Homebrew apps come to the Palm Pre

According to Dieter over at PreCentral, real, honest-to-goodness usable apps are starting to “trickle out” for the Pre / webOS. Apparently utilizing a loophole in the operating system which allows unsigned apps to be sideloaded through email, homebrewers have taken to the interwebs with small utilities like the tip calculator (pictured above). This comes just a day after a group of DIY’ers figured out a workable solution for getting software onto the phone without rooting, so obviously Pre hacking is moving along at a healthy clip. These are — of course — very early applications, so don’t expect perfection, and there seems to be some concern that Palm might want to patch up this hole, as it leaves the phone vulnerable to less altruistic endeavors. While the latter point is reasonable to consider, we do have a piece of advice for the folks at the front of this movement: don’t wait and worry on how Palm will react to this stuff. It’s important to push platforms like webOS, and the Pre needs all the love it can get on the development side right now.

Read – Right now: Install a Homebrew App without Hacking
Read – Homebrew Apps Tricking Out, but be careful

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Homebrew apps come to the Palm Pre originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