The Washington Times

Apple Inc.

Latest Apple Inc. Items
  • Gadget makers forced to look at links to Congo war

    Does that smart phone in your pocket contribute to rape and murder in the depths of Africa? Soon, you'll know: A new U.S. law requires companies to certify whether their products contain minerals from rebel-controlled mines in Congo and surrounding countries.


  • Online games lift Sohu's 2Q net income by 10 pct

    Chinese Web portal Sohu.com Inc. said Monday its second-quarter net income rose 10 percent as online advertising and games revenue jumped.


  • Government announces exemptions to copyright locks

    Owners of the iPhone will be able to break electronic locks on their devices in order to download applications that have not been approved by Apple Inc. under government rules announced Monday.


  • New gov't rules allow unapproved iPhone apps

    Owners of the iPhone will be able to legally unlock their devices so they can run software applications that haven't been approved by Apple Inc., according to new government rules announced Monday.


  • Summary Box: Gov't allows unapproved iPhone apps

    THE NEW IPHONE RULE: Owners of the iPhone will be able to legally unlock their devices so they can run software applications that haven't been approved by Apple Inc. _ a practice known as "jailbreaking."


  • Gadget makers forced to look at links to Congo war

    Does that smart phone in your pocket contribute to rape and murder in the depths of Africa? Soon, you'll know: A new U.S. law requires companies to certify whether their products contain minerals from rebel-controlled mines in Congo and surrounding countries.


  • Apple delays white iPhone 4 to 'later this year'

    Apple says the white version of the iPhone 4 will not be available until later this year.


  • Manka Bros take media by storm, online that is

    While Disney CEO Bob Iger was chatting with Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg at a major media summit in Idaho this month, Khan Manka Jr. was squiring around the lodge bar looking for a drink.


  • On the Call: Microsoft CFO Peter Klein

    The runaway success of Apple Inc.'s newest gadget, the iPad, has Microsoft watchers on high alert for signs of competing devices from Windows computer makers, which so far have flashed prototypes but have not started selling any of the keyboardless touch-screen devices.


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