Tag Archive | "google"

Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russia’s Skolkovo Innovation Centre?


apple in talks to open rd facility in russias skolkovo innovation centre Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russias Skolkovo Innovation Centre?Russian newspaper Izvestia reports [Google translation] that the organizers behind the Skolkovo technology park near Moscow are currently in talks with a number of high-profile companies including Apple, Google, and Facebook about locating research and development facilities in the area. Skolkovo has already landed agreements with Microsoft, IBM, General Electric, Cisco, and others, with the project’s backers envisioning the region becoming Russia’s version of Silicon Valley bolstered by dozens of major corporations.



According to the report, Apple officials in Moscow declined to comment on the claims, but Skolkovo executive Roman Romanovsky indicated that the two sides have expressed interest in negotiating about possibilities. No deal appears to be imminent, although Romanovsky hopes that the talks will eventually lead to an agreement.



Apple is in the process of opening up its first major international research and development center in Israel, looking to leverage its own expertise and that of Anobit, an Israeli flash memory company acquired by Apple earlier this year, to spur new innovations.

 Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russias Skolkovo Innovation Centre?

 Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russias Skolkovo Innovation Centre?

 Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russias Skolkovo Innovation Centre?  Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russias Skolkovo Innovation Centre?
 Apple in Talks to Open R&D Facility in Russias Skolkovo Innovation Centre?

Posted in iPhone NewsComments (0)

Creative Images Of The Day [ Photo ]

Well, let’s check the creative images of the day and please don’t forget to tell us your impression and let us see your comments on our Facebook page and Google plus page. Let’s see the photos of the day after the jump.
( Parking Tower )
Car Creative Images Of The Day [ Photo ]
( Carrots In Love )
Carrots Creative Images Of The Day [ Photo ]
( Shark In The Dark )
shark Creative Images Of The Day [ Photo ]
( Sperms Oops )
1 Creative Images Of The Day [ Photo ]

( Age Stages )
37 Creative Images Of The Day [ Photo ]
 Creative Images Of The Day [ Photo ]

Posted in Jailbreak iPhoneComments (0)

Apple wants to squelch five Google patents issued to HTC

In its latest legal salvo, the iPhone maker has asked the ITC to dismiss five patents that Google issued to HTC last year.

Posted in iPhone NewsComments (0)

Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS?

chrome full 620x410 Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS?

Earlier today one “analyst” published an assumption that Google would be making Chrome for iOS (iPhone and iPad) and would market it extensively, and basically bring the desktop browser wars to mobile. He didn’t claim any sources, anonymous or otherwise, or any leaked information, or any good faith basis at all for the assumption. It was purely a flight of fancy, and a poorly reasoned one.

Google hasn’t announced Chrome for iPhone or iPad, of course. Chrome for iOS would be very difficult to pull off as anything other than a novelty app under iOS 5.

Now Google does make Gmail and Google+, and other apps for iOS, and they work okay. But their primary function isn’t web browsing. And here’s the thing: Apple doesn’t allow alternate HTML or JavaScript rendering engines. If you want to show a web page in a iOS app, you use UIWebView and that’s it. And UIWebView, as far as I understand, doesn’t have access to the significantly faster Nitro JavaScript engine that the Safari app or that Web.app (Home screen web apps) enjoy.

If you’ve ever noticed how much slower web pages seem to render inside an iOS app, that’s the reason.

Google prides itself on the speed of Chrome. That’s part of its raison d’être. From their own implementation of WebKit to their own V8 JavaScript engine, Chrome is all about speed.

Why on earth would Google want to put the Chrome brand on a much slower thin web client on iOS? Even if they skin it to look more like Chrome (and UI has always been one of the worst aspects of Chrome), it would always be worse than Safari, and that would damage the Chrome brand.

Sure, there are “alternative” web browsers in the App Store, and some people love the extra features they provide, but none of those extra features are better local performance. (And I’d argue proxy performance is minimal at best, and always a trade off.)

Apple takes control and security extremely seriously in iOS. I doubt they’ll let third party browser or rendering engines onto the iPhone or iPad in iOS 6 or any time in the near or distant future. Google takes Chrome’s reputation for speed just as seriously. I doubt they’ll put a frustratingly slow web browser on iOS any time in the near or distant future.

