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“Apple is being tipped to introduce a much anticipated update that brings support for search services from China's Baidu into iOS next month, according to Chinese reports that cite comment from Baidu staff,” Jon Russell reports for TNW.“As we wrote in March, the two firms are sa...

In what was meant to have been a peace-keeping move, Google may have inadvertently brought upon itself the wrath of Iran in its entirety. And now the otherwise mighty corporation is facing one rather intimidating lawsuit.More »

Apple's 3D maps service is expected to get its debut in iOS 6. Following Apple’s acquisition of several mapping companies over the years, it has always seemed inevitable that the company would one day wave goodbye to Google Maps in iOS in favor of its own, in-house service. That’s...
Apple surprised some earlier this year when it debuted a new iPhoto app for iOS devices that featured maps from a source that was not Google. Now a new report indicates Apple may be on the verge of replacing Google Maps altogether in the next version of iOS.9to5Mac cites “trusted sources...

iOS 6's built in Maps app will no longer call on Google Maps as its back end, but will instead host an Apple-made solution. Map's will retain a Street View-style option and 3D building functionality thanks to their acquisition of C3 Technologies, with other mapping data coming from Placebase and...

According to trusted sources, Apple has an incredible headline feature in development for iOS 6...

If the latest rumor is to be believed, the next major release of Apple’s iOS operating system powering the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad will forgo Google Maps in favor of Apple’s in-house mapping service based on incredible 3D maps. It’ll still be called Maps, but this is where a...

Apple hasn't really needed Google maps for a while now, but until now it's continued to lean on the service to power iOS's Maps app. 9to5mac is reporting that Apple will drop Google's mapping service in iOS 6 in favor of an entirely in-house system.More »

OpenStreetMap is pretty happy that Apple finally tipped their hat to them. When Apple first released iPhoto for iOS, it quickly became clear that the new app was Apple’s first app to distance itself from Google’s Maps API in favor of OpenStreetMap (OSM), a collaborative online project...

After iPhoto landed on iOS in March, people quickly discovered the app used OpenStreetMap data for the map tiles. At the time, there was no attribution given to OSM but that has changed in the latest version of iPhoto, which was released earlier this week. OpenStreetMap pointed out in a tweet tha...