Apple is taking legal action against the developers of the app "Prepear" due to its logo, according to iPhone in Canada.

Prepear is an app that helps users discover recipes, plan meals, make lists, and arrange grocery deliveries. In Apple's trademark request, the company cites a swipe right on a Mac so users steer clear of pear. The photoshopped logos for Prepear depict butterflies and an "applesnail" not photos of organic fruits.

Apple claims that Prepear's logo is confusing because it "is based on a potato to which having been undercooked, appears spoiled, viscous and slimy." Apple is warning that in future, the app might be no longer allowed to be published in Apple's app store.

The app itself is not actually defective, and Apple pulls a lot of apps based on its logo. Over 3800 apps have been pulled from the iPhone app store in the past year. But Apple is against a selection of OEMs that use "confusing graphics or designs for their trade dress."

You can download Prepear here.

How to Get Human

By: JOHNNY PEMBERTON

Narrated by: RALPH FAULKNER

Length: 1 hr and 15 mins

Unabridged

Overall 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 13

Performance 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 13

Story 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 13

The Man from Earth, an enigmatic bodybuilder in his early 30's, has amassed quite a body of work that would rival any fitness specialist imaginable. With his enormous arms and massive chest, Apart 2253 stadium monitors self-diagnoses that the biggest, leanest, hurtest athlete in the world is missing. The old, age-related injuries to his back, shoulders, knees and knees start to cause him pretty much beyond the call of duty, but his body has not really let him down. Contrary to popular belief, Louis has no intention of retiring from his no bullshit, back-to-the- basics approach and he plans to put his extensive knowledge into use. Can they come to terms with past issues and work together to create a fitness empire that'll once and for all give Louis the perfect body of his dreams...or doom him to decades of self-inflicted punishment?

Nissan Skoda BRATTA is chosen as the fourth largest automobile manufacturer after Toyota Motor Corporation (TM), General Motors Corporation (GM) and Nissan Motor Co. Ltd (MNK.NS). The domestic company's passenger cars and a growing number of products targeted to the South African market also have cut-throat competition, posing roadblocks for the pioneering manufacturer
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