The technology world spent its collective eyes glued to the Consumer Electronics Show this past week, but there was a truckload of news in Apple land, including announcements that confirmed three high-profile rumors.
Amid the unveiling of products going on atCES in Las Vegas, Apple quietly sent out invites to an education-related event it's holding next week in New York. That matched up with rumors from last week claiming the company was gearing up for an event across the country from its Cupertino headquarters.
That confirmation was joined by two others. Target confirmed that it was, in fact, building up special displays for Apple products in 25 of its stores as part of a larger initiative to bring boutique shopping experiences into the fold. That was joined by a report from Bloomberg with Apple confirming that it had purchased Anobit, a chipmaker it was rumored to have bought in early December.
For more on these stories and more read on.
Apple Talk Weekly is a collection of some of the week's top Apple news and rumors from CNET and around the Web. It appears every Saturday, and is curated by CNET's Apple reporter Josh Lowensohn.
News
Apple holding education event next week
Smack dab in the middle of the Consumer Electronics Show, Apple stole some of the thunder, sending out invites to a special event it's holding next week the Guggenheim Museum in New York. The event, which takes place on the 19th, is rumored to center around Apple's iBookstore and text books.
iPhone 4S launches in China, then stumbles
This week brought the iPhone 4S to customers in China, but things got off to a rough start. Apple's flagship store in Beijing didn't open up on time, later saying it would not be selling the device at all. An angry crowd threw eggs at the store, and several fights broke out between customers. In a statement, Apple said it would not be selling the device in two of its Chinese retail stores, pushing shoppers to purchase one on the Web instead.
Apple unveils supplier list in supplier report
Yesterday Apple published the 2012 edition of its supplier report, its audit of the suppliers that it says manufacture 97 percent of its products. The big surprise was a full listing of third-party companies it uses, information that up until now had not been shared with the public. Alongside the release of the report, Apple joined the Fair Labor Association, a third-party auditing group that will keep tabs on what goes on in those factories and issue publicly-available reports.
ITC says Motorola does not infringe on Apple patents
Yesterday the International Trade Commission issued an initial determination on Apple's complaint against Motorola, ruling that its Droid smartphones do not violate three of Apple's patents. The ruling is preliminary and now goes to an approval stage with the ITC's six-member commission.
Kodak sues Apple again
Kodak took aim at Apple once again, adding to its existing lawsuits with new complaints filed with the International Trade Commission and local courts this week. In its complaint, which also targets HTC, Kodak says the two companies are infringing on a number of its patents with their smartphones and tablets, and is seeking a sales ban.
Apple confirms Anobit acquisition
Where there's smoke there's fire, or at least the saying goes. That turned out to be the case this week with Apple finally acknowledging its acquisition of Israel-based flash memory maker Anobit. Reports of the sale date back to December. Apple has acquired a handful of companies in recent years, but has a long history of not announcing those deals. Most recently that's included the pick-up of Quattro Wireless, which it rolled into iAds, and Siri, which became the namesake feature of the voice assistant in the iPhone 4S.
Target details mini Apple store plans
The store within a store concepts that Apple Insider reported last week are, in fact, coming to a handful of target stores. Target this week announced plans to bring specialty Apple displays to 25 of its locations. Which stores, and when they're rolling out are yet to be unveiled.
Rumors
iPad 3 to bring 4G, quad-core processor, HD display?
A report from Bloomberg yesterday pegged March as the month we'll get a follow-up to the iPad 2. Citing manufacturing partners in Asia, the outlet said the new tablet will be packing a quad-core processor, and support for 4G LTE networks. The display on the tablet is also said to be making the jump to HD, falling in line with a number of earlier reports pegging this next model as the one fall in line with the same pixel density as can be found on Apple's latest generation iPhones and iPod Touches..
iPad 3 not so different on the outside?
The iPad 3 is seemingly months away, but in a report this week, iLounge says it's already gotten its hands on it. iLounge editor in chief Jeremy Horwitz wrote that the new model looks nearly identical to the iPad 2, right down to the button placement. The only change is that it's 1mm thicker, the report said.
Sharp no longer making iPad 3 displays?
Display maker Sharp is out of the running for sourcing Apple with displays for Apple's next-generation iPad. That's according to Korean outlet Electronic Times Internet News, which said that the work instead went to LG Display and Samsung after Sharp could not meet Apple's specifications for the high-density pixel displays.
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