mcfrazieriv

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mcfrazieriv
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  • US iPhone owners spent average of $35 on apps in 2015, mostly on games

    sog35 said:
    Time for Apple to get into the ad business.  That is where the real money is made
    chief strategy officer speaks
    singularity
  • New 4-inch iPhone expected to add $5.5 billion in sales for Apple

    Sad how this is what Apple has become... a cash machine.

    What happened to liberal arts meets technology and changing the world?
    6Sgoldfish
  • Watch Republicans Marco Rubio & Ted Cruz side with FBI in Apple encryption debate

    At the last Republican debate before the "Super Tuesday" primaries, the remaining candidates for U.S. president said they believe Apple should help the FBI unlock the iPhone 5c used by one of the San Bernardino shooters.



    Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, John Kasich and Ben Carson were all asked about the iPhone encryption debate at a debate hosted by CNN and Telemundo Thursday night, and all four of them sided with the FBI. Frontrunner Donald Trump was not questioned on the issue, though he has already called for a boycott of Apple until it complies with government requests to help unlock the handset.

    Perhaps most surprising was Rubio's response, given that the senator from Florida had previously said that the complex issue required thoughtful debate. But on Thursday, he took a more hardline approach against Apple.

    "Apple doesn't want to do it, because they think it hurts their brand," Rubio said. "Well let me tell you, their brand is not superior to the national security of the United States of America."




    Sen. Cruz of Texas said he agrees with Apple's "broad policy" that there should not be backdoor access to any iPhone. But he believes that the company should do everything it can to gain access to the iPhone 5c involved in the San Bernardino shooting.

    "We should enforce the court order, and find out everyone that terrorist at San Bernardino talked to on the phone, texted with, emailed," Cruz said. "And Apple absolutely doesn't have a right to defy a valid court order."

    Moderate candidate and former Ohio governor Kasich took a softer approach, laying blame on President Barack Obama for not brokering a deal in private.

    "Where has the president been? You sit down in a back room, and you sit down with the parties, and you get this worked out," Kasich said. "You don't litigate this on the front page of the New York Times, where everybody in the world is reading about their dirty laundry out here."

    Finally, retired neurosurgeon Carson said he believes Apple will ultimately be compelled to unlock the iPhone for the FBI.

    "I would expect Apple to comply with the court order," Carson said. "If they don't comply with that, you're encouraging chaos in our system."

    A U.S. magistrate judge has ordered Apple to comply with FBI requests to help extract data owned by one of the shooters involved in the December terrorist attack. The device in question is a passcode-protected iPhone 5c the FBI seeks to unlock.

    Apple, however, has fought back, saying the only way to unlock the handset would be to create a backdoor to iOS --?something that does not currently exist. Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook has said creating such a tool would set a bad precedent and potentially expose mobile devices to security issues.
    Still siding with the far right wing... nothing learned from Romney's loss. Instead of staying conservative on core issues and moderate on everything else, these losers will probably lose another race. Wonder how many they'll lose until they finally realize what it is that Donald Trump is calling "the new republican party" and why it's leaving these crazies in the dirt.
    lostkiwi
  • Apple's iPad shipments could hit new low in first quarter - report

    No sh!t sherlock! Jobs introduced a product and his successor gave almost zero market reason to buy into the dang thing so the market fizzled out. Every time Jobs introduced a product, he introduced it to disrupt a whole industry. Tim Cook doesn't have the vision for this, he just knows how to make millions of them with a high margin. Jobs was known for extreme interest in the education market, once calling schools "fortune 500 companies" at a NeXT product launch. There's been almost nothing but failed deals with Tim Cook's leadership in education, one of which being a massive "scandal" with the LAUSD and another the eBooks garbage probably left unfinished by Jobs. Yes, it's annoying to point out how life was different with Jobs, but damn it's as glaring as those damn blue polo shirts with embroidered white Apples.
    cornchip
  • AI 'drivers' will gain same legal status as human drivers in autonomous vehicles, NHTSA rules

    No thanks. I'd rather drive my own car and enjoy the experience. People invent newer and newer technology which always appears to phase out the need for anything human. Who needs people at all eventually when you can have a computer do it for you? Such a developer mindset.
    tallest skil