becoming greater than ever in the mobile space? Apple’s controlling “Puritanism” could come back to haunt it, despite its apparent motives. Evidently, that’s a chance the company is willing to take.
Do you think Apple is making the right decision by pulling all of these apps? Will Google benefit? Share your thoughts here.
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![]() Sofia Echo |
Report: Apple purged over 5000 ‘overtly sexual’ apps
TG Daily A third-party application developer known as ChilliFresh claims that Apple has purged more than 5000 “inappropriate” programs from its iPhone app store. The shocking statistics were recently confirmed by AppShopper.com, which discovered that … Apple Removes Some Adult Apps Wall Street Journal Why Apple’s Porn Purge is a Smart Move PC World Poll: Should Apple ban adult-themed apps from the App Store? CNET ZDNet (blog) - PC Magazine - Register all 313 news articles » |
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![]() Reuters |
What Microsoft Learned From Apple
PC Magazine Microsoft has taken a page out of the Apple playbook for its new mobile OS. It may be the key to the company’s success in the space. by Tim Bajarin At Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last week, Microsoft finally unveiled the latest version of … Motorola May Produce Windows Phone 7 Devices, Says Report eWeek Microsoft phone system hits reset on digital music Reuters Rivals aim to slow mobile gains by Apple, Google Computerworld AnandTech - TMCnet - NewsFactor Network all 107 news articles » |
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Starting sometime around the first of March, Microsoft is going to give Europeans an obvious chance to pick something other than Internet Explorer as their Web browser. And starting today, Microsoft’s given the whole world a chance to see what its “Web browser choice screen” looks like.
This ballot screen has been in the works for a long time. The process began when European regulators objected to Windows and Internet Explorer being bundled together. Then, a proposal that would have put all of the different browser choices in alphabetical order was vetoed.
Eventually, all of the parties agreed upon displaying the browser’s names in a random order.
Now tests are set to begin next week in Belgium, France, and the U.K., with a full-scale rollout planned for early March. The browser choice screen software will reach people via Windows Update, and should (except for the order of the browsers) resemble the picture below.
Microsoft seemed rather pleased to announce that all of this is taking place ahead of the European Commission’s schedule. We’re just very curious to see what Internet Explorer’s market share will look like come April.
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Yay for wet shower hair!A Response to:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3hrVyYlQ9s0My 3rd Podcast:http://veritas48.blogspot.com/2009/12/podc… a…
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![]() France24 |
Why Apple’s Porn Purge is a Smart Move
PC World It appears Apple is embarking on a new anti-smut crusade to rid its iPhone App Store of “overtly sexual content.” According to news reports, the targets of Apple’s ire include relatively tame adult fare, many of which manage to incorporate the word … Apple Removes Some Adult Apps Wall Street Journal Poll: Should Apple ban adult-themed apps from the App Store? CNET Apple May Be Purging Sexy Apps PC Magazine ZDNet (blog) - TG Daily - Register all 199 news articles » |





