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Stolen Belgian iPhones Starting To Appear on Russian Black Market

Batches of stolen iPhones snagged during the “Great iPhone Heist” in Belgium earlier this month are showing up on the Russian black market.
Two weeks ago, thieves made off with 3,000-4,000 iPhone 3GS from a Belgian warehouse belonging to wireless carrier Mobistar. The haul was valued at $3 million. Now the stolen iPhones are being offered [...]

iPhone Worm Creator Snags App Dev Job

The 21-year-old Australian guy who got chewed out by his parents for launching the first iPhone worm landed a job with an app company.
Ashley Towns wrote Ikee, calling it an “experiment that got out of hand,”  a worm that  switched iPhone wallpaper for an image of 80s pop singer Rick Astley. Astley, who sang the [...]

Apple Opens iTunes LP and Extras to Developers

Never let it be said that Apple doesn’t keep its promises. Six weeks after announcing it would open up its iTunes LP file format to all developers and labels, Apple delivered this morning with specifications and resources for both iTLP and its DVD-like iTunes Extras. All of the contents are here. The company also through [...]

Let’s Give Thanks This Thanksgiving — For Steve Jobs

Techcrunch’s Michael Arrington has written a nice essay giving thanks this Thanksgiving — to Steve Jobs.
Arrington rightly points out that our world would be very different if Jobs hadn’t returned to Apple 12 years ago. Mobile phones would still be horrible, computers would still be ugly and the music industry would have collapsed.
“… What would [...]

A Commanding Sight In Iceland

commandsymbol-20081110.jpg

The keen Mac cultists among you will already know the story behind the cloverleaf Command symbol (⌘) but for those of you who don’t, this photo (by cogdogblog on Flickr, used under CC license) tells the story rather well.

The ⌘ was discovered for Apple by bitmap artist Susan Kare in a dictionary of symbols, where it was said to be commonly used in Scandinavia to identify places of interest or camp sites.

Cogdogblog’s photo shows the symbol alive and well in Iceland, 1300 miles or so away from Stockholm but culturally close nonetheless.

Where else has the command symbol been spotted? In a jellyfish. In a bakery. In a bedroom. If you’ve seen it anywhere interesting, do let us know.

About the author

gilest

Giles Turnbull is a freelance writer in England. He is a columnist for PA, and has written for the BBC, Guardian, Daily Telegraph, MacUser, Macworld, and The Morning News. He has a blog you can ignore and a Twitter account you needn't follow.

Email the author | Read more posts by Giles Turnbull.

8 comments

    ⌘ is comonly used all over europe “to identify places of interest”. usually on brown background.

    They use the same signs in Sweden for ‘interesting points for tourists’:
    http://blog.tice.de/beitrag.php?file=2007_02_09_2251&sprache=englisch

    And in Norway, we have them placed under water also :-)
    http://www.norway.org.uk/culture/heritage/kulturminneskilt.htm

    The logo is adorned on the football shirts of Histon FC in England.

    http://www.histonfc.co.uk/images/histonsquad0809.jpg

    I don’t think it has anything to do with a Swedish campground – if this was so, you would expect to find it here: http://www.camping.se/templates/article____312.aspx. As I understand it, the meaning is any kind of tourist attraction. I always thought it was meant to resemble a castle seen from above.

    This sign is used in Lithuania to denote places of interest as well. Maybe in other Baltic states too.

    You can find it even in street art XD
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/cranjam/2853234904/
    is it meant as a weapon??? :P

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