Friday, January 11, 2008

Macworld leads tech out of the desert


Posted by Tom Krazit

Apple has the third week of January all to itself this year, and although it probably won't top last year's Macworld, the company will likely make everyone forget about the Consumer Electronics Show.

Trade shows are a necessary evil in the tech industry. Everyone claims to hate them, but the opportunity to have all the major players in the same town at the same time is too much of a draw. And usually, the parties are decent, leading more than 140,000 business types to CES in Las Vegas this week for a chance to make deals and network inside crowded booths and over the craps tables.

Contrast that with Macworld, scheduled for next week at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. About 40,000 people are expected to attend the 23rd such gathering, according to conference presenter IDG World Expo. And, like last year, Tuesday's Macworld announcements will probably overshadow anything announced in the Nevada desert.

Hundreds of ordinary people will start lining up for Macworld on Monday night for a chance to sit 300 feet away from their hero. They'll be swapping stories and talking tech all throughout the chilly night with their fellow line-standers. They're anticipating the Stevenote, the two hours of the year when the tech world stands still, waiting for Apple CEO Steve Jobs to introduce the company's latest products.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveils the iPhone at last year's Macworld.

(Credit: Declan McCullagh/CNET News.com)

The buzz this year doesn't seem to be approaching the heights reached last year, when Jobs unveiled the iPhone. The best bets this time around appear to be new slim notebooks and a movie rental service with several of the world's largest studios joining forces with Apple.

Apple's stock, which usually follows a "buy on the rumor, sell on the news" pattern prior to Macworld, is actually down quite a bit from last week. Granted, it was a bad week for just about everyone, but it's still a little surprising that Apple's performance was below the market's in the week leading up to Macworld. With a recession looming in the minds of many economists, perhaps some investors are wondering whether people forced to choose between a growing mortgage payment, filling up the tank, or buying a new Mac might opt to keep the roof over their head and the car moving.

However, it's also pretty hard to introduce products every year that will generate buzz on the order of the iPhone. New notebooks seem like a given, coming off the introduction of new mobile processors from Intel and the two-year gap between next week and the last significant overhaul of the MacBook design template.

Much of the speculation has centered on an ultraportable notebook, a 3-pound or so laptop currently missing from Apple's slate of Macs. But it's also likely that the company will take the occasion to update the regular notebooks in its arsenal.

The more significant news, should it come to pass, would be the announcement of a movie rental service through iTunes. Reports have been flying out of Hollywood that Fox, Warner Bros., Paramount, Lions Gate, and, of course, Disney will have rental agreements to announce with Apple.

Apple's attempts to replicate the success of the music portion of the iTunes store in the video market haven't exactly taken off, especially when it comes to movies. While people may indeed want to own their music, they seem less interested in having to buy movies just to check them out. Details of exactly how Apple's rental service would work are still sketchy, but for a few dollars, you'd likely download a file that would last a predetermined amount of time (24 hours is the popular bet) and then disappear from your hard drive.

Given how many people are using iTunes, this could be one of the first Internet-download services to break through to average consumers. The concept has been around for a while through companies like Wal-Mart and Movielink, but no one has managed to turn the idea into a hit. Apple has a fighting chance to pull that off, and if it does, it'll also dramatically expand the usefulness of Apple TV.

There's also likely to be the fabled "one more thing." A lack of preshow buzz might mean Apple has been ratcheting down expectations for this year, but it might also mean it's done a better job keeping its secrets secret. After all, there's no way Jobs can talk about notebooks and movies for the scheduled 90 minutes, and some feel that this week's introduction of the Mac Pro and Xserve was done to free up some time in his keynote for something else.

Contrast that with the "news" coming out of Las Vegas. Despite hours of keynote speeches from some of the titans of the American technology industry, there didn't seem to be anything radically new or different this year that changed the way the industry looks at a certain segment or captured the attention of the average person. The iPhone managed to do both of those things last year at Macworld.

