
but iOS is up: iOS had 43.95% of the mobile operating system market share in June, way up from 33.03% in May.
NISUS WRITER PRO NMAC KED WINDOWS
Windows remains dominant with 91.51% as of June. April 2016’s 9.2% was an all-time high, according to NetMarketShare’s measurements. MacOS market share down -According to the report, among desktop operating systems, macOS had 6.12% of the global market share in June, down from from 6.36% percent in May (that’s global market share in the US it’s over 13%). The Silicon Valley saga gets a wonky boost from Bates’ electronic score, punctuated by clicks from a Macintosh Plus. In fact, Jobs’ story is just as torrid as anything in Carmen or La Traviata – unchecked ambition, fickle love, rivalry, betrayal, death, and redemption. “Too often people think of opera as this stupid old European art form that has nothing to do with our lives,” Campbell says. The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs, an original opus by Pulitzer Prize–winning librettist Mark Campbell and DJ-slash-composer Mason Bates, premieres at the Santa Fe Opera in July. Now the late technologist is something new: a baritone. Steve Jobs opera -He was a visionary, perfectionist, tyrant, and genius. It’s currently on special for 6 more days (US $29.99 instead of US$99.99) and it ships internationally. Zoomable monocular lens to iPhones - The Zoomable 60X Monocular can be used by itself, or with an attachment that joins it to your iPhone camera to bring landscapes, far off animals, sports fields, or anything else off in the distance into clear focus for you to snap amazing pictures. Apple could invest up to $2.62 billion in LG’s new iPhone OLED factory -Apple appears to be widening supply options for future OLED screen deliveries, with multiple media reports claiming it is on the cusp of a deal with LG to expand manufacturing capacity.ĪCCC to question Apple regarding its ban on the Westpac Keyboard feature - Apple’s decision to order Westpac Banking Corp, an Australian and New Zealand bank and financial-services provider headquartered in Sydney, to disable a mobile banking feature that let customers make payments in chat apps such as WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger has caught the attention of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) over concerns it could be attempting to remove rivals to its own upcoming service, according to The Financial Review.
