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Think you're an iPhone know-it-all? Check out these handy tips that might still be new to you.

Brian Tong shows off some of the new features, including new multitouch gestures, that are in the latest developers version of Apple's iOS for the iPhone and iPad.

The Verizon iPhone 4 is finally here, but that's old news. We'll dig inside of the iOS 4.3 beta and show you some new features that you can see now, and talk about others coming later.

Samsung may be holding a digital hostage; Android gains ground on Apple, but may soon lose it to the Verizon iPhone; and the announcement of the next iteration of Android raises questions about version numbers. Join Antuan Goodwin and Justin Eckhouse for all that and more in the world of Android.

At the iPhone 4 Verizon unveiling, Dan Mead, President of Verizon Wireless, and Tim Cook, COO of Apple, answer questions from the press.


We dissect Google's decision to drop H.264 support from Chrome and go with WebM, we mop up a little bit of the Verizon iPhone news, and more importantly, we eventually get this show on the road after yet another tech disaster. Also, and this is very important, people, the next version of Android will not be called Ice Cream. It's Ice Cream Sandwich, people. Keep up. --Molly


At CES 2011, Sharon Vaknin shows off the AcuTouch 9500 with HT Connect, a massage chair that lets you operate everything via iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad.

The Beatles now on iTunes; Adobe and Apple smack talk continues; and the white iPhone is ready to order, but not through Apple! All that and more, on this week's Apple Byte.

A new Apple patent wants to bring augmented reality games to iOS devices, iOS 4.2 is ready to rollout with all new text tones, and Steve wants you to "buckle up" for all new products.

Apple is banning slide-on cases from its retail stores; Android tops Apple's iOS worldwide; and we'll take a look at the iPad's top contender, the Samsung Galaxy Tab.

The makers of PlayOn, a useful media-streaming program for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, have a new iPhone version of the PlayOn app.


Our top-secret source, Rob Redmond, joins us in-studio for this year's listener extravaganza; and from around the world, we bring in Elwin (Jakuza) from the Netherlands, Joshua Caleb from deepest Minnesota, and our favorite early iPhone 4 reviewer, Gil Cabrera (better known as GilSD). They made the show awesome all year with their emails, top-secret tips, and Photoshop skills, and this show is no exception.

It's a Halloween mystery on the Buzz Report this week: what's happening with the white iPhone? Plus, the end of Limewire and the TSA-safe MacBook Air.

iPhone OS 4.0 brings multitasking, home screen folders, and a camera zoom to the iPhone 3GS. Watch as we take it for a test drive.

An official PlayStation app is set to launch soon on iPhone and Android, Hotmail lets you surf the Web inside your e-mail, and the Google Body Browser lets you float inside the human chassis.

Google launches Latitude for iPhone, T-Mobile says a 4G tablet is on the way in 2011, and Twitter and YouTube release their top trends of 2010.

It's a shoestring-and-gum operation around here, and someone took our gum. But somehow, we've got another show for you today, and we're talking more Wikileaks Web warring (WWW3, perhaps?), Google activating 300,000 phones a day, and Apple's refusal to let you donate money via iPhone apps (and weirdly robotic response). --Molly

Caroline McCarthy takes Wilson's place today for a review on Mark Zuckerberg's 60 Minutes interview, the Furry Phenomenon, American Psycho:The Musical, and a $62k iPhone crafted with T-Rex teeth and meteors.

On today's show, we follow the Google Chrome announcements live, but we'll have the real wrap-up tomorrow, because wow, did that thing go on and on. In other news today, Julian Assange is arrested but Wikileaks soldiers on; unsurprisingly, the DecorMyEyes guy turns out to be a bona fide sociopath; and whatever you do, do not buy anyone an iPhone or iPad for Christmas--just give them an IOU. Trust Shaw Wu on this one. Plus: Koreaceratops! --Molly

3D without glasses is the only way Steve Jobs will do it, you'll have second thoughts about using the iPad as a camera, and more iPhone tips.

eBay buys Milo.com, a new version of Rock Band is out for the iPad and iPhone, and the Wi-Fi Baby 3G will keep an eye on your little ones...and big ones.

Manage Google Voice from either your iPhone or Android smartphone.

This week on the CNET Tech Review: is your iPhone safe from prying eyes? No, it's not. Plus: T-Mobile's MyTouch goes 4G; counting down the Top 5 laptops; and we try out all six Kinect launch titles.

It's the Apple Byte's 100th episode and we celebrate with a Mophie Juice Pack Air giveaway; the new MacBook Air could be just around the corner; and we find unique ways to charge your iPhone.

A look at Android 3.0, a dual-core phone and the top 5 reasons Android is better than the iPhone, on this week's edition of Android Atlas Weekly join Justin Eckhouse along side guest host, CNET Associate Editor, Antuan Goodwin.

Verizon's CEO want's Apple to jump on board, CDMA iPhones are ready for production, we'll show you how to find missing iTunes Album Art, and get a Double Rainbow on your iPhone.

Scott brings his expertise in mobile computing to help us discuss today's stories about elderly iPad-ing, cracking iPhone 4s, the link between hyper-texting teens and risky behavior, & mobile STD testing!