Saturday, October 15, 2011

Big high-tech Subtitle: iPhone 4S, Facebook on the iPad, BlackBerry stranded

During the week ending October 14, 4S and the iPhone iOS 5 received their first sales and critical, Facebook has finally released its application iPad, BlackBerry services have experienced multiple failures and Netflix made ​​machine back on the DVD rental. iOS 5 and iPhone 4S: what the critics think? Everyone has an opinion on the latest versions of telephone and mobile operating system from Apple, but the assistant Siri intelligent voice which catalyzed the comments. 
"Despite Siri, the iPhone 4S does not radically change the deal as did previous versions of the iPhone," wrote Walt Mossberg in the Wall Street Journal. For This Is My Next, 
"The iPhone is a mobile 4S most excellent." Gizmodo found Siri "damn impressive" and the New York Times sees an application "redefining voice recognition."  
Facebook finally released an iPad application Facebook released its long awaited iPad customer, which enables network members to access it in full screen, with the comfort of a dedicated program. Some blogs are wondering if the delay is not due to a disagreement between Apple and Facebook on the issue of transactions within the application. One million orders for the iPhone 4S, queues stretch to Apple stores Bloggers have seen the iPhone 4S as a "disappointment", which does not prevent him to convince consumers: more than a million pre-orders within 24 hours after its announcement, it is almost double Apple's previous record (600,000 iPhone 4). And of course, some fanatics camped outside Apple stores to be sure to be among the first owners of the unit.  The BlackBerry network failures causing the rage of mobile users Research In Motion, maker of BlackBerry, has a dirty past week, punctuated by crashes involving several days of Europe, the Middle East, Africa, India, the United States, Canada and Latin America . 
Furious at not being able to send messages or e-mail, users of the smartphone dumped cartloads of critics on Twitter.  Netflix backtracked, cancels the split of business After announcing that Netflix would separate its postal rental of DVDs and streaming on demand, becoming one and the other remaining Qwikster Netflix, Reed Hastings, CEO of the company, returned to this decision: "It does not change anything: a single site, one account, one password ... ie: no Qwikster ". Bloggers response: "Reed Hastings should resign from Netflix?"

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