Multi-tasking coming with iPhone OS 4.0? |
- Multi-tasking coming with iPhone OS 4.0?
- Greek police take down torrent tracker
- UK launch of Google Nexus One gets delayed
- Punish all the pirates, says James Murdoch
- iPad on sale via eBay for $21 million
- FT: Google is '99.9 percent' sure to shut down China search site
- EA dumps in-game ad partners
- IFPI stops trying to force Telenor to block Pirate Bay
- LG 3D TV line-up coming in May
- Steve Jobs feels betrayed by Google?
- Apple patches Safari security vulnerabilities
- Password cracking optimized for SSDs works '100 times faster'
- Ofcom proposes 3G at 2G frequencies in UK
- AMD to push 'fusion' chips for netbooks
- Microsoft working to patch serious Internet Explorer 6, 7 flaw
Multi-tasking coming with iPhone OS 4.0? Posted: 14 Mar 2010 07:43 PM PDT According to AppleInsider, multi-tasking may be the headlining feature of the upcoming iPhone OS 4.0, giving millions of users their biggest demand. Multi-tasking will allow for apps to run concurrently in the background, although it is unclear how many apps will be able to run at once. The news comes from sources with "proven track records" in predicting upcoming Apple updates, says AI, and the sources say that Apple has "developed a full-on solution" to multi-tasking, although it is unclear how battery life will be affected. The iPhone 4.0 OS is expected to be released in June at the earliest. |
Greek police take down torrent tracker Posted: 14 Mar 2010 07:08 PM PDT Greek authorities have taken down the large torrent tracker Gamato.info, accusing the site of facilitating copyright infringement of music, games, movies, and books. Six admins of the site were also arrested in raids of their homes in Athens, Salonika, Larissa and Aridaia. The police officials were working on tips from IFPI Greece, the local branch of the industry group. Gamato.info was a top 20 most visited site in Greece, with an estimated 155,000 daily visitors. The site had around 13,000 movies, 6500 games and over 35,000 music albums available. Says Jeremy Banks, director of anti-piracy at IFPI: "Gamato.info was facilitating the illegal distribution of music, film, games and books. It is the perfect illustration of how such illegal operations are damaging a wide range of creative industries in Europe. The Hellenic Police swiftly recognized this was not a victimless crime and took action against those who sought to shamelessly profit off the back of others' creative work. This skilfully executed action by a highly knowledgeable police force should act as a real deterrent to others in Greece considering engaging in online piracy." |
UK launch of Google Nexus One gets delayed Posted: 14 Mar 2010 06:39 PM PDT According to multiple reports, the UK launch of the Google Nexus One has been delayed until the middle of next month, a setback that should lose it sales to the HTC Legend, which is set for release in a few weeks. The handset will be available unlocked at a premium or locked to Vodafone with a two-year contract for free. Because of the delay, the Nexus One will have to compete with the Legend as well as the HTC Desire, both of which use Android, along with the very popular HTC Sense user interface. Overall, the Nexus One has struggled in the US, and Goldman Sachs recently cut their sales estimates from 3.5 million this year to a measly 1 million. There was no reason behind the delay. |
Punish all the pirates, says James Murdoch Posted: 14 Mar 2010 06:09 PM PDT James Murdoch, chairman and CEO of News Corps. European and Asian operations has made some interesting comments this week in regards to piracy, calling on governments to "get tough" on illegal downloading. "We need enforcement mechanisms and we need governments to play ball There is no difference with going into a store and stealing Pringles or a handbag and taking this stuff. It's a basic condition for investment and economic growth and there should be the same level of property rights whether it's a house or a movie," said Murdoch. "The idea that there's a new consumer class and you have to be consumer-friendly when they're stealing stuff. No. There should be the same level of sanctity as there is around property. Content is no different. They're not crazy kids. No. Punish them." James Murdoch is the son of mogul Rupert Murdoch, the chairman and CEO of News Corp, and younger Murdoch is expected to take over the company when his father retires. Adding to what his father has said in the past, James said News Corp. will act against "content aggregators," including search giant Google, in order to protect its copyrights. "We're being very careful legally to protect our rights," says Murdoch, via Guardian. "If there's money getting stuck it's getting stuck in an inefficient distribution layer where Google and Yahoo are suddenly indexing copyright material and then selling bits of it and making money from it. You may have to withdraw access to those things. You may not." |
