Review: VirusBarrier X5 If you're in the market for a fast-working antivirus program, VirusBarrier X5 10.5.2 is the gold standard. It will protect your Mac without making your other work grind to a halt.
Secrets of Mac trackpad, from iBook to MacBook Air Depending on which Mac laptop you have, there are up to 10 specialized trackpad functions you can use to make navigating the screen, Mac OS X and various applications faster and easier. Computerworld’s Ryan Faas takes a look at each of them.
Apple offers details, advice for Friday’s iPhone launch An e-mail from Apple tells would-be iPhone 3G customers what to expect at the Apple Store this Friday and what information they should have on hand to activate their new phones.
Freeverse plans more than a dozen iPhone titles Freeverse Software has revealed plans to publish more than one dozen games and applications for the iPhone and iPod touch in the coming months.
Japan to get 3G iPhone from 7 a.m. on Friday Japanese consumers will be among the first in the world to get their hands on the new 3G version of the iPhone when it goes on Friday.
Review: Sony HDR-SR11 Handycam HD camcorder The HDR-SR11 HD camcorder is an easy choice for those wishing to jump on the tapeless bandwagon. Sony has all the bases covered: the camcorder is Mac-friendly, sports impressive video quality, and is elegantly designed.
Mémoires 1.1 Mémoires 1.1.40 is quite limited in features. But its simple interface makes it ideal for keeping a basic personal journal.
Privacy groups to Google: What took you so long? Privacy groups are glad that Google has finally placed a link to its privacy policy on its home page, but they said it was something the search giant was legally obligated to do, Computerworld reports.
Keynote Motion Themes 2.0 includes five themes for iWork Each of the five themes introduced in Keynote Motion Themes 2.0—Money, Rain, Exercise Book, Story, and Curtain—cost $10. The entire collection of Keynote ’08 themes is available for $25.
Digital Photo: Extreme vacation photography Want to add some pizazz to those vacation snapshots? Derrick Story explains how to take your digital camera underwater or up into the sky and get photographs that'll wow the folks back home.