Google could very well be playing around with Chrome on iOS in the labs, but there’s nothing to indicate it’s coming, at least not based on the information presented to date.

Right now, the only story here is the unfortunate one about how it become a story.

mf Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS?emailthis2 Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS?bookmark Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS?

a2 Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS?a2t Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS? Did you hear the one about Chrome for iOS?

Posted in iPhone NewsComments (0)

How to integrate all your social networks into your your iPhone and iPad Contacts

How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

How to integrate all your social networking contacts into your iOS Contacts app1 620x345 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

Having lots of Gmail, Facebook Twitter, and LinkedIn Contacts on your iPad and iPhone is great, but how do you get them all into your Contacts app where you need them?

I get to use most of the newest devices and test out all the platforms in my job. My “go-to”  phone is the iPhone 4S, but there are features I see on other devices that I really wish were present in iOS. At the top of the list of wants is rich contact integration with my social networks.

WebOS had perhaps the most elegant approach with Synergy.   If you have a contact on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Gmail –- whatever -– just log in and you get a unified contact card with all that information. Doesn’t sound so hard, right?

Now, Android does this pretty well, Windows Phone does a great job with the People hub and QNX –- the OS on the BlackBerry Playbook (and the upcoming BlackBerry 10) — does an amazing job at this contact integration.

So, why is it so hard for iOS to get this one important feature right? Well, we will have to let the boys and girls in Cupertino figure that one out. For now, there is a way to get all this information into the Contacts app… it just takes a little extra work.

Getting your basic information into Contacts

In the old days, you needed to connect your iPhone to your Mac or PC and then sync your contacts from your Outlook, Google or native contacts app on the computer. It was messy and often inaccurate. Now, fortunately, the majority of our contacts get “sucked into” the iPhone through some sort of cloud syncing.

How to get your iCloud Contacts onto your iPhone or iPad

If you don’t yet have your iCloud contacts on your iPhone, just go to your Settings app and then touch the iCloud tab. Just turn the Contacts switch to the ON position and all your iCloud contacts will be in sync with your iPhone, Mac, iPad, etc.

icloud 11 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contactsicloud 2 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts[/caption]

How to get your Google Contacts onto your iPhone or iPad

If you use the standard Gmail setup (IMAP instead of Exchange, see below), getting your Google Contacts onto your iPhone or iPad isn’t as easy as it should be.  When you typically sign into a Google account you can choose to sync your email, calendar and notes – but not your Google contacts. The easiest way to do this is either: Export your Google contacts from the Google Contacts web app on your computer. Import then contacts to your iCloud account. To export your Google contacts Log into your Gmail account. Choose Contacts. Under the More tab, choose Export. Choose which format to export all your contacts and where to save the file. export google contacts How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

Export your Google contacts into a format that you can import into another app like iCloud

To import these contacts to your iCloud account for syncing: Log into your iCloud account via iCloud.com and click on Contacts. Click on the Settings gear and then choose Import vCard Navigate to where the exported contact file is located and import it into iCloud.

import to icloud How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

If that is either confusing or a pain in the rear, the other option is to set up your Google account as an Exchange account which will wirelessly sync all your Google account data –- Contacts, Calendars, Notes, etc with your iphone.

Go to your Settings app. Tap the Mail, Contacts, Calendars tab. Under the listing of your accounts, touch the Add Account tab. Choose Microsoft Exchange from the list of options Put your Email address in the Email field (youremail@gmail.com) Leave the Domain field blank. Your Username should be your Email address. Input your password. Add a Description such as “Primary Gmail” or something like that. Touch the Next button at the top right hand corner. On the next screen, in the Server box, type: m.google.com Choose Next. On the following screen, simply turn ON or OFF the things you want to sync with your Google account. For our purposes, make sure that the Contacts tab is in the ON position. Select Save and your Google contacts will now sync with your iPhone contacts.

contacts exchange 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad ContactsGmail exchange setup 2 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

How to get your Facebook Contacts onto your iPhone and iPad

Most of us have our contacts spread out over our various apps –- especially our social networking apps. I have lots of data for some folks in my Google account, but they are not Facebook friends. The reverse is often true as well. There is a way to get your Facebook contacts into your iPhone – you just have to dig a little to find it.

