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BusyToDo Review: MobileMe Syncing at Last

BusyToDo, a new to-do app for iPhone, aims to bring the most obvious omission from MobileMe to subcribers of the cloud services package from Apple. It does this without much flair, and it has a fairly high asking price. So is it worth it?

Why MobileMe Wants to Be Free

In response to complaints about MobileMe, the latest terse Steve-mail asserts Apple’s cloud services "will get a lot better in 2011.” That’s good, because it’s hard to imagine the industry-trailing MobileMe taking a downward turn from where it is in 2010.

iPad 2: The Android Challenge

Despite mixed reviews and a version of Android “not optimized” for tablets, Samsung sold 600,000 Galaxy Tabs in its first month, and recently claimed to have sold a million. If Steve Jobs isn’t concerned by those numbers, he should be.

Google Books: The Worst iOS E-reader, But Still a Winner

To say Google's Books app lacks polish would be kind indeed. If Apple can be accused of sometimes favoring form over function, Google does neither with Books. Instead, Google leaves out expected features, adds a few bizarre ones, and wraps it in a barren interface.

iPad Closes on Kindle, Google Looms Over Both

According to a ChangeWave survey, the iPad is about to surpass the Kindle as the favorite among consumers buying e-readers, and the just-announced Google Editions bookstore may help accelerate that trend. Regardless of the outcome of the Amazon/Google battle, Apple looks to reap the rewards.

Apple Set for Record Holiday Quarter

Last quarter was one for the record books for Apple: $20 billion in revenue, 14.1 million iPhones sold, 3.89 million Macs, and 4.19 million iPads, but that record may be broken as soon as the end of this quarter, according to estimates.

Mac Lands One-Two Punch Against PCs in Profit and Growth

From Apple 2.0, Needham analyst Charles Wolf has issued a research note on Mac sales that is no less impressive for being a statement of the obvious: Apple is selling a lot of Macs, and enjoying a very healthy profit margin on those sales.

Apple’s Announcement: The B-side of Steve Jobs

As today's announcement of The Beatles on the iTunes Store illustrates, the thing about visionaries like Steve Jobs is that what's important to them is important to us, even when it's not. This is just the latest example, and probably not the last.

The Ongoing Decline of the Desktop Mac

Outside the diminutive circles of Mac enterprise IT, the end of the Xserve will hardly be noticed, but perhaps it should. Up until today, there were four categories of Mac desktop, and now there are three. How long before there are none?

Mac Market Share Up in U.S., Down Worldwide: iOS to Blame?

According to the October report from Net Applications, the Mac remains mainly an American platform. Mac market share in the U.S. has been steadily climbing, rising in recent months from 11.2 percent in August to 11.4 percent in October. Globally, though, there's a different story.

Has Apple Given Up on iWeb?

iLife '11 brings no update for iWeb. Users should rightly wonder what the fate of the app will be. It's a shame that iWeb is being ignored, because it made web design accessible to all Mac users. But maybe it's just time for a new model.

New MacBook Air Is the Future of Notebooks

Beginning his presentation by waxing philosophical on the impact of iOS devices on Apple industrial design, Jobs rhetorically asked what would happen if an iPad and a MacBook Air "hooked up?" The result is the new MacBook Air, which comes in two distinct sizes.