iPad on sale via eBay for $21 million Posted: 14 Mar 2010 05:46 PM PDT Pre-orders for the much-hyped Apple iPad just started on Friday but that isn't stopping eBay sellers from trying to make a pretty penny off the tablet before it officially ships on April 3rd. There are currently 442 iPads up for sale, with a range of prices, most with a heavy premium. The most ridiculous comes from a "top rated seller" with the moniker egiftscentral_123, who is selling a Wi-Fi/16GB model for $21 million USD, and even then is audacious enough to charge $14.42 for shipping. Users that will ship internationally seem to be the only ones receiving true bids, as the iPad is set to go on sale in only 10 countries next month. View the auction here: eBay $21 million iPad Pic via CNNMoney: |
FT: Google is '99.9 percent' sure to shut down China search site Posted: 14 Mar 2010 05:21 PM PDT According to the Financial Times, Google Inc. is "99.9 percent" sure to shut down its Chinese search engine. The newspaper cited a source familiar with the situation in reporting that talks between Google and the Chinese government over censorship have reached an apparent impasse. The report said that Google is likely to make a decision very soon but that it will take some time to follow through on its plans. The company would carry out an orderly closure to take steps to protect local employees from retaliation by authorities. On Friday, China's Minister of Industry and Information Technology, Li Yizhong, warned Google about its decision to stop censoring search results for Chinese users. "If you don't respect Chinese laws, you are unfriendly and irresponsible, and the consequences will be on you," he told reporters. Google shocked the business world and ignited tension between the United States and China in January when it revealed that it would pull out of China if it would not offer unfiltered search results. The move came after Google was targeted by a cyber-attack sourced in China aimed at its Intellectual Property and the e-mail accounts of Chinese activists. |
Posted: 14 Mar 2010 05:21 PM PDT Electronic Arts has dropped its in-game advertisement partners and opted instead to sell its ads in-house. EA is currently partnered with IGA Worldwide and Massive Inc, owned by Microsoft, but has held an event in New York where it pitched its properties to advertisers and media buyers. The sale operations will not be handled in-house when the deals with IGA Worldwide and Massive Inc. end in August this year. Both companies will provide ads until Electronic Arts ships the next Madden NFL title in the United States. Reports from the New York event suggested that Electronic Arts put a big emphasis on content on the Apple formats, such as the iPod Touch and iPad, and also social networking sites like Facebook, along with its expected titles and formats. |
IFPI stops trying to force Telenor to block Pirate Bay Posted: 14 Mar 2010 05:21 PM PDT The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) and performing rights group TONO have given up efforts to legally force Norwegian ISP Telenor to block the Pirate Bay BitTorrent website. The case had seen Telenor triumphant twice after it refused to block the Pirate Bay and the IFPI brought the case to court. In November 2009, a court decided that Telenor had no obligation to comply with the IFPI's demands. TONO confirmed that the verdict would be appealed, but in February the Borgarting Court of Appeal rejected the appeal on the grounds that there was no basis in Norwegian law for the claim. The next option for the IFPI and TONO was to go to the Supreme Court, and most thought it would happen. However, the IFPI and TONO have decided not to take that route. "We wanted to get a legal clarification on whether under Norwegian law it is possible to order ISPs to block access to The Pirate Bay," a TONO statement reads. "Now we have two clear decisions that there is no legal authority under Norwegian law for such blocking requirements." Instead, the focus is not on Norwegian law. TONO maintains that Norway may not have adequately implemented the EU Copyright Directive and called for "clearer legislation". |
