Apple Inc. Chairman and CEO Steve Jobs gestures on stage during an event in Cupertino, Calif., April 8, 2010.
Eric Risberg, Associated Press
CUPERTINO, Calif. — Apple Inc.'s iPhone and iPad devices will soon be able to run more than one program at a time, an ability that phones from Apple's rivals already offer and that iPhone owners have long sought.
The changes, coming this summer to iPhones and this fall to iPads, mean that users user might be able to listen to music using the Pandora program and check a bank account online simultaneously. Currently, users must return to Apple's home screen, effectively quitting the open program, before starting a new task.
"We weren't the first to this party, but we're going to be the best," Apple CEO Steve Jobs declared Thursday, as the audience of bloggers, software developers and others greeted the news of such "multitasking" with applause.
The iPhone already permits some multitasking, but that's largely limited to Apple's own programs. Apple had not given users ways to seamlessly switch among all the software "apps" available from outside software companies, the way phones from rivals Palm Inc. and Google Inc. already do.
That will change with the updates known as iPhone OS 4. Apple generally makes such updates available for free, and often automatically, as a software download.
"It really changes the way you use the iPhone," Jobs said. You're bouncing around the apps with tremendous fluidity."
Jobs also unveiled a unified inbox for all e-mail accounts, support for folders filled with applications and a way to connect an iPhone with a regular keyboard using Bluetooth wireless technology.
He also announced an advertising platform called iAd in which Apple will sell ads to run on apps made by outside developers; those developers get 60 percent of the ad revenue.
Full multitasking had been high on many people's wish lists. Because Apple's new iPad runs the same software as the iPhone, changes would apply to that larger gadget as well. Some people have held off buying one because of its inability to run more than one program at once.
Jobs also said the company has sold 450,000 iPads since its launch Saturday. The company earlier said it delivered more than 300,000 iPads on the first day, though that included pre-orders and units shipped to retail stores such as Best Buy but not necessarily purchased right away.
Shares of Apple fell 27 cents to $240.33 in afternoon trading Thursday.
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