Apple has updated its all-in-one desktop Macs with faster processors and revved up graphics, including options for a 3 GHz Core 2 Duo and Nvidia GeForce 8800 GS graphics.
A white paper from Paypal outlines an anti-phishing strategy in which the company would ban browsers that don't support specific anti-phishing technologies.
OWC has introduced a 500 GB version of its Mercury On-The-Go drive, offering USB 2.0, FireWire 400, and FireWire 800 connections...and it runs off bus power.
Windows users with iTunes or QuickTime installed may have noticed Apple's Software Update utility offering the Safari 3.1 Web browser...set to download by default.
Claiming it is up to three times faster than the competition, Apple's Safari 3.1 browser also implements portions of HTML 5, CSS Animations, and CSS Web Fonts.
The latest version of Buffalo's MiniStation TurboUSB offers 500 GB off storage on a 5,400 rpm drive, consumes just 2.5 Watts, and is just 0.8 inches thick.
The "social Web browser" Flock - based on the same Mozilla engine as Firefox - says it's gaining users...and version 1.1 adds support for Web mail, friend tracking, and Picassa.
Apple has announced support for Microsoft Exchange email on the iPhone, and outlined third-party development tools for the iPhone and iPod touch...including games.
Dark Castle was one of the first real games on the Macintosh; now the updated Return to Dark Castle runs on modern Macs and features new levels and minigames.
PayPal's chief information officer says its users stay away from Apple's Safari Web browser because it lacks anti-phishing features PayPal considers important.
DVD Jon is back with doubleTwist, a new desktop application that promises to share and convert media between devices...even if it's protected by Apple's FairPlay DRM.
Sun Microsystems is delving deeper into virtualization, snapping up Innotek, developers of the open source VirtualBox that lets desktop operating systems run side-by-side.
Four months after shipping Mac OS X 10.5 "Leopard," Apple finally offers an update that smoothes some sharp corners on their flagship operating system.
Think vinyl's great but MP3s are more portable? Convert your LPs and singles to digital audio without intervening pre-amps and gear with Audio Technica's USB turntable.
At his keynote at this year's Macworld Expo, Apple CEO Steve Jobs revealed Time Capsule, iTunes movie rentals, new Apple TV software, and...the ultra-thin MacBook Air.
Smith Micro's new TuneRanger software enables users to manage iTunes libraries across multiple computers, finding lost songs, coordinating libraries, and managing multiple iPods.
Want to say goodbye to the format war? Addonic's Zebra external optical drive handles both Blu-ray and HD DVD discs, and lets users write to DVD and CD media.
Apple has quietly updated its MacBook and MacBook Pro notebooks, adding MacBook Pro build-to-order options and taking consumer-oriented MacBooks to the Santa Rosa architecture.
Prism allows Web 2.0 applications like Facebook and Gmail to run directly from a desktop shortcut as a traditional application would, without a browser window.