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Macworld Focus: Steve Jobs answers the call
Steve Jobs kept the Apple faithful on the edge of their seats until he finally announced a new iPhone.
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Steve Jobs kept the Apple faithful on the edge of their seats until he finally produced the new iPhone during his keynote address at Macworld Expo 2007.
Larry Dignan: The impact of Apple's iPhone, rolled out at Macworld by Steve Jobs, is going to have a lasting impact on the tech industry beyond today's big splash.
Queuing for Jobs and the iPhone
Before dawn on Tuesday morning, hundreds of Mac faithful were lined up outside the Moscone Center--waiting for Steve Jobs.Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone
Dan Farber: Apple CEO Steve Jobs said, "I have been looking forward to this for two and a half years," followed that with "Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone."Finally, Apple answers call for iPhone
Dan Farber: Apple CEO Steve Jobs said, "I have been looking forward to this for two and a half years," followed that with "Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone."Apple reveals plans for joining PC to TV
Apple TV is a small white box that plugs into a flat-panel TV and wirelessly connects to a Mac or PC, allowing content stored on the computer to play on the television.Office 2008 for Mac to come this year
Revamped Office for Mac, slated for second half of this year, will run on both Intel-based and PowerPC-based Apple machines.iPhone blows away expectations
Ed Burnette: Sometimes, the truth can be wilder than the rumors. Such was the case today at MacWorld 2007, where Steve Jobs unveiled the long awaited iPhone.Apple announces Apple TV
Ed Burnette: Steve Jobs formally introduced the "iTV" during the keynote address at Macworld 2007 in San Francisco today. The new device will be available in February for $299. Live blog from Macworld
Jason D. O'Grady: It's packed inside Moscone West for the Macworld Expo 2007 keynote address--probably one of the most highly anticipated Apple keynote addresses of all time.Microsoft bashes potential iPod phone
Entertainment chief at Microsoft says Apple will face all sorts of problems if it launches a mobile phone built around the iPod.
iPhone fallout: Winners and Losers
- Photos: Steve Jobs takes Macworld stage
- Video: Jobs launches the iPhone
- Video: Jobs demos iPhone apps
- Larry Dignan: Apple-Cisco iPhone dispute resolved
Macworld Headlines
Before dawn on Tuesday morning, hundreds of Mac faithful were lined up outside the Moscone Center--waiting for Steve Jobs.
Dan Farber: Apple CEO Steve Jobs said, "I have been looking forward to this for two and a half years," followed that with "Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone."
Dan Farber: Apple CEO Steve Jobs said, "I have been looking forward to this for two and a half years," followed that with "Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone."
Apple TV is a small white box that plugs into a flat-panel TV and wirelessly connects to a Mac or PC, allowing content stored on the computer to play on the television.
Revamped Office for Mac, slated for second half of this year, will run on both Intel-based and PowerPC-based Apple machines.
Ed Burnette: Sometimes, the truth can be wilder than the rumors. Such was the case today at MacWorld 2007, where Steve Jobs unveiled the long awaited iPhone.
Ed Burnette: Steve Jobs formally introduced the "iTV" during the keynote address at Macworld 2007 in San Francisco today. The new device will be available in February for $299.
Jason D. O'Grady: It's packed inside Moscone West for the Macworld Expo 2007 keynote address--probably one of the most highly anticipated Apple keynote addresses of all time.
Entertainment chief at Microsoft says Apple will face all sorts of problems if it launches a mobile phone built around the iPod.
Read more about Macworld in ZDNet's Blog Focus.