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Bottom-Feeding Jeweler Unveils Despicable Diamond iPad for $20,000

We all know the wait for the iPad, at least in the U.S., will be over on April 3, right? Wrong. True connoisseurs know they need to wait until June 1, when Mervis Diamond Importers will unleash the hideous and despicable Diamond iPad on the world. It’s a bejeweled and bedazzled monstrosity boasting 11.43 carats [...]

iPhone App Magnets To Appify Your Fridge

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If – like me – your fridge is black, then these shiny iPhone app fridge magnets from Jailbreak Collective will look very smart indeed displayed on the door.
Just 13 bucks gets you a set of these icon almost-replicas. I say almost because if you look carefully, you’ll see they’re not identical to the Apple originals. [...]

Which iPad To Buy? Get the 32GB iPad With Wi-Fi + 3G. Here’s Why.

If you’re in the market for an iPad — and you know you are, because it’s killer — you’re probably wondering which model to buy.
Naturally, you’re looking at the cheapest $499 iPad, which has Wi-Fi only, but you’re thinking you might also want 3G. After all, you can pay-as-you-go for data, and who knows when you [...]

Is Apple Selling 20K iPads an Hour?

Did you buy an iPad when Apple began pre-sales this morning? If so, you weren’t alone. Indeed, Apple may have sold 20,000 iPads per hour, leading one commentator to suggest the Cupertino, Calif. company was earning $10 million per hour on its new tablet device.
The estimate comes from Andrew Erlichson, CEO of Phanfare, a photo [...]

Can Intel Turn Netbook ‘AppUp’ Into Another App Store?

If it walks like an App Store and quacks like an App Store, it’ll succeed like an App Store, right? Well, that’s certainly Intel’s hope as it unveils AppUp, a site promoting applications built around the Atom processor for the growing number of netbooks.

The beta version was introduced Thursday, during the first day of CES in Las Vegas. AppUp is a ‘white label’ version of Apple’s App Store, which recently celebrated topping 3 billion downloads for the iPhone and iPod touch. Although Intel introduced AppUp, we’re likely to see customized versions from Dell, Acer, Samsung and other makers of netbooks powered by Intel’s Atom processor.

AppUp beta can currently be downloaded for Windows netbooks, but may come pre-installed and branded on the low-cost PCs. However, the application takes several pages from Apple’s App Store playbook, including the user interface and operation.

Like the App Store, consumers can search for applications in various categories, including games, education and health. Some of the first apps include Boxee’s streaming media software, the Visual Eating and Exercise Program (VEEP), and a news browser called Newsy. Additional apps are expected from developers part of the Intel Atom Developer Program.

Another familiar feature: a 70-30 revenue split favoring developers which mirrors Apple’s arrangement with App Store entrants. New apps for AppUp must first be validated by Intel. The process had become a sore point between Apple and its developer base.

But is an App Store needed for Windows machines, especially when applications can be found through a Google search? That may be one of the questions Intel hopes to answer through the beta process. The ‘AppUp’ store is just the latest attempt to rival Apple’s success.

The number of applications available for download from rival app stores are a far cry from Apple’s. Google Android Marketplace has 20,000 apps, according to one report By late 2009, Microsoft had around 246 Windows Mobile applications. Nokia’s Ovi store also opened in 2009.

[Via VentureBeat, Engadget, AppleInsider]

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About the author

Ed Sutherland

Ed Sutherland is a veteran technology journalist who first heard of Apple when they grew on trees, Yahoo was run out of a Stanford dorm and Google was an unknown upstart. Since then, Sutherland has covered the whole technology landscape, concentrating on tracking the trends and figuring out the finances of large (and small) technology companies.

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    linux users have had repositories for a decade and a half

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