The iPhone's popularity shows no signs of dying down. When
the device was first
unveiled in January 2007, it took the world by storm and sparked a buying
frenzy when it launched
a few months later.
The iPhone was clearly designed with consumers in mind,
focusing on phone, music and video operations. Later updates even provided
mobile access to Apple's iTunes
Wi-Fi Music Store.
The only people seemingly left out of the iPhone equation
were business users. Apple announced its plans to rectify that issue earlier
this month with the rollout of the iPhone
SDK and a beta of the upcoming 2.0 firmware. The 2.0 firmware brings a
wealth of business-oriented features to the iPhone including push email
support, Cisco IPsec VPN, WPA2/802.11x and support for Microsoft
Exchange/ActiveSync.
A new
job posting on Apple's website reveals yet more technology that could be
coming to OS X as well as the iPhone. The listing seeks a Handwriting
Recognition Engineer that is well versed in pattern recognition, C/C++ coding,
Cocoa programming and neural net algorithms.
Apple notes that the main area of focus will be handwriting
technology for Mac OS X and that development/design "may extend beyond Mac
OS X to other applications and the iPhone."
The handwriting technology could make for an interesting
alternative input option for the iPhone. The iPhone has been oft-criticized for
its on-screen keyboard, so any form of handwriting may be welcome by
iPhone/iPod touch users.
Usage could also extend to the rumored tablet-based MacBook
which has yet to materialize and the ModBook
which use's Apple's existing InkWell
handwriting technology.