
iPhone can take a lesson from Opera's fat browser plan
Analysis: Developers wouldn't find iPhone so limiting if Safari incorporated plug-in functionality
A developer's-eye view of Leopard, part I
Xray and Core Animation stand out among Apple's immense bag of new Leopard tricks
A developer's-eye view of Leopard, part II
Leopard's Xcode3.0 integrated development environment and Objective-C 2.0 language help define the Mac platform
A developer's-eye view of Leopard, part III
Cocoa and other sweet object-oriented frameworks magically make all Mac apps part of an integrated suite
A developer's-eye view of Leopard, part IV
64-bit Darwin, Dashcode, Time Machine, and Ruby on Rails call on developers to trade out established skills for new ones
Leopard not enough to make PC users switch
Based on what Steve Jobs showed of the latest version of OS X, there are plenty of nice-to-have features, but no must-haves
iPhone developers left hanging
Leopard beta: Check. Muchos kudos to Intel: Check. iPhone SDK: No such luck
Is Jobs the wizard behind the curtain?
On Monday, Steve Jobs took center stage to give a not-so-close look at the development platform for the iPhone. But is it really magic?
Is iPhone out of business?
Jobs tells developers that for them, iPhone is purely a portable browser. Microsoft, Nokia, and RIM rejoice.
iPhone users will need iTunes account
Apple says customers have to subscribe to music service and AT&T before they can activate the device
Apple's iPhone open to software developers
Steve Jobs also reveals OS X 10.5 will include 300 new features, Safari 3.0 will be available for Windows Vista and XP
A .Mac-Google Apps integration makes sense
Opinion: An integration between the two platforms would help them take on their common competitor: Microsoft
Sun CEO spills Apple Leopard secret
Apple's HFS+ file system to be replaced by Sun's open source ZFS, Sun chief Jonathan Schwartz reveals ahead of WWDC
WWDC keynote wrap: Now back to NDA
Info on .Mac surprisingly thin and bringing Safari to the Windows platform isn't a big surprise
Steve Jobs' WWDC keynote
During his keynote address, Steve Jobs discusses the new features in Leopard, the iPhone, and the Safari browser -- and lobs a few zingers at Microsoft
Apple WWDC: Nothing to see here?
With developers unable to grab iPhones and Leopard still under wraps, what of note will come out of WWDC?
RELATED VIDEO |
* Video from the WWDC * Gina Smith: The Week Ahead |
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* Tom Yager's Enterprise Mac blog |




