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Apple Patents Steering Wheel Remote Control For Safer 'Hands-Free' Driving

Apple Patents Steering Wheel Remote Control For Safer 'Hands-Free' Driving
Apple hopes to make all drivers safer with a new invention, which lets users wirelessly control the music playing in their car without ever taking their hands off the steering wheel. In a patent that was quietly granted on May 15, Apple describes a new remote control that can be clipped onto any car's steering wheel.
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Apple 'iPhone 5': Major Featurse, Specs, Schematics Released By Repair Site [REPORT]

Apple iPhone 5 Features Surface: Leaked Audio Components Signify Departure From Old Design [RUMORS]

Little by little, we are slowly putting the pieces of the iPhone 5 puzzle together. On Saturday, Hong Kong-based components supplier SW-Box claimed to have come into possession of a group of new components, including a headphone jack, ear speaker, and a Wi-Fi cable part, which are all allegedly being built for Apple's sixth-generation iPhone. What else does Apple have in store for the iPhone 5?
The new CUE system in the 2013 Cadillac XTS and accompanying iPad app.

2013 Cadillac XTS Will Come With Free iPad, Teaching Apps

Every new 2013 Cadillac XTS will come with an Apple Incorporated (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPad with a suite of customer education apps pre-loaded to teach new owners about the car's Cadillac User Experience (CUE), General Motors Company (NYSE: GM) announced on Wednesday.
New iPhone

New iPhone Rumors: Why Insiders Believe The '4-Inch Screen' Speculation May Be True [PHOTOS]

While Apple has left the details of the iPhone 5, the iPhone 6, the iPhone 4G, or whatever you want to call it, to much of the imagination, iPhone insiders have gotten access to some of the most valued particulars of the mysterious phone -- its size. Apple insider iLounge is reporting that the Cupertino, Calif., based company is abandoning the long-rumored teardrop-shaped iPhone 5 in favor of another glass-bodied design.
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Computer Security: IBM Finds Too Many Companies Not Prepared

Despite publicity about hackers, intrusions into company databases and even the insertion of computer viruses into Iran?s nuclear program, most companies simply aren?t prepared to handle them, a new study from International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM) determined.

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