First off, make sure you have the latest version of the Facebook app downloaded from the App Store. Start up your Facebook app and login into your account. Tap the top left hand corner to get into your Facebook options and touch on Friends. Tap the Action button (the one that looks like a Send key) in the top right hand corner. Choose Sync Contacts from the list. Turn the switch next to Syncing to the ON position – this will had (add?) your Contacts, profile pictures and links to your Contacts app. Read the scary message from Facebook saying that all contacts from your device will be sent and stored by Facebook as subject to their privacy policy. If you are comfortable with that, choose Sync Contacts in the lower right hand corner and your Facebook contacts will be integrated into your iPhone Contacts app. If you want to replace the existing photos of your contacts with their Facebook pictures, turn the Replace photos switch to the ON position. You should now see new category in the Contact information for Facebook contacts that says: Facebook and has a link to his/her Facebook page.

facebook contacts syncing 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contactsfacebook sync contacts 1 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

NOTE: This is not perfect, after doing this several times I still have some Facebook contacts whose Facebook page is not listed in their iPhone Contact card.

When it does work, just tap the Facebook address and you can launch their Facebook page right from the Contacts app.

facebook sync contacts warning 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

How to get your Twitter Contacts onto your iPhone or iPad

For many of us, we follow people on Twitter who are not our “friends.” For others, we would like to have the Twitter information for our Contacts in case we do want to follow or Direct Message them. Fortunately, this is pretty easy to do.

First off, download the official Twitter app from the App Store. Go to your Settings app and look for the Twitter settings. Touch the Twitter tab in settings. Touch the Update Contacts button to get Twitter information for your contacts put into their Contact cards.

NOTE: As with Facebook, there are some privacy concerns here. Twitter essentially takes all the email addresses and phone numbers stored in your Contacts app and cross references them against their database to get you the Twitter contact information.

twitter discover and find friends 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contactstwitter settings update contacts 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

How to get your LinkedIn Contacts onto your iPhone or iPad

LinkedIn may be where most of your professional contacts are stored. For many of us, this is yet another completely different list of contacts than those stored in Gmail or Facebook.  Fortunately, it is easy to get your LinkedIn data into the iPhone. Download the official LinkedIn app from the App Store. Start up the app and login into your LinkedIn account. Touch the You icon – usually at the top right of the four icons. Touch the gear in the upper right hand corner which is the Settings area for LinkedIn. Touch the Download Connections tab and make sure that Download Connections is turned ON. Touch the Download Now button to bring in all your LinkedIn connections into your iPhone.

linkedin download connectinos 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contactslinkedin download connectinos ON 413x620 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

NOTE: I experienced some interesting things when I did this; some of my contacts, which had their Facebook page link in the web page section of the Contact card, now had the LinkedIn page instead of the Facebook page.  The Contact photo changed according to which app I used last to sync contacts. In some cases, I really wanted the Facebook photo and not the LinkedIn one, so I had to go back and sync the photos from Facebook to replace the LinkedIn ones.

If at this point you are saying to yourself “this is way too complicated” you may be right, but it is the best way to get all this data into one place – Your Contacts app.

How to deal with multiple contact entries

iOS has the ability to link Contacts, so if you had more than one Contact for the same person, you could combine them into a unify view. However, it doesn’t seem to work anymore (or was removed). Hopefully this get restored or fixed in iOS 6. Until then, you will need to go to your computer and go to the web site or app and merge the contacts that then sync with your phone.

Merging your Google contacts

If you sync your contacts via Google, the process of merging contacts is not too complicated. Login in to your Gmail account Across the bar at the top, click on More and then on Contacts Once in Contracts, click on More and then scroll down to Find & merge duplicates. Google will then go through your contacts and merge those that have the same name. It is always a good idea to go and check to make sure it was done correctly – but overall this is pretty easy and seamless and will clean up your multiple entries for the same contact.

duplicated in google How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

Merging your Mac address book

For Mac users, Finding and merging your duplicates in Address Book (Contacts under Mountain Lion) is quite easy. Open up your Mac Address Book app. At the very top, click on the Card menu and then scroll down to Look for duplicates and click. You should then receive a message saying that “X number of duplicates were found.” Click on Merge and the cards will be combined so you only have one contact card per individual in your Address Book.

mac duplicates How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

NOTE: If you currently manage your contacts through the iCloud website, there is no way to merge your duplicate contacts from the Contacts app on iCloud.