For the most part, people leave Las Vegas drained from the experience of the daily trek across the equivalent of a small town, listening to the same stump speeches from the same industry visionaries who want you to imagine that all of the things they said would happen last year (and the year before that, and the year before that) actually did happen.

Jobs has managed to avoid falling into that malaise so far. Last year, he introduced the iPhone. That seems to have worked out fairly well. The year before that, he introduced the first Intel-based Macs. People have clearly responded to those as well.

Every time he does this, however, the expectations grow. Apple has done a masterful job with Macworld the last several years, but it will become more and more difficult to outdo itself every year.

But until the Intels, Microsofts, Yahoos, and Comcasts of the tech industry start doing the same thing at CES--introducing products that captivate ordinary people--that show will always be more about schmoozing and gambling. And Apple will continue to own January.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

iPhone is the Next Sex Toy, Porn Industry Says


Sascha Segan

The iPhone is definitely a sexy phone. It's also the perfect vehicle for bringing mobile porn to Americans, according to adult content producers at the annual AVN convention in Las Vegas.

And 2008 could be the year that pornography finally breaks through to the mobile user, thanks to new deals and advanced devices like the iPhone, said Ali Joone, co-founder and director of adult content firm Digital Playground.

"Yes, it's happening," Joone said. Digital Playground already delivers its porn in customized form to the iPhone; their site even auto-detects whether iPhone users are on Wi-Fi or EDGE.

"The phones are changing," with real Web browsers, streaming video and high-quality graphics, said Kate Sylvan, marketing and PR coordinator for porn firm Pink Visual. That means phones are ready for porn – and she says the iPhone is the best platform out there so far.

This week, Pink Visual launched the first major U.S.-based porn site designed especially for iPhones. iPinkVisual.com caters to iPhone owners, with streaming video trailers and catalogs; it's more of a marketing tool than a direct content sales site, Sylvan said.

Lance Cassidy, director of marketing for user-generated porn site XTube.com, agrees that phone porn is coming soon. They're working on a mobile phone site right now, he says, and the iPhone is the ideal platform. Meanwhile, some other porn providers are rethinking their next-generation DVD stance following the decision of Warner Bros. to drop support for HD DVD.

"You have to adapt to the format [for phones], but if your standard is the Apple iPhone, no adaptation is necessary," he said.

Joone disagrees, somewhat. The cell phone's small screen means "we do a mobile edit where we use more close-ups and less wide-angle shots," he said.

Online video isn't the only way the iPhone is getting sexy. At the AVN show, OhMiBod announced a new version of their iPod-connected vibrator – this one specifically for the iPhone. The new OhMiBod "NaughtiNano" line connects to iPhones to vibrate not only to the rhythms of music playing, but to the cadences of speech on the other end of a phone call. The new models cost $69.

Apple "has made the iPhone so beautifully simple, that if the adult video world can harness that simplicity they too will prosper," said OhMiBod founder Suki Dunham, herself a former Apple employee.

But not everyone in the world of porn is convinced that phones are the next frontier.

"I just don't know how to make money" with porn on phones, said New York porn entrepreneur Joanna Angel. "Anyway, people don't watch porn in public. If you're going to be sitting by yourself, why don't you watch it on your laptop?"

"Why can't you sit by yourself and watch it on your phone?" Xtube's Cassidy shot back.

Porn producers aiming to fulfill their mobile desires must also risk the wrath of the moral majority, warned Garion Hall, chief executive of Australian porn site AbbyWinters.com. In the land down under, mobile porn had a brief heyday when wireless carriers sold it directly – until a massive public outcry shut everything down.

"Moms in the suburbs were like, 'little Johnny's getting porn on cell phones,'" and carriers removed the content, Hall said. Even in Australia, phone companies don't block porn outright– they just make it harder to get to. But that's enough to stop Hall, for now. "For us, it's only worthwhile if mobile phone providers push it to consumers," he said.

Joone, the American adult mogul, isn't as worried. He says that in the U.S., strict age verification systems could help salve carriers' concerns. And Pink Visual says they don't need any help from carriers at all to develop a market for iPhone porn.

