iPad Refunds; EU Roaming Caps; Facebook Password Amendment Rejected

Apple surfaced tech headlines on Wednesday after word widespread that the company  agreed to emanate refunds to new iPad buyers in Australia who are not confident with a device’s “4G” speeds. The new iPad is not concordant with existent Australian 4G LTE and WiMax networks and therefore defaults to 3G speeds. The updated tablet, however, is still advertised as a “Wi-Fi + 4G” device in a country, that prompted a complaint from a Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.

In other Apple news, the company’s late co-founder, Steve Jobs, was notoriously opinionated, and  one thing he apparently didn’t like was a name Siri, a voice partner app on a iPhone 4S. Meanwhile, the App Store for iPad was home to 180,000 apps as of February, according to a new analysis from Dutch investigate organisation Distimo.

European lawmakers this week also authorized a understanding that would put a tip on how many travelers could shelve adult in mobile roaming charges. The deal, authorized Tuesday night by a Council of Ministers, would go into outcome on Jul 1.

Back in a U.S, House Republicans defeated an amendment that would have criminialized stream or impending employers from requiring workers to palm over personal passwords as a condition of gripping or removing a new job.

Also creation headlines on Wednesday:

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