Otterbox has launched a very good protection for your iPhone against dust, light rain, etc… I think it’s the protection for all the iPhone’s owner who have an outdoor job. Check out here:
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Written by Chris on December 8th, 2007 with no comments.
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Mophie’s last product of note was a combination iPod shuffle case/bottle-opener; of use to some, perhaps, but a little niche for my liking. They’re following up with something far more useful, the mStation Mophie juice pack for iPhone - basically a soft-touch, non-slip case for the cellphone with a built in LiIon battery pack that adds an additional 250hrs of standby, 8hrs of talktime, 6hrs of surfing, 7hrs of video or 24hrs of audio playback.
 
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Written by Chris Davies on December 3rd, 2007 with no comments.
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Straight in line with all other stores on Black Friday, Macmall will be giving up to 22% off on select Apple products including Notebooks, iMacs, Mac Pro’s, Mac Mini’s, and the full range of iPod’s on Thursday the 22nd (Thanksgiving) and Friday the 23rd. There doesn’t appear to be any discounts on iPhone’s though. A sale of 22% off could mean some major savings on notebooks or other Apple computers.

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Written by Ken Allen on November 22nd, 2007 with no comments.
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This year the Apple store is participating in the day after Thanksgiving holiday Black Friday specials. It’s a one day sale, most likely with small discounts on most of their products. Be sure to check the Apple store on Friday the 23rd to see what you can scrounge up.

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Written by Ken Allen on November 22nd, 2007 with no comments.
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A common complaint about the iPhone is that it has no physical buttons for playback control; you’re forced to use the phone’s touchscreen, which presents challenges when carrying the iPhone in a bag or pocket. Another complaint is that the iPhone’s recessed headphone jack prevents you from using many third-party headphones that offer better performance than the stock earbuds.
Apple provides a workaround for the first issue via the special earbuds included with the iPhone: the right-hand cable provides a small, inline module that includes a microphone and a control module. Squeeze the module once to pause or resume iPod playback, or to answer or end a call; squeeze it twice in succession to skip to the next track. The functionality is limited–you can’t skip back, skim, or perform any other action, but it’s a welcome way to get at least some degree of playback and call control.
Third-party vendors have provided workarounds for the second issue through small adapters that let you connect other headphones to the iPhone’s headphone jack. (We’ve reviewed two, and we have a few more to cover.) Unfortunately, when you use most third-party headphones, you lose the stock earbuds’ control module and microphone. Shure makes an adapter that includes such functionality, but it’s $40 and somewhat bulky.
For those who want better audio quality without losing the additional features of Apple’s earbuds, an appealing alternative is provided by Ultimate Buds. The company takes a set of quality in-ear-canal headphones–either the Etymotics ER-6i (MSRP $149) or the Future Sonics/XtremeMac FS1 (MSRP $150)–and a set of Apple’s iPhone earbuds, and then performs electronics surgery, grafting the iPhone-headset’s cable and controller onto the in-ear-canal headphones. The result is the Ultimate Buds UB7 (pictured above) or UB7EB, each $150 (at the time of this writing, the UB7EB is on sale for $120). You get the sound quality and noise isolation of the ER-6i (UB7) or FS1 (UB7EB) with the playback-control and phone-making convenience of Apple’s own iPhone earbuds. (Ultimate Buds will instead modify your favorite set of headphones for $40; we didn’t test this service.)
See the rest of the review after the jump.
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Written by Dan Frakes on November 20th, 2007 with no comments.
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