Apple has banned Flash in the iPhone OS 4.0 developer agreement, and Adobe Systems has fired back by citing Apple in its SEC filing. By listing Apple’s Flash ban as a risk factor, Adobe appears to be preparing to ask for government intervention. Apple’s ban on Adobe Flash for the iPhone OS 4.0 affects the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch
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Bibi Krach
28 August 2010 at 8.18 am
The Apple iPad today, is a killing word — more than a product — it’s a brand new idea, and potentially a mover in the electronics world. Before iPad today it was called the Apple Tablet, the Slate, Canvas, and a handful of other guesses — but what was little more speculation for nearly ten years is now very much a reality. Announced on January 27th to a middling response, Apple h for what could be the most significant product launch in its historyfor the Ipad Today world; the making (or breaking) of an entirely new class of computer for the company. The iPad is something in between its monumental iPhone and wildly successful MacBook line — a usurper to the netbook throne, and possibly a sign of things to come for the entire personal computer market… if Apple delivers on its promises. And those are some big promises; the company has been tossing around words like “magical” and “revolutionary” to describe what many have dismissed as nothing more than a larger version of its iPod touch. But is that all there is to this device? Is the hope that Apple promises for this new computing experience nothing more than marketing fluff and strategic hyperbole? Or is this a different beast altogether — a true sign that change has come to the world of the PC? We have the definitive answers to those questions (and many more) right here, so read on for our full review of the Apple iPad!