Conclusion

So, after all this, you should have all your Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn contacts along side your Google or whatever other contacts you have on your iPhone. You can launch the Facebook page of your contacts; go to their Twitter page or LinkedIn page right from their Contact card.

This is not a perfect solution as we said at the outset. We wish that you could send a Facebook message or a Direct Message like you can from other platform Contact apps. We wish you could see status updates in the Contact app like the BlackBerry Playbook. Hopefully, these things will be on the horizon for us iOS users.

Do you have other thoughts about the Contacts app on iOS? Have you found other solutions for merging your data? Let us know in the forums.

mf How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contactsemailthis2 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contactsbookmark How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

a2 How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contactsa2t How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts How to integrate all your social networks into your iPhone and iPad Contacts

Posted in iPhone NewsComments (0)

Clock Widget for DashboardX

Clock Widget for DashboardX is essentially what it says on the tin. It’s a clock widget, specifically for use with the cydia tweak ‘DashboardX’. If you didn’t catch my coverage on DashboardX you can find it here. It allows iOS users to add custom widgets to their springboard, much like google users have in Android.

Posted in Jailbreak iPhoneComments (0)

iMore Picks of the Week

iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

imore picks of the week for may 12 2012 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

Every week the editors at iMore carefully select some of our favorite, most useful, most extraordinary apps, accessories, gadgets, and websites. This week’s selections include a jailbreak app to manage off-device media, a sheet music app, an app for social networking, a video player that lets you watch old-school movies, and a popular virtual pinboarding app.

To see what we picked, and to tell us your pick, follow on after the break!

XBMC for iPad – Chris Oldroyd

XBMC 620x465 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

This week’s pick is a jailbreak app that I use all the time and is the only reason I keep my iPad jailbroken. When it comes to managing off device media the iPad with App Store apps is just not good enough. Air Video and other similar apps do a decent enough job of letting you access media on a PC or Mac but everything that is in a non Apple approved format needs to be encoded on the fly and it means the process is slow and a little ugly.

With XBMC I can connect to my NAS (Networked Attached Storage) box and access all of my content straight over my network, it plays all sorts of file types like AVI and MKV as well as MP4 and M4V all without any encoding or delay; the picture quality is excellent too. XBMC is a highly customizable app and if you are prepared to invest a little bit of time with the app itself and how you store and name your media on your NAS it can look absolutely stunning with the correct meta data.

XBMC is available as a free download from Cydia and it works on the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch.

Steinway Etude – Gary Mazo

steinway etude 465x620 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

Last week I was in guitar mode, this week I am back in piano mode – my primary instrument. There are lots of apps for purchasing sheet music and others for instruction. What makes Steinway Etude unique is that it combines both functions in one app.

First off, Steinway Etude is a music store where you can purchase sheet music. There is a pretty good selection of music from pretty much every musical category. Most songs are about $3.00 which is not terrible compared to pricier services such as Musicnotes.

Once your music is purchased (and there are some free songs to download as well) you see it on a bookshelf – reminiscent of iBooks. Tap the song you want to play and you have the main screen. Touch the Play arrow and you will hear a midi version of the song play, following along the notes in the song. There is also a small keyboard at the bottom showing you which notes to play.

For beginners, this is a great feature; you can see how to play the song, hear how to play the song and then try to play it on your own. I usually maximize the window to just see the song – but its nice to know that if I ever did get stuck I could listen to parts of the music to help me along.

Options are a plenty in Steinway Etude. You can adjust the tempo, turn on or off the right and left hands on the keyboard below, differentiate the hands with unique colors, change the background and more.

Pages just slide left to right and page turns are quick (which is key for a music apps.) All in all, this is a very useful app with a good library of music to purchase and the ability to learn while you play.

Free – Download Now Google+ for iPhone – George Lim

g+ hero 620x345 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

So, I’m one of those few people who still uses Google+. I’m also a sucker for gorgeous iOS apps, so when Google recently updated their Google+ app, I was happy.

The app is mainly a significant UI improvements. Its certainly easier for a human to understand, navigate and use, as well as overall being cleaner. Its clearer how you can switch between ‘Circles’ to get the posts you want. Instead of having multiple circles which you change by swiping side to side, you get one stream which is changeable through a simple drop down menu.

While not a new feature, I use Google+ hangouts on the iPhone all the time, and I think, for a 10-way video call it is implemented very well. I have a Google hangout with friends every weekend, with the app, I can join it where ever I am.

There are still some gaping holes in the app; the ability to post YouTube links and getting an embed preview, editing posts and comments, and the fact that your display picture is just a small landscape section on your menu-screen, so it doesn’t show your display picture properly.

However despite all these flaws, I still really like this app. Its certainly better than the Facebook app (even on iPad).

Free – Download Now Video Time Machine – Seth Clifford

video time machine 620x413 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

My pick this week is pure joy. Video Time Machine is a sweet little app that allows you to watch all kinds of things from years gone by. One of my favorite activities on YouTube (and the internet in general) is find and watch commercials and shows from my youth. The app allows you to do this with a great interface that makes searching for a time period easy. You just roll the dial back to the year you want, select the type of content you want to see (TV, music, ads, trailers, video games, sports, etc.) and the app serves up the goods. Sharing to Facebook and Twitter is baked in, so you can get your friends in on it quickly too. There’s no direct search right now, but that’s also what makes it kind of cool – it’s kind of like a jukebox on random. And it’s a universal app that supports AirPlay, so if you want to throw it up on the big screen, you can do so.

I’m really digging it, and I hope that more content gets added as time goes on. It’s the perfect way to kill a few minutes and put a smile on your face.

$2.99 – Download Now Pinterest – Leanna Lofte

pinterest hero 620x345 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

When the Pinterest for iPhone app first released, I hated it. It was terribly buggy and miserable to use. It’s had several updates since then and it’s now a great app. It’s beautiful and runs great. I go through phases with Pinterest, but now that they have a solid iPhone app, there’s a good chance I’ll use it more regularly. What would seal the deal, though, would be if they updated Pinterest to be universal for the iPad as well. Hopefully soon!

Free – Download Now Tell us your pick!

Those were our picks, iMore Nation, so now it’s your turn! Tell us your pick of the week below. Give us the name of your favorite app, site, or accessory, and tell us why it made your life more productive, more informed, more entertaining, or just plain more fun. Jump into the comments and let us know your pick of the week!

mf iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012emailthis2 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012bookmark iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

a2 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012a2t iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012 iMore Picks of the Week for May 12, 2012

Posted in iPhone NewsComments (0)

iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October release

iphone 5 design still not finalized still no big screen still no metal back still on track for october release iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October release

Despite some rumors to the contrary, according to our sources Apple still hasn’t finalized the design of the next generation iPhone 5 (or whatever Apple ends up calling iPhone 5,1). No giant screen. No 16:9 aspect ratio. No metal back.

Apple typically makes extensive use of the prototyping process, which could well be the source of inconsistent rumors (perhaps best seen in the conflicting iPhone rumors last year). Sometimes there are more audacious and more conservative prototypes, with the final choice coming down to component costs and device tests.

Currently, the new, smaller dock connector is being implemented, but no changes to screen size or aspect ratio have been decided on. And yes, it still has a Home button.

Once again we’re hearing that if the screen size does change, it won’t be by a lot (no larger than 4-inches). We’ve heard nothing to indicate a planned change in the aspect ratio either way (and such a change still doesn’t make much sense to us).

Keeping the Home button also necessitates certain design trade offs (everything has an opportunity cost) when it comes to overall device size and screen layout.

October is still the planned launch period, alongside the 7-inch iPad we reported on yesterday, and Apple is indeed planning to hurt Google with this release by removing their data pipe into (and out of) the Maps app. (Which we, like others, have heard is terrific looking.)

iMore previously heard the iPhone 5 was going to ship with an LTE radio as well.

mf iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October releaseemailthis2 iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October releasebookmark iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October release

a2 iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October releasea2t iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October release iPhone 5 design still not finalized, still no big screen, still no metal back, still on track for October release

Posted in iPhone NewsComments (0)

iOS 6: Google’s Maps Dropped, Replaced with Apple’s own 3D Mapping Mode

Earlier this morning, Mark Gurman from 9to5mac reported that in iOS 6 will have a completely-in-house maps application that will be replacing Google Maps in the default iOS maps application. With this upgraded app, Apple will be reducing their dependency with Google and also the new app will offer “a much cleaner, faster, and more reliable experience”.

Posted in Jailbreak iPhoneComments (0)

iPhone 5 to be another Google killer — but with a twist

samsung galaxy s iii 30 620x348 iPhone 5 to be another Google killer    but with a twist

A couple of years ago Steve Jobs called a Town Hall meeting at Apple and rallied the troops by saying the next iPhone, which was to be the iPhone 4, would be an A+ update and take it to the turncoat Google and their Android operating system. According to our sources, a similar sentiment is being expressed by Apple in Cupertino again this year, but with a decidedly different twist. Instead of just hitting Google and Android in the market place with better hardware and software, and in the courts with patent litigation, they’re going to hit them where it really hurts.

While the exact numbers are hotly debated, it’s long been said Google makes more money off iOS than they do off their own Android operating system. The reason for this is simple — mainstream iOS users tend to use the web and apps more than mainstream Android users, and iOS is filled with Google services. The built-in Maps app is powered by Google and provides sponsored search results. The built-in Safari web browser defaults to Google Search and serves Google Search ads. When iOS users use those services, Google makes money. Regardless of whether or not iOS or Android is winning in the market place, Google is winning in the wallet.

And Apple wants to end that.

Removing Google from Maps is an easy step in that direction. As reported by 9to5Mac earlier today, and as we’ve confirmed from our own sources as well, iOS 6 will come with an updated Maps app that removes the Google backend and replaces it with an Apple backend.

This isn’t without precedent. Both Apple and Google used to use Skyhook for Wi-Fi router location mapping, and both have now switched to in-house databases. Google used to license map tiles and has since re-drawn them themselves. Apple has bought 3 mapping data related companies, and could have either re-licensed or redrawn tiles by now as well.

For the end-user, the interface is the app, and switching out backend pipes is far more transparent than altering front ends. Mail is Mail regardless if it’s being fed by iCloud or Gmail. The same holds true, in large part, for Maps.

So in this case, the goal is more interesting than the process — to remove Google as much as possible from iOS.

Realistically, Google Search will be tougher to replace since Google enjoys an almost monopoly sized share of the search space. But it may not be impossible to displace. Apple is already intermediating Google Search with Siri and that will likely continue.

Google isn’t in the search business, it’s in the data collection/advertising business. It doesn’t make money when you search its index, it makes money recording your information, aggregating it, and brokering deals for it. Search isn’t the product it sells. We are. If Apple steps in and makes the queries on our behalf, and returns them on Google’s behalf, Google is cut out of the important parts — the money.

All of this is in stark contrast to January 2007, when then Google CEO Eric Schmidt took the Macworld stage with then Apple CEO Steve Jobs to celebrate the Apple/Google iPhone partnership. That was before Google pulled a 180 and turned Android from a low-end Windows Mobile and BlackBerry competitor to an iPhone competitor. That was before Apple started suing Android manufacturers and Steve Jobs threatened to go “thermonuclear”.

And that’s before Apple decided to stop helping Google’s revenue stream, data stream, and perhaps bolstering their stock profile, by giving them built-in access to iOS users, and Apple branded data deals.

Now, Apple isn’t just fighting back by making the best iOS software and iPhone hardware they can, and by trying to legally force Android manufacturers to stop copying Apple. With iOS 6 on the upcoming iPhone 5 and rumored 7-inch iPad, they’re fighting back by removing as much of Google as they can as well. By denying Google access to iOS eyeballs and data.

If history is any indicator, both new devices will sell incredibly well, and tens of thousands of new customers, and hundreds of thousands of newly updated customers, will be funding and feeding Google less than ever before.

This time Apple’s fighting back by hitting Google where it really hurts — in the wallet.

mf iPhone 5 to be another Google killer    but with a twistemailthis2 iPhone 5 to be another Google killer    but with a twistbookmark iPhone 5 to be another Google killer    but with a twist

a2 iPhone 5 to be another Google killer    but with a twista2t iPhone 5 to be another Google killer    but with a twist iPhone 5 to be another Google killer    but with a twist

Posted in iPhone NewsComments (0)

Adspace

Calendar

May 2012
MTWTFSS
« Apr  
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031