Apple's iPhone is without a shadow of a doubt a real competitor for most 'real' cameras out there, as is perhaps evidenced by the fact that it is once again the Flickr's most use camera of the year. People love taking photos with their iPhone, but we bet they don't love taking photos of anything that requires a flash because, even with the newest iPhones featuring an improved flash component, it's still not very good.
JoinedJanuary 21, 2011
Articles20,133
Oliver Haslam has written about technology for over a decade. His work has been published in print at Macworld and online pretty much everywhere else. If it plugs in or has a battery, it's fair game.
When Apple announced HomeKit at WWDC it was almost forgotten about in the midst of all the other new additions that iOS received as part of the iOS 8 unveiling. Now that CES has come to a close though and the dust is beginning to settle on the huge number of announcements that took place there, HomeKit is once again starting to gain traction after some of the home automation companies showed off their wares.
Yahoo's Flickr is the place that many people go to save and share their digital photographs, and has long been where people upload their best shots. That means that Flickr has quite a lot of interesting information on which cameras are being used thanks to the EXIF data that is embedded in the images uploaded to its website.
Google's Android Lollipop release is without a shadow of a doubt the company's most polished version of Android to date. Having spent years being arguably the most customizable mobile operating system on the planet, Android has finally come of age and received the spit and polish that many have suggested was beyond Google's engineers. In fact, parts of the new Material Design are so good that even those carrying iPhones and iPads are jealous.
We’re all for app developers getting their dues. After all, if it wasn’t for their awesome work then we wouldn’t have the brilliant apps that we use day in, day out. Whether it be an iPad, an iPhone or one of the thousands of Android devices available, it’s the apps that make it all work.
A new photograph has appeared online that claims to show a manufacturing mold for the potentially upcoming iPad Air Plus. The image, which is suitably grainy, shows what appears to be a mold with a faint Apple logo in the middle.
Apple hasn't even got the Apple Watch out of the door yet, but the Chinese knockoffs are already on the scene, and they aren't afraid to shout about it.
It’s that time again, and even with CES going on in the background and new hardware being announced every five minutes, we just don’t want you to miss out on any kind of bargain. Here we have quite a few iOS apps that should cost money but now do not, and some of them used to cost as much as $5.
Apple’s CarPlay has suffered more false starts than an old Ford, but it may finally be starting to get a foothold in the automotive world. While you can go out and buy a new Ferrari with CarPlay built in, that doesn’t help those of us with cars already parked in our garages. What we need is aftermarket solutions.
Kodak is a name that was synonymous with photography, and later it lent itself to all kinds of technology. At this year’s Consumer Electronic Show Kodak also became a smartphone maker, with the iconic brand adorning an Android phone that is designed for those who are a little further through life.
















