The number of apps in the Android Market has almost doubled in just three months, Google confirmed today in an update. Where it had officially reached 16,000 apps by mid-December, the search company now says the official marker has jumped to 30,000. Its figure includes both free and paid apps, although it wouldn't tell MobileCrunch what the ratio might be.
The surge is most likely to be a direct result of accelerated Android phone sales, which could fuel both interest in apps and the corresponding development. Google chief Eric Schmidt at Mobile World Congress told those gathered that the company's partners were shipping 60,000 Android phones per day versus just 30,000 before. The Motorola Droid, its GSM-based Milestone equivalent and a continued wave of phones from HTC are the largest contributors.
The share still leaves Android with just a fifth of Apple's over 140,000 apps for the iPhone but makes it a clear second in app availability. Smartphones which were relatively late or limited entries to app stores, such as the BlackBerry, Palm's webOS devices and Windows Mobile, typically have a few thousand apps or less.
Google may get a further boost through two initiatives that were unveiled just today, including shipping an AT&T-ready Nexus One and making paid Android apps available in Canada, initially through Rogers.
Source: electronista
Apple safari is the most popular Mac OS X browser. With its third version release Apple decided to extend it to Windows OS. As a result every Safari update is released for two OSes.
Fraudster Daryl Simon is known for his laundry list of scams, but this time, he went one step too far when attempting to Photoshop himself into pictures that portray him participating in volunteer work, then submitting them to a federal judge.
AMD is currently in talks with Renesas Electronics, which was merged with Japan-based NEC, about the licensing of USB 3.0 technology, and is considering integrating USB 3.0 support in its upcoming Hudson D1 southbridge chipsets, according to sources from notebook makers.
Intel has unveiled the prototype of a high-speed fiber-optic data system based on silicon chips with integrated lasers and detectors. The system runs at 50Gbps, with Intel claiming future scalability to 1Tbps and beyond.
JEDEC Solid State Technology Association today announced the publication of JEDEC DDR3L, an addendum to its JESD79-3 DDR3 Memory Device Standard.

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