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iPhone App Magnets To Appify Your Fridge

20100312-iphonemagnets.jpg

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 [...]

Reader Poll: Will You Pre-Order an iPad?

As we predicted, the iPad went on pre-order in the US this morning in the Apple store after a nail-biting world blackout.
Are you going to reserve yours today or wait? Which one are you getting? Buying your customer limit (2) at once?
Let us know the whys and wherefores of your purchasing decisions in the comments.

Microsoft: Zune Pass Subscribers Can Keep 10 Songs A Month

Microsoft, a day after slashing prices of its Zune media player, Thursday threw a bone to fans of DRM-free music, offering a $15 per month Zune Pass subscription for essentially $5.

Microsoft said it would allow Zune Pass subscribers to keep 10 songs (worth around $10) per month that they can own, even if the subscription ends. Previously, copy-protection meant songs downloaded from the Zune marketplace would be disabled if the $15 per month subscription service expired.

“People want the freedom to listen to whatever they want across millions of songs, combined with the confidence that they can keep their favorite tracks forever,” Chris Stephenson, Zune’s general manager of global marketing, said in statement.

The DRM-free songs will be available from Sony BMG and Universal Music Group. Microsoft also inked agreements with EMI, Warner Music Group and several independent music publishers.

Microsoft rival Apple reportedly is in talks to add Sony and Universal Music Group to its iTunes Plus program offering DRM-free music downloads. Currently, EMI is the only publisher offering copy protection free songs through iTunes.

On Wednesday, Microsoft cut prices on its flash-memory based Zune media players. The software giant said it would slash $20 from its 4GB Zune to $99 while dropping the 8GB Zune by $10 to $139 and trimming its 16GB media device by $20 to $179.

In a statement, Zune marketing head Adam Sohn attributed the hardware price cuts to “realities of the market.”

“For the Zune team, future success will have as much to do with the marketplace/store and the subscription service as it does the hardware,” Gartner media analyst Mike McGuire told Cult of Mac.

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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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