One of the things that Jobs really was intent on talking about throughout the D5 conference is what happens to computers and gadgets in what he called the Post-PC era.
Interestingly, Steve Jobs revealed that the Google Maps software client was programmed by Apple, not Google as I had previously assumed. Perhaps not surprisingly, Steve thinks it is a much
Walt Mossberg’s All Things Digital, aka D5, has posted video of the Gates and Jobs fireside chat. It’s unfortunately in 9 chunks of FLV; there’s no stream, no MOV
iTunes 7.2 is available, and with it comes iTunes Plus, song tracks that you can purchase for a little more money that have more audio quality and no DRM. EMI’s
Steve Jobs was at Walt Mossberg’s All Things Digital conference, also known as D5, and there’s a bunch of news. There’s a good video interview of Jobs by Mossberg,
According to Gizmodo, the iPhone data plan could be $30. AT&T’s current standard EDGE data plan is $20 per month.
It used to be that no Macworld or WWDC Jobs keynote was complete without John Mayer playing at the end of it; he was basically the ‘fat lady’ punctuation at
Google apparently has more compelling iPhone apps in the works, though information on what they actually do is still scant. Here’s hoping we find out soon, and don’t forget
Bill Gates and Steve Jobs are scheduled to have a sit-down where they discuss the state of the industry at Walt Mossberg’s D-Conf. All sorts of high-rolling things are going




























