| PC World - Apple's rumored iTunes-in-the-cloud service may be called iCloud, and the iOS maker may have paid as much as $4.5 million to acquire the new name, according to online rumors. Until recently, iCloud was the name of a free Webtop and online ... |
| Mashable - Apple's iPad 2 arrived in Japan Thursday, and the company has announced that the tablet will be in 11 more countries by Friday. iPad 2 will be available at Apple retail stores and select Apple Authorized Resellers at 9 a.m. local time, as ... |
| Mashable - Another day, another hazy rumor. Apparently Apple may have purchased the domain name iCloud. GigaOm is citing an anonymous tipster who says Apple recently snapped up the domain name from a Linkoping, Sweden-based desktop-as-a-service compa ... |
| PC World - Research firm Canalys on Thursday said Apple was the world's fourth-largest PC maker during the first quarter, after adding the computer maker's iPad in worldwide PC shipments. ... |
| Reuters - Samsung Electronics filed its own U.S. lawsuit against Apple, accusing the iPad maker of infringing 10 patents in an escalation of the dispute over tablet and mobile technology. ... |
| Mashable - We knew it's happening today, but it's still hard to believe our eyes: after an extended period of downtime, the white iPhone 4 is now available in Apple Online Store. The device should also become available in Apple retail stores when the ... |
| Om Malik, of GigaOm, knows just about everybody. So when a tipster Apple-may-have-snapped-up-icloud- ... |
![]() | In what may serve as further evidence of an impending cloud-based iTunes service, a new report claims Apple has purchased the iCloud.com domain from the Swedish company Xcerion for $4.5 million. ... |
| AP - THE CONCERNS: Security researchers last week publicized a file that iPhones store on PCs they're linked to, which contains an approximate record of the phone movements for as much as a year. Privacy advocates questioned why the phones were stori ... |
| Apple broke its silence on Wednesday over accusations that the iPhone tracks users with an unencrypted file, saying the file is part of a crowd-sourced database of WiFi hotspots and cell towers. Apple said the file stores so much information — up to ... |