A number of high profile names from the business world have already come out in support of Apple as the company fights against a federal court order to assist law enforcement in unlocking an iPhone involved in the San Bernardino shootings in California. Notably, current Google CEO Sundar Pichai offered his support to Apple, calling the move a "troubling precedent" if allowed to continue. Now, a couple of additional figure heads from the technology community have chimed in with an opinion, one in favor of Apple's stance on the case, and one supporting the FBI's position.
It probably won't come as any surprise that Apple is still vehemently opposed to assisting the FBI in decrypting the iPhone that belonged to one of the accused in the California shooting last year. After initially being ordered by a federal judge to assist law enforcement agencies with their enquiries, the Cupertino-based company has since opted against compliance on the grounds that what it is being asked to do could have serious ongoing repercussions for all iPhone owners. Now, in an effort to shed some clarity on the situation, Tim Cook's company has published a FAQ that goes into additional detail as to why compliance is a very bad idea in this instance.
It's not every day you buy a charging cable that lights up, but that's exactly what Poweradd's 2-in-1 Lightning and micro-USB cable does, pulsing quickly or slowly, depending on how fully charged your device is, and it's currently down to $35.99 from its original price of $59.99.
Senior Apple executives have told reporters on a scheduled call that county officials within San Bernardino reset the Apple ID/iCloud password associated with the iPhone 5c that is part of the law enforcement's case. The executives also went as far as to say that if the Apple ID password had not been reset in the crucial hours after the shooting in California, then it was highly possible that the data FBI needed from the device could have been retrieved from iCloud backups after a court order without having to build any backdoor to iPhone which FBI is now demanding Apple to create.
It is being rumored that Apple could replace the 3.5mm headphone jack in the iPhone 7 with a dual-stereo speaker setup. Here are the details.
The Department of Justice has filed a motion to force Apple to help the FBI crack the iPhone involved in the San Bernardino shooting, claiming that Apple's decision to oppose the original court order is more based on its marketing strategy than any legal footing.
You can now download iOS game Warhammer 40,000: Deathwatch - Tyranid Invasion for iPhone and iPad completely free of cost for a limited period.
Here's a step-by-step guide on how you can fix error 53 using iOS 9.2.1 build 13D20 on a bricked Touch ID-enabled iPhone or iPad.
Ringing Bells Freedom 251, India's $4 Android smartphone which is currently making waves on the web, seems to have taken more than a little inspiration from the iPhone's design and icons. Check it out in action in the embedded video.
Apple today has released a new version of iOS 9.2.1 with build 13D20 to fix "Error 53" which bricks devices when a third-party Touch ID repair is performed on iPhone 6/6 Plus, iPhone 6s/6s Plus, iPad Pro, iPad Air 2 and iPad mini 4 & 3.