LG 3D TV line-up coming in May Posted: 14 Mar 2010 05:21 PM PDT LG Electronics has revealed that it plans to release its line-up of 3D televisions and other products in the UK in May this year. The electronics giant's initial line-up includes two LED TVs and a Blu-ray Disc player. The televisions use active-shutter 3D technology which requires suitable glasses that will not be included. The 47-inch and 55-inch LC9900 series televisions will feature 400Hz frame interpolation, 4 HDMI ports and 10,000,000:1 contrast ratio. The backlighting for the 47-inch comprises of 864 LEDs, whilst the 55-inch set had 960 LEDs. Both come packed with Freeview HD receivers. Bluetooth and WiFi are included in both sets, and they also feature USB 2.0 ports for playing DivX HD, MP3 or JPEG Images from portable media. Both televisions are priced very high, as you would expect. The 47-inch will set customers back £3,000, while the 55-inch model costs £4,000... and don't forget about the 3D glasses. |
Steve Jobs feels betrayed by Google? Posted: 14 Mar 2010 04:08 PM PDT According to an article in the New York Times, Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs feels that Google violated the alliance it had with the iPhone-maker. The article highlights the growing bitter rivalry between Apple and Google Inc. due to Google's release of products and software that would compete with Apple technologies. "We did not enter the search business. They entered the phone business," Jobs was quoted as saying at a company meeting. "Make no mistake; Google wants to kill the iPhone. We won't let them." The article says that the comments were reportedly met with "thunderous applause" from the Apple employees present at the meeting. After Google released its Android operating system for mobile devices, relations between the companies reportedly started to sour. A number of heated meetings between Apple and Google executives reportedly followed the software release, many of which apparently turned confrontational with Jobs accusing Google of stealing features from the iPhone. According to the article, Google executives disagreed and felt that the features the company allegedly stole from Apple were based on longstanding concepts and ideas circulating in the industry, and also pointed out that some Android prototypes predated the iPhone itself. At the lowest point of the dispute, Jobs reportedly warned Google executives that he would sue the company if they deployed a version of Android that uses multitouch - a majorly defining feature of the iPhone. So nasty is the dispute between both companies that reports surfaced in recent weeks about Apple and Microsoft potentially partnering to make Bing the default search engine for iPhone. Recently, Google also acquired AdMob for $750 million; reportedly paying a premium just to keep the company out of Apple's hands. "While Apple conducted due diligence on the deal, AdMob agreed to a 45-day 'no shop' provision, a routine clause that prevented the start-up from offering itself for sale to others, according to three people briefed on the negotiations. But after Apple inexplicably let 45 days pass without consummating its offer, Google pounced," the NYT article reads. |
Apple patches Safari security vulnerabilities Posted: 14 Mar 2010 04:08 PM PDT Apple Inc. pushed out Safari 4.0.5 earlier this week to address a slew of security vulnerabilities that could be exploited by attackers. In total, Safari 4.0.5 fixes 16 known security vulnerabilities with the browser. The update is available for Mac and Windows. Among the vulnerable Safari components are ColorSync, ImageIO and the WebKit engine, which were hit with critical code injection and information disclosure bugs. Unpatched Windows machines running the browser are more vulnerable than those running Mac software. Apple's advisory on the update is available at: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4070 Safari for Windows: http://www.afterdawn.com/software/network_software/web_browsers/safari_win.cfm Safari for Mac OS X: http://www.afterdawn.com/software/alternative_platforms/mac_software/safari_mac.cfm |
