
Oppressed iPhone App Developer Quits, Facebook Coming to PS3?

Highlights from this morning's other big tech headlines....
- Joe Hewitt, the software engineer responsible for developing Facebook's popular iPhone app, has quit the project over Apple's tyrannical App Store review process. Refusing to be encumbered by the company's stifling and intrusive policies, Hewitt plans to return to Web development, saying that at least the Net is still "unrestricted and free." [From: Tech Crunch]
- Microsoft is already testing a social networking function for the Xbox, and, if the leaked screen shots are accurate, Sony is doing the same thing with Facebook for the PS3. Nintendo needs to step it up soon. Motion controls may not provide enough ammunition against Blu-ray, Facebook, and the other features its competitors offer. [From: Mashable]
- Searching for authorized, high-quality videos or television shows online typically involves visiting two or three well-known sites -- which may start charging for content soon. Finding other, free options can be difficult. Clicker, which launches today, is the self-proclaimed 'TV Guide of the Web' and aims to ease that hunt by acting as an up-to-the-minute portal for online video content. For a full, hands-on review, check back with us later. [From: Clicker, via: CNET and The New York Times]
- Amid the intense ad battle between the Droid and the iPhone, Palm's products have been lost in the smartphone shuffle. The company is stealthily returning to the fracas, though, with its new Pixi handheld, but initial reviews aren't too glowing. [From: Engadget]
- Beginning today, the FDA and pharmaceutical companies will engage in discussions about Internet drug marketing. Great. Just what we need: yet more online reminders that, in a few years, we'll be sexually dysfunctional and constantly peeing. [From: Huffington Post]
- Although other companies offer numerous smartphone options, and Apple only holds a 2.5-percent mobile phone market share, it still leads the way in generating revenue. Apple and its iPhone brought in more than $1.5 billion in just the third quarter of 2009, displacing Nokia as the most profitable mobile manufacturer. [From: TUAW]



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