Apple Security update 2008-005 released
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
Filed under: OS, Software Update, Security, Leopard
Apple has just released a new security update for client and server users of Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) and 10.5 (Leopard). This Security update 2008-005 is “recommended for all users and improves the security of Mac OS X,” and includes fixes for a dozen or so features in Mac OS X.
This update fixes a QuickLook bug where loading a malicious Microsoft Office file could lead to “arbitrary code execution.” Doesn’t sound too good to me! It also fixes a DNS vulnerability that has been highly discussed over the past week (and which many other vendors have already patched).
You can download this update by opening Software Update (Apple menu > Software Update). You can also find more information on what this update fixes by looking at Apple’s support note.
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Tags: apple, computers, mac, Technology
Ask Engadget: Best digiframe / alarm clock combo?
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
Filed under: Ask Engadget, Digital Cameras, Displays, Misc. Gadgets
Frightening though it may be, the fall semester is just around the corner. You know what that means? You’ll actually have to get up at — wait for it — an appointed time. Carissa, being the proactive student she is, posed this question:
“Going to school in the fall, I’m looking for the ideal alarm clock to beat the late nights and what not and noticed a few digital photo frames / alarm clocks. I want a decent alarm clock that has battery backup and good resolution on the screen for viewing photos. An auxiliary audio jack would be a major plus. Which one do you guys recommend that falls under the 200 dollar mark? Thanks a million!”
Look at that — you all even received a thank you in advance! For those who’ve mastered the art of waking up on time and pretending to be a real live adult, which alarm clock / digiframe hybrid have you found to be supreme? Oh, and you know that question you’ve been hitting the snooze on? Yeah, send it on over to ask at engadget dawt com.
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Tags: computers, gadgets, Technology
Malaysia’s Anwar plans no-confidence vote: report
Jul 31, 2008 World News
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysia opposition figure Anwar Ibrahim is gathering support to file a no-confidence vote against the government in six weeks, the Financial Times reported on Friday.
Tags: world
Tethering Briefly Comes To The iPhone, Tempers Flare
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology

Macrumors reports that Apple’s App Store was selling a tethering app compatible with the iPhone (both 3G and EDGE) for a brief period earlier this evening. The $10 application, called NetShare, was developed by Nullriver software, and would be a godsend for many iPhone owners. After going up around 8PM EST to the elation of a lucky few, the application was pulled down around 20 minutes later.
Phone tethering allows users to access the internet from their laptop computers wherever they get service on their cellphone carrier’s data network. The feature is common on many phones with high speed (namely 3G) data access, and has been noticeably absent from iPhones. While 3G is typically slower than most Wi-Fi access points, having internet connectivity on the go is a huge plus for many people - enough so that many carrier charge on the order of $30 a month to enable it.
Users with jailbroken (hacked) iPhones have been able to enable tethering to their phones through a complicated process for some time, but such tethering is prohibited by AT&T’s terms of service. The release of NetShare seemed to (albeit briefly) indicate that AT&T had changed its mind on the matter.
Now, users who try to download the application (at least in the US) are told that it is no longer available in their country. The app may have snuck past Apple’s approval process - but with reported wait times of weeks (or months) it seems unlikely that anything appears there accidentally. It is also possible that the app was supposed to be limited to a few select countries, and was accidentally posted on the US store. AT&T may have really changed its mind, but it seems unlikely that they’d pass up the chance to tack one more fee on our data plans.
Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0
Tags: internet, Technology, web
10.5.5 developer seed released, includes install warning
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
Yesterday, we noted that Apple was close to releasing a 10.5.5 seed for developers. Little did we know that it would be dropping a couple hours later. AppleInsider is reporting that the 10.5.5 developer seed was released today, along with an interesting note.
Developers were told not to install the update on any Mac that uses integrated graphics. These computers include: MacBook Air, MacBook, Mac Mini, and some models of iMac. The build number of 10.5.5 is showing up as “build 9F5,” however, these pre-release build numbers have a history of changing before the update is released to the general public.
Developers were asked to evaluate many parts of the OS, specifically: AirPort, FileSync, and the Finder. AppleInsider notes that this update fixes over 82 bugs that were reported in 10.5.4.
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Tags: apple, computers, mac, Technology
Podcast - Apple Weekly Report #130: Apple Earnings, Jobs’ Health, MobileMe Headaches
Jul 31, 2008 Technology
Apple reported is second best quarter in the company’s history, App Store downloads topped 25 million, and there’s a mystery product transition coming in the next couple of months. The second iPhone 3G launch is coming in August, and MobileMe is giving people headaches. This week’s Quick…
Tags: apple, computers, mac, Technology
Activision profit up on “Kung Fu,” “Guitar Hero”
Jul 31, 2008 Technology
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Video game publisher Activision Blizzard Inc said quarterly profit at its Activision unit more than doubled on sales of “Kung Fu Panda” and “Guitar Hero: On Tour,” and it raised its 2009 forecast for the newly merged company.
Tags: Technology
U.N. council renews Darfur peacekeeping mandate
Jul 31, 2008 World News
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council adopted a resolution on Thursday that renewed the mandate for peacekeepers in Sudan’s war-ravaged Darfur region but drew harsh U.S. criticism for part of the text.
Tags: world
Tether your iPhone, wirelessly. Maybe.
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
Filed under: Cellphones
We’re not sure how this one got past Apple’s App Store censors, but the clever kids at Nullriver have released what appears to be the first tethering solution for the iPhone. The $10 NetShare app is just a SOCKS proxy that links an ad-hoc WiFi network to the iPhone’s 3G or EDGE connection — and if we could get it to work, we’d probably think it was a fine, if hacky, solution to a major limitation of Steve’s baby. As it stands, though, the instructions are pretty sparse, and while we can get the app to recognize a connection, we’re not able to actually load anything. We’re not sure how long this one’s going to last — anyone else willing to give it a shot before it gets yanked?
[Thanks, Zoli; Warning, link opens iTunes]
Update: Aaaaand it’s offline. Shocking.
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Tags: computers, gadgets, Technology
New Way Of Storing Solar Energy Discovered [Solar Energy]
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
Solar power has a lot of promise, but until recently there hasn’t been an adequate way to store the energy the sun produces. Scientists at MIT have come up with a new fuel cell process that mimics the way plants store the sun’s rays that is both efficient and inexpensive, not to mention environmentally sound. Without getting too technical, the system uses sunlight to separate water’s hydrogen and oxygen atoms and then puts them back together in a fuel cell, providing energy. This means an almost limitless supply of clean energy might be just a few years away, though it’s still too early to say when you’ll have what you want: a solar powered laptop. [PhysOrg]
Tags: gadgets, Technology
PaceCalc figures time, distance, pace data on iPhone
Jul 31, 2008 Technology
Runners, bikers and swimmers have a new iPhone tool, PaceCalc, allowing them to track distances, times and pace. PaceCalc, by Maverick Software, calculates results using time and distance data to provide pace. Athletes can also put distance and pace to calculate time or pace and time to calculate distance. The software offers live recalculating as …
Tags: apple, mac, Technology
Enterprise organizations must take note of the Kaminsky DNS flaw
Jul 31, 2008 World News
Jon Oltsik fears many companies with a big Web presence don’t realize the DNS flaw is their problem, and says if that’s true, we all have a problem.
Tags: international, national, world
Why I Hate the iPhone Camera (and Loved the Best Rock Concert Ever) [Apple]
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
There. I said it. I hate it. OK, I don’t really hate it. But sometimes I want to smash it against the wall. The last time was in the pit at the Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band’s concert in Madrid. I was there, first row, center of the stage, after waiting a whole night and day outside of the stadium. That night was the most amazing and magical I’ve experienced in a very long time, and certainly the best rock concert I’ve ever been to. Only one thing failed: my iPhone’s camera.
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I was tired, exhausted, and about to fall sleep standing up (there were no seats at the pit). The week had been hell, and I was physically and emotionally destroyed. But then, the band and the Boss took the stage and Night blasted everything away. In a few seconds, as the adrenalin kicked in, the exhaustion disappeared. Then Radio Nowhere came. And Lonesome Day. And the Promised Land. From there, he and his band made every single one of the 60,000 souls in the stadium fly.
Three hours of pure rock, with the Boss giving it all until the end, when he sung a ten-minute version of Twist And Shout, mixed with—get this—La Bamba. Not a single pause. Just music, heart and soul. I just couldn’t believe this guy is almost as old as my dad. Forget Mick Jagger. Forget bloody Bono. He is the greatest rock musician alive, a true force of nature.
And I’m not even—or was not, until this day—a fan. The whole thing was totally unexpected for me. At the beginning I thought “this is going to be amazing” and I realized I only had my iPhone, because like every other concert, cameras and camcorders are absolutely prohibited. Specially when you are in the front row and the security guy can shake your hand. Or get your camera away.

During the whole concert, the entire stadium was under his command, jumping, singing, waving, screaming, completely in ecstasy, electricfied, everyone sweating under the hot spanish summer night. He and the band were enjoying the whole thing to no end. You could see them laughing, looking at us with real surprise in their faces, as if they weren’t believing that this huge stadium just couldn’t stop singing and jumping through every single one of the songs they played.
They were giving all their life away right there, and the public was returning it right back. With interest. Each of us. Mass hysteria. Crowd orgasm. Total love and dedication from Bruce, the band, and the public.
At one point—one of many in which he came to sing even closer to us—the Boss walked to the central platform and took a girl up on the stage. I knew she was the daughter of one of the spanish fans—who had been following him through the whole tour—because I met her before the concert started. She danced with her for a minute, smiling while the band played. It was just one of the many “I can’t believe this is happening” moments of the night.

Right there, in the very first row, in the corner of the central platform, I could see all these moments perfectly, like I’m seeing the screen of my computer right now. We were able to actually shake his hand, as well as the hands of the band—who at the end all came to the center platform. I shouted at him at one point (”Yes! Take us up there!”) and he replied looking straight into my eyes, with the biggest smile, pointing at me and saying “Yes, I’m going to take you there!” just before the band exploded with sound.
Another time, I could see him turning to Max Weinberg—at the end of Seven Nights to Rock—and whisper: “Born to Run!” And (boom!) Born to Run started to play a second later. At any time, I could turn around and see the 60,000 people in the Santiago Bernabéu—the name of the Real Madrid football stadium—singing, clapping, taken way by his power. Yes, it was absolutely breathtaking. All of it. From the very beginning I thought: “I have to share this with the people I love. I can’t do this justice with my description. I have to take photos.”
There was when I started hating the iPhone’s camera.

Nothing, I wasn’t able to take any of this magic with clarity. I’m not even talking about recording video (don’t get me started on that). I’m just talking about making a decent photo with one of the most advanced pieces of technology ever developed. Only one single photo that didn’t appear to be taken with a broken Lomo. By a drunk guy. Without a decent sleep in the last three days (ok, forget about the part about the drunk guy.)
Sure there was some clear pics here and there, but whatever was ok’ish, it was also completely crazy and badly framed. Some of them look nice—as you can see here, in the gallery of untouched images—but most of them need cropping and heavy Photoshop treatment.
I know most cellphone cameras are exactly the same. They behave poorly under low light conditions, they are slow, and have bad interfaces. And yes, I have to admit I like the iPhone’s camera blurriness and unwanted “special effects” sometimes. I even try to get similar effects with my DSLR. But that’s optional. This time I only wanted one thing: to be able to frame a good photo. Without having to hold the iPhone in a weird position. Without trying to find the stupid software interface button and not miss the shot (which I did, plenty of times).

That’s what I want. I don’t want more resolution, and I don’t want a stupid zoom. I would be happy (HAPPY) with good lenses and a better, speedier, more luminous sensor. And of course, the physical button. In fact, scrap the rest. Just give me the physical button. As much as I love virtual interfaces—because they open the door to multi-functional devices at a low cost, with great power and flexibility—I’m afraid that there are still times when the only way to go is a physical button. Photography is one of them.
And since we are at it, here’s a note for the Nokias, Sony Ericssons, Samsungs, and LGs of this world: stop doing the silly marketdrone “More megapixels!” and “Bigger optical zooms!” race. Educate the users. Don’t dazzle them with higher numbers. Give us all more quality, more light, and more speed. That’s what really counts to catch the special, truly ephemeral, completely unexpected moments you want to save forever. Because when I think about it, even while I will always keep this concert in my—blurry as the iPhone’s camera—memory, there would never be another one like it.
That’s exactly what cellphone cameras are for. To capture the unexpected, to take decent pictures of the special moments in your life, because we can’t go around life with a camera in our pocket at all times. That’s what I want in an cellphone and, specially, in the iPhone. A camera to be able to take any moment we want, fast, and with good quality, under most circumstances. And Señor Jobs, no matter what, please give us the physical button in the iPhone 3G 2.0.
Tags: gadgets, Technology
First Pics of LG Netflix Blu-ray BD300 Player [Blu-Ray]
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
LG’s Netflix-streaming, Blu-ray 2.0 playing BD300 made its public debut tonight, and we’re impressed. The box is slim and it won’t take up more space on your shelf than any other player. An LG exec confirmed a September launch for the sub-$500 player, so check out the gallery and start lickin’ your chops. [LG] galleryPost(”bd300″, 3, “”);
Tags: gadgets, Technology
Jumbo-Sized MIDI Sampler Let’s You Muscle Out Beats Like Mario in Giant World [Music]
Jul 31, 2008 Blogs, Technology
No matter how good the music is, musicians look kinda lame tapping out little beats on tiny samplers on stage. What is emphatically not lame though is pounding them on 16 giant pressure-sensitive pads with this 750-pound sampler rig. It was built for the Warped-tour band Family Force 5 by a musician named bwack, and it packs a 22″ monitor, 10 control knobs, two pizza-sized pitch wheels and a Mac running Ableton to control the whole game. Check it out onstage at the Warped tour below. Giganto-rock!
I want to play this soo badly.
[Bwack via MAKE]
Tags: gadgets, Technology
