The ongoing spat between Samsung and Apple is turning into one of those rather depressing proses where an allegiance breaks down, descending into all-out war.
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As anybody familiar with Apple products will know, music video (and pretty much everything else) is centered around the iTunes app, and if the Cupertino company had it their way, that's how it would stay.
Far from being content with one new product hitting the market, consumers are almost instantly looking for what's next, what can be improved, and when it's going to arrive.
There's no doubt jailbreaking an iOS device opens the door to so many new and previously unattainable possibilities.
It's been quite a while since Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook announced its most recent overhaul of the social network, bringing in a host of new features to fend off any potential threat from Google+.
What started out as a statement for freedom and open-source-ness has turned into a worldwide institution, and as such, whenever a new device or firmware version is released of a smartphone, tablet or games console, scores of consumers begin the hunt for root access, known commonly as jailbreaking.
Call Of Duty, although the world's most popular game on both PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, hasn't made the same amount of noise on mobile devices. Well, at least not yet.
With iOS 5 now the focal point of attention as far as iDevice users are concerned, that doesn't necessarily mean that every iPhone, iPad and iPod touch user has readily leapt into the fruit company's latest mobile software abyss.
There's something rather exciting about unifying OS X and iOS, and whenever it is done well, it just feels so right.
TouchPad for iOS has built up a reputation for being one of the smoothest remote keyboard and Trackpad apps to do it, with functionality and features second to none.

