Apple has released the latest firmware update for its iOS mobile operating system, version 4.1. The new firmware fixes the performance issues for the iPhone 3G as well as adding new features for the iPod Touch, iPhone 3GS, and the iPhone 4.

Besides fixing the 3G performance issues, the biggest reason to update is to check out Apple’s all new Game Center. The new gaming service allows users to send and receive friend requests, play online multiplayer with your friends and other Game Center users, and the ability to view Leaderboards and Achievements among some other cool features.
Game Center is currently only available for the iPod Touch, iPhone 3GS, and the iPhone 4.
Other performance upgrades and bug fixes include: Nike+iPhone performance issues, improvements for better BlueTooth compatibility, and performance boosts for the iPhone 4′s proximity sensor. Apple also updated its security for FaceTime, ImageIO, and WebKit.
Remember, if your device is jailbroken and you update to 4.1, your device will no longer be jailbroken.
It’s pretty interesting when you take a look at all the content being shared on Twitter: photos, links, thoughts, check-ins, and even your thoughts. Twitter users have been about to share all of these things on their smartphones and computers, and now they can share on Twitter via the iPad.

The social network website announced the new iPad app on its official blog by saying, “Today we are bringing Tweets to a device that really lets content shine – the iPad. Twitter for iPad takes advantage of the iPad’s fluid touch interface, letting you move lots of information around smoothly and quickly – without needing to open and close windows or click buttons.”
There are several new features that come with the Twitter iPad app that you won’t see on other smartphones and computers. In the new application, when you tap a link or click on a video, you can now view that embedded video from within the actual application.
You can also “pinch” Tweets to view information about the author, you can pinch by putting two fingers together and pulling down.
Google has begun developing its own tablet, which will run a Chrome operating system, and will be built by HTC. The Taiwan-based company seems to be the go-to manufacturer for Google, as HTC built the Nexus One as well.

No specifics on hardware have been provided thus far, but Download Squad predicts that the tablet will be based on nVidia’s Tegra 2 platform with a 1280-by-720 multi-touch display.
The Nexus One had great features, so one could expect the same for Google’s first tablet. Expect it to be cheaper than the iPad too.
Google plans on offering its tablet in conjunction with Verizon, sources close to the situation have said. This isn’t the first time, in recent history, that Google and Verizon have worked together. Both companies recently proposed their own Net Neutrality plan to the FCC.
The tablet is rumored to be launched on November 26. The launch date is a smart move for Google and Verizon, both, as the 26th is Black Friday — the busiest shopping day of the year in the United States.
Most college students don’t like having to carry textbooks around all day — in a backpack or not. Here’s some help: There is a free iPad application that claims to have 90 percent of the “core textbooks”.

The developer, which is CourseSmart, already develops e-books for the iPhone and for view on computers. An iPad would not only be the cool thing to do right now, but it would be optimal for class.
The huge screen dimensions would allow for a page on screen to contain just as much context as the physical textbook. The screen and the color would be great for graphs and pictures. And the ability to write notes in books. (See the screenshot above.)
Although the app is free, you still obviously have to buy the books.
Research in Motion Ltd. has plans to introduce a tablet in November to compete with Apple’s increasingly popular iPad tablet, according to Bloomberg’s sources. The device, which is going to be called “Blackpad”, will cost around the same as the iPad, starting at $499.At around the same dimensions as Apple’s tablet, the Blackpad will include Wi-Fi and Bluetooth that will allow you to connect to your BlackBerry’s Internet.

“They can’t wait for a second generation of devices from Apple or they’ll fall too far behind,” Ashok Kumar, an analyst at Rodman & Renshaw Inc., told Bloomberg.
Several other companies, like Microsoft for example, have also been rushing to come out with their tablet to rival the iPad.
“With the success of the iPad, RIM faces an uphill battle,” said Robert W. Baird & Co. analyst William Power, who has “a ‘neutral’ rating on RIM’s stock”. “RIM really has yet to demonstrate that it can roll out touchscreen technology to match the leaders in the space, most noticeably Apple.”
RIM is also betting that its tablet will become the favorite for its e-mail capabilities and for the corporate love that it’s BlackBerry smart-phone receives.
One thing that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has always been great at is admitting whether or not another company has struck gold with a product, and following the trend of the times.

Ballmer has been adamant about Microsoft’s venture into tablets, like he is with anything Microsoft-related, and told financial analysts that Microsoft would be entering the tablet scene with “full guns” and that the Microsoft-manufactured tablet would be running a version of Windows, presumably a variant of Windows 7.
“They’ll be shipping as soon as they are ready,” Ballmer told the conference, not giving any details. “It is job one urgency. No one is sleeping at the switch.” Ballmer also noted that his company’s goal was not to only deliver products, but “to deliver products that people want to buy.”
As to how many iPads have been sold, Ballmer said, “they’ve sold certainly more than I’d like them to have sold.”