"We're not going through AT&T. AT&T doesn't have to know anything about it," Sylvan said.

Apple had no comment on the iPhone's erotic allure.

iPhone News 11/10/07


Microsoft to Concentrate on Windows Mobile; Won’t Launch iPhone Competitor

business/microsoft.jpg

Software giant, Microsoft Corp., is not planning to launch a device to compete with Apple’s iPhone, according to the company’s Chairman and co-founder, Bill Gates.

“No, we won’t do that,” Gates said in an interview with Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung yesterday. “In the so-called smart phone business we will concentrate solely on software with our Windows Mobile Program.”

“We have partnerships with a lot of device manufacturers from Samsung to Motorola and this variety brings us significantly more than if we would make our own mobile phone,” Gates explained.

Apple, which is one of Microsoft’s main competitors in the computer software market, launched its long-anticipated iPhone handset in the U.S. last June. The high-end music- and web-enabled cell phone was a big hit in America and parts of Europe this holiday shopping season.


Pre-teen creates iPhone malware

IPhone hacking is child's play

Shaun Nichols in California, vnunet.com 10 Jan 2008

A precocious pre-teen has prompted security warnings after creating a piece of malware for Apple's iPhone.

The 11 year-old hacker created a malicious file for the iPhone that masquerades as a legitimate piece of third-party software.

The file presents itself as 'firmware 1.1.3 prep', a utility said to prepare the handset for an upcoming software update.

Malicious activity does not occur when the software is installed; the damage is done when the user attempts to remove the malware. On deletion, the 'prep' file also removes a number of other legitimate files from the iPhone.

Security firm F-Secure credits the administrators of iPhone download site Modmyifone with publicising the attack and tracking down the author.

The administrators of Modmyifone claim that they have contacted the author's parents, and that the site hosting the malicious code has been taken down.

Since the first third-party iPhone applications were released last summer, their regulation has rested largely on the shoulders of the user community.

Apple has washed its hands of the unofficial software, saying that, while it would not take special steps to remove any iPhone hacks, it would not support or take responsibility for damage caused by third-party software.

Although this latest attack has been taken down, security firms are warning iPhone users to be very careful when installing third-party software on the mobile device.

McAfee recommends that iPhone users install only official firmware updates, and the US Computer Emergency Response Team advises users to download files only from trusted websites.

"Hopefully this serves as a warning for those who have opened their iPhones using a security hole in the system and installed unverified software without a second thought," wrote F-Secure chief research officer Mikko Hyppönen.

"This time it was an 11 year-old playing with XML files who created the Trojan. Next time it might be someone with more skills and specific targets."

First iPhone Trojan in the wild


By Tom Espiner, ZDNetUK, News.com

Published on ZDNet News:

The first warnings about the Trojan were posted on Saturday on the iPhone modification forum ModMyiFone.com, said security vendor F-Secure. When installed, the Trojan appeared to do nothing more than display the word "shoes", according to the ModMyiFone post.

However, when a user attempted to uninstall the malicious code, the application wiped files from the /bin directory, breaking "Erica's Utilities" such as sendfile. Erica's Utilities are a collection of command-line utilities for the iPhone, according to security vendor Symantec, which warned on Monday that the Trojan also overwrites OpenSSH, an open-source encryption protocol.

The Trojan, known as "iPhone firmware 1.1.3 prep", or "113 prep", is the first to be seen in the wild, according to Symantec researcher Orla Cox.

"This is technically the first Trojan horse seen for the iPhone; however, it does appear to be more of a prank than an actual threat," Cox wrote in a blog post. "The impact of uninstalling the 'Trojan' would appear to be an unintended side effect."

Affected users need to uninstall the Trojan and reinstall affected files, according to Symantec. The risk to users is minimal as they would have to choose to install the bogus package and the site which was hosting it has now been taken offline, wrote Cox.

Both Symantec and F-Secure warned that users should be cautious when installing third-party iPhone applications. Apple warned in September last year that its own updates could break unlocked iPhones running unofficial iPhone software.

