Apple may be worth one and a half Googles now, but the world’s most valuable company needs its relationship with the world’s largest search engine to keep clicking. Such was evident Monday when Apple
Apple wants to join the antitrust case against Google, and it has explained why it doesn't want to create its own rival search engine.
Apple Inc. has asked to participate in an upcoming antitrust trial that will focus on Google LLC’s practices in the search market. Reuters reported the request today, citing a court document filed on Monday.
The recent rollout of iOS 18.2 finally brings many of the promised Apple Intelligence features, like Genmoji and Image Playground. One such long-awaited tool is Visual Intelligence, a feature currently reserved for the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max that was first introduced at the company’s September event.
Apple has asked to participate in Google's upcoming U.S. antitrust trial over online search, saying it cannot rely on Google to defend revenue-sharing agreements that send the iPhone maker billions of dollars each year for making Google the default search engine on its Safari browser.
An Apple exec cited financial risk and potential privacy conflicts as reasons the company doesn't have its own search engine.
One of Apple's apps for Android has popped up on the Google Play's store top downloaded apps over Christmas. Here's why the "Move to iOS" app has launched itself into the top 40, and what it does.
In a declaration filed on Monday, Apple's senior vice president of services, Eddy Cue, asserted that Apple has no interest in creating its own search engine and would prefer to continue to use Google.
This week’s Apple headlines; iPhone Pro camera details, the iPhone SE challenge, Apple Silicon M5 improvements, Apple’s AI strategy, and
A door lock with a video camera could set the iPhone maker up to compete with Google's Nest and Amazon's Ring.
Android is finally showing signs that it could evolve into a half-decent tablet platform. I dearly hope Google gives it a deservedly meaningful desktop mode.
This technology uses the power of the iPhone’s camera to instantly provide information about the objects and surroundings within your vicinity.