
Unicom has informed the public on their plans of launching Apple’s latest iPhone. It would be released next month in the world’s largest mobile market, state-run media said Tuesday.
Apple also has settled to let China Unicom, the country’s second-largest mobile operator, distribute the iPad tablet computer in China,. The source was released by Caixin media group said, citing an unidentified source from China Unicom.No timetable has been set for the iPad launch, the report said.
China Unicom has said beforehand it is in talks with Apple to sell the iPhone 4 and the iPad, which have commence around the world to much display and are already available in China’s flourishing grey market for Apple products.
The company started offering the iPhone 3GS model with wireless Internet capability earlier this month, with Apple’s Beijing store selling out of the phone on the first day, Caixin said.
he highly anticipated release of the iPhone in China — which has 687 million wireless subscribers, more than twice the population of the U.S. — is expected to be a boost for both Apple and Unicom, one of three Chinese state-owned telecommunications carriers. Still, the two companies face challenges to realizing the iPhone’s potential in China, including competition from similar devices, and the companies left several key questions about pricing and other details unanswered Friday.
The release of the iPhone in China could turbocharge overseas growth for what is already Apple’s fastest-growing product. China is the world’s largest mobile market by subscribers, with some 687 million subscribers. That compares with more than 270 million subscribers in the U.S.
An official at China Unicom told AFP he could not confirm the deals.
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Google has announced today on its Google Mobile App for different smartphones. The Google
Is for the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch. They are also bringing push notifications for Gmail and Google Calendar. Users will never miss an important appointment or email since the application can help with push notifications from your Google account to your iPhone. It is an icon badge shows you’ve got new mail in Gmail, and Google Calendar event reminders appear right on your home screen. Included is an update is as-you-type results for searches on flight info, weather, stock quotes and currency conversions. The update appears to just be going live now, and may not yet be appearing for all users. Google Mobile for iOS also has a revised search area. Now you can see search results before you’re even finished typing. Results will start to show up as you type, and some types of information will appear above the search results if you’re looking for weather, stock quotes, flight info, or some other types of data.
Users can receive pop-up alerts when new email messages arrive or when calendar appointments are coming up. They can also configure the new version of Google’s Mobile app to work with multiple Google accounts — so if you have a few email addresses or calendars and you’d like to receive notifications from one but not the other, you can do that.
A number of users have said that the application is awesome since its convienient and helps them search right on their phones.
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Apple is now coming to China. It is true and reports coming in that the second biggest Chinese carrier will have the Apple iPhone 4 available on September 16th. Orders will have to be made online, and in advance, at least for starters.
The iPhone 4 that will land in China will still have the similar reception issues we know all the iPhone 4s launched anywhere else in the world. China Unicom has actually prepared and will be subjecting all iPhone 4 buyers a complimentary case to alleviate those problems.
The online-only launch will ensure that we won’t be seeing any gigantic queues outside China Unicom shops, as has become customary whenever a new Apple product is released somewhere.
China Unicom, the exclusive provider of Apple’s iPhone in China, launched the 8G version of the iPhone 3GS on August 9. Caixin learned that the iPhone 4 is likely to suffer from the same issues related to signal reception in China, but China Unicom will be offering iPhone cases to customers as a free gift.
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Sumo wrestlers are one of the most huge people in the world who has the ability to fight well. Japan who has an ancient sport of sumo restling is hugginh the latest high-tech, with its governing body set to distribute Apple’s iPad to wrestlers. Those who often struggle with smaller cellphone keypads due to their giant hands.
“We will hand out the newest iPads to all the sumo stables to swiftly communicate what we need to,” association vice chairman Hiroyoshi Murayama said.
The sumo organization said it will give out iPads to Japan’s 51 “stables,” or the clubs the wrestlers belong to, with the goal of improving communication among the roly-poly grapplers after some in the past had missed information sent by fax or telephone.
“We will hand out the newest iPads to all the sumo stables to swiftly communicate what we need to,” association vice chairman Hiroyoshi Murayama said.
The iPad tablet PC, which starts at 48,800 yen and $570, in Japan is likely to be chosen because a lot of stablemasters does not use computers and wrestlers are not good at punching in messages on their mobile phones due to their enormous hands, Jiji news agency said.
Sumo is trying to overhaul its image after being rocked by a series of scandals. Scandals includes an illegal baseball gambling racket, assault and drug use.
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Recently Apple has made it possible for students to have an easy access to their notes for study purposes. Digital college textbooks have been dawdling to get off the ground, in part because of high prices and hardware distress. A
Now, a former Apple Inc. employee, Matt Mac Innis, is trying to wobble up the market with a new advance that taps into the iPad’s strengths.
His tech start-up, Inkling, is pioneering its first four full-length interactive college textbooks using its software platform. The software is designed specifically for Apple’s iPad—a marked departure from e-textbooks that are almost entirely just text that has been digitized. Inkling is one of a amount of companies serving textbook publishers rethink their titles for the iPad, eager to exploit its color, video, and touch-screen capabilities.
The four digital titles— McGraw-Hill Cos. best sellers in biology, economics, marketing, psychology—are expected to become available via the iTunes App Store beginning Friday. Prices will start at $2.99 per chapter and $69.99 for entire books, for a limited time. Thereafter, chapters will be $3.99 and books will start at $84.99.
The Inkling-based e-books make full use of the iPad’s color, video and touch screen. A biology text, for example, offers 3-D views of molecules such as DNA, video lectures, and interactive quizzes. Users can highlight text, take notes and share them in real time with other users, such as fellow students. Students can jump outside the text to Google or Wikipedia.
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