Password cracking optimized for SSDs works '100 times faster' Posted: 14 Mar 2010 04:08 PM PDT Swiss security firm Objectif Sécurité was able to crack 14-digit LMHash Windows XP passwords with special characters in just 5.3 seconds. The firm optimized its rainbow table of password hashes for use with solid-state drives. Objectif Sécurité's Philippe Oechslin said that the result was 100 times faster than previously possible. The test showed how much of a bottleneck the speed of hard discs are in password cracking based on password hash lookups is. The test rig itself was hardly amazing, running with an AMD Athlon X2 4400+ processor and the optimized tables with 80GB of password hashes on an SSD. The company claims it is 500 times faster than a password cracker from Russian firm Elcomsoft that utilizes NVIDIA GPUs. Free web-based demo: https://www.objectif-securite.ch/en/products.php#demo |
Ofcom proposes 3G at 2G frequencies in UK Posted: 14 Mar 2010 04:08 PM PDT Ofcom has proposed that frequencies reserved for 2G (GSM) networks be used by 3G technologies, complying with an EU deregulation directive on the 900 and 1800MHz bands. The proposal is part of a bunch of changes that Ofcom is proposing, which includes permitting radar installations at level crossings for safety reasons and rule changes on Ultra Wide Band. While moves by the European Union meant that eventually the UK would permit the use of 2G bands for 3G networks, the subject has been controversial in the UK. 2G frequencies were allocated for use in the UK, whereas 3G spectrum was bought at enormous costs on the basis that it was the only way to operate 3G networks in the region. Allowing 3G on 2G had its good points, but it devalues the 3G spectrum that operators spent enormous amounts of money to obtain. However, with the UK government standing firmly behind the plan and the EU directive mandating it, Ofcom's final approval should go through in August this year. |
AMD to push 'fusion' chips for netbooks Posted: 14 Mar 2010 03:02 PM PDT AMD is pushing its 'Ontario' dual-core chip for use in netbooks, according to an "AMD Notebook Platform Roadmap" slide that is doing the rounds again. The chip though is not "new" news, with Ontario being made public by AMD in November 2009. The chip is part of AMD's "Fusion" line-up. It contains AMD's "Bobcat" core and will have an on-board DirectX 11 graphics processing unit (GPU). AMD has treated the market for notebooks and ultrathin devices quite differently from Intel. Intel has developed its Atom line of chips specifically for these small-scale devices whilst AMD maintains that they are essentially just tiny notebooks and don't need dedicated chips. Maybe AMD is correct in a way, as sales show that users buy the netbooks with larger screens (relative to netbook sizes), larger hard-drives and with software capabilities of their notebooks. Linux-based netbooks haven't sold as well as Windows, and low-storage-space SSD netbooks lose out to traditional HDD-based netbooks. It's clear from popular netbooks then that users aren't buying them just for web browsing and Internet-based cloud applications as they are often marketed for, but instead want netbooks as capable as full-sized notebooks, just smaller. |
Microsoft working to patch serious Internet Explorer 6, 7 flaw Posted: 14 Mar 2010 03:02 PM PDT Microsoft Corp. is racing to release a patch for Internet Explorer 6 and 7 to address a serious security vulnerability that could allow an attacker to take control of a victim's computer. The Redmond-based software giant has picked up the pace on this particular flaw since the public release of exploit code by Israeli researcher Moshe Ben Abu. The exploit code release means Microsoft will issue a patch for the flaw before the next 'Patch Tuesday'. "We have seen speculation that Microsoft might release an update for this issue out of band. I can tell you that we are working hard to produce an update which is now in testing," said Jerry Bryant, senior security communications manager lead at Microsoft. "This is a critical and time-intensive step of the process as the update must be tested against all affected versions of Internet Explorer on all supported versions of Windows. Additionally, each supported language version needs to be tested as well as testing against thousands of third party applications," he wrote in an advisory on the Microsoft Security Response Center blog. "We never rule out the possibility of an out-of-band update. When the update is ready for broad distribution, we will make that decision based on customer needs." The vulnerability does not affect Internet Explorer 8, and Microsoft has repeatedly urged users of older versions of Internet Explorer to upgrade to the latest version of the browser for security reasons. |
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