Dear LiveScribe Product Managers:
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As evidenced by my recent post history, I've been thinking quite a bit about the upcoming iPhone OS 3.0, Apple's rumored "netbook" device, and generally evaluating Apple's products from a product design perspective.
That's what the iPhone Dev-Team are promising. Let's see.
I'm going to call my prediction a bust.
So here's the very first of what I'm sure will be many Apple announcement predictions I shall make on Uncarved.
So Courtney Gaines, of the Telegraph's "Gadget Inspectors" gadget reviews series rates the HTC G1 (the first Google phone) with a a 10/10 rating, citing capabilities that are theoretically possible in upcoming Android-based phones... what?!
Microsoft has recently announced that they will be entering the retail space with their own stores. Clearly they feel a need to compete with Apple's success in their retail endeavors. But, in a seeming effort to remain depressingly consistent, they're once again stealing from the surface and ignoring the treasures below.
William Hurley, author of the Evil Genius blog, recently published a post, titled Five Reasons Apple Should Open Source The iPhone. Despite the title, however, he never actually directly argues that the Apple should open source iPhone's software.
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Wallet is a neat little utility that — like Keychain.app, which comes bundled with Mac OS X — lets you store all sorts of tidbits like notes, account numbers, PINs, etc. in a safely-encrypted little repository (or, wallet).