First iPhone Trojan horse is weak, Greeks point, laugh


Well if you’ve been telling your buds your iPhone is totally virus free and safe, ’tis time to eat your words. Seems some incompetent 11-year old kid added an app to Installer sources that lists itself as “iPhone firmware 1.1.3 prep” — we’re calling it fail.trojan — an update to Erica’s Utilities. Though not too troublesome — apparently only says “shoes” once installed — it may well be the start of a whole new bag of fun for the inspired yet bored amongst us. Removing the app damages a pile of programs in the iPhone’s bin folder like Erica’s Utilities, OpenSSH, Doom, and Launcher, though you can sort it by simply re-installing. Apparently his father’s been notified and he’s been given a harsh talking to and the site with the malicious source is now offline.

[Via CNET, image courtesy of thecampuscomic]

CES 2008: Flytunes iPhone Digital Music Service


At CES 2008, Flytunes introduced a personalized digital music service for the iPhone, iPod touch and other media capable phones. Flytunes lets you access over 20,000 radio stations anywhere a WiFi, or cell phone signal is available; something satellite radio cannot do (inside buildings). Flytunes is available free of charge and can be run on either PC or Mac. Flytunes will be available on their website as of January 21st, 2008. Their website and pictures look bad, so we’ll have to wait and see how this service comes along in it’s final debut.

Flytunes iPhone

Video: FlyTunes brings internet radio to iPhone


Interested in hitting up internet radio on your iPhone with a sleek interface? For those with unmodified iPhones that are already turning away sheepishly, come on back. FlyTunes is simply a web application accessible via Safari, which allows users to customize stations on their PC / Mac and then login and listen from the phone. Also of note, it can queue up to a half hour of music should you want to listen for awhile after leaving an EDGE / WiFi-covered area, and if you’re wondering how much coinage you’ll have to lay down to get in on this, you’ll be stoked to hear it’s free. Onward, to the video!

Apple iPhone Review By gizmodo.com [10]


Miscellaneous Things That Make us Smile or Frown
• Every app always retains state when you leave to take a call.
• It doesn't have wireless syncing of data over EDGE, Wi-Fi, or Bluetooth, using local PC, .Mac, or even Google/Yahoo storage. You sync when you dock with your Mac, which is something other phones can do. But hey, you're charging this thing every day, right? Might as well be by USB.
• Syncing backs up all your stuff, including notes and settings, although you can't read your notes on the PC.
• No little ring to hang my Kawaii cellphone charms off.
700MB taken by system files. No shit, really. No, not really. I think it may be closer to 180MB, thanks to the math of a Richard Graver at EverythingiPhone.com.
• The 4GB unit should be $50 cheaper if they want to move those units.
• GSM buzz is maddening in some docks, and some car tape adapters.
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Complete IPhone UI Walkthrough

youtubescreen2.JPGyoutubescreen.JPGyoutubemore.JPGwritescreen2.JPGwritescreen.JPGworldclock.JPGwifiscreen.JPGweatherscreen2.JPGweatherscreen.JPGwallpapersnow.JPGwallpaperscreen2.JPGwallpaperscreen.JPGvoicemailscreen.JPGvideoscreen.JPGusagescreen.JPGtodoscreen.JPGtextscreen2.JPGtextscreen.JPGstopwatchscreen.JPGstockscreen.JPGsoundscreen.JPGsoundscreen2.JPGsnowpicscreen.JPGsidebrowsescreenJPG.JPGschedulescreen.JPGsettingscreen.JPGsafariscreen.JPGphotoscreen2.JPGringtonescreen.JPGplaylistscreen.JPGphotolibrary.JPGphotoscreen.JPGphoneinhand.JPGphonescreen.JPGmapscreen3.JPGmapsearch.JPGnotescreen.JPGmailscreen2.JPGmapscreen.JPGmapscreen4.JPGmapscreen2.JPGmapinfo.JPGmailscreen4.JPGmailscreen3.JPGmailscreen.JPGipodscreen.JPGjpegscreen.JPGipodmorescreen.JPGiphoneicons4.JPG