PC World – ShareFile has launched native clients for Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android OS, allowing smartphone users to access its file sharing service, the company said on Thursday.
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AP – The engineers at iRobot Corp. continue to fill the world with wondrous robots, the latest being a compact floor-washing machine called the Scooba 230. -
PC Magazine – The leading online backup provider now offers access to files on iPhones, iPads, and soon Android devices.
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PC Magazine – Microsoft on Wednesday released a bunch of new figures about Windows Phone 7’s app store that don’t address developer concerns about revenue potential. They do, however, raise questions about how Apple and Google count their apps in the App Store and Android Market.
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PC World – Microsoft has bragged about its growing app store for Windows Phone 7 devices, but the store’s offerings are still puny compared to Apple’s or Google’s stores. The Windows Phone 7 app store has around 10 times less apps than the Android Market and around 30 times less than Apple’s App Store. Will Microsoft ever catch up?
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PC World – Samsung Electronics’ laptops do not contain a secret program that logs keystrokes, security researchers have found, chalking the problem up to a mistake by an antivirus program.
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Macworld – At some point, weâve all told a friend something along the lines of âcool song, can I listen?â This is when you either split a pair of headphones and hope that your friend has a sense of personal hygiene, try your luck with Google, hand over a USB drive to make a clunky exchange, or embark on a journey through iTunesâ search box on your own device.
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AFP – The Washington Post, Dow Jones, Time Inc. and other news organizations have accused iPad news reader Zite of copyright infringement and told the Canadian startup to stop displaying their articles. -
Appolicious – Here are some insane numbers for you: according to research firm Gartner, the tablet market pulled down about $9.6 billion in 2010. Apple has reported $9.566 in iPad-generated revenue for the period. That suggests that tablets other than iPad were responsible for about $34 million of that $9.6 billion.
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Macworld – Major League Baseball Advanced Media’s network operations center in New York looks a bit like a NASA control room. Computers cover several rows of tables, all facing a wall covered with eleven massive flat-screen displays. To complete the space-shot feel, there’s a red digital clock just below, slowly ticking toward blastoff—er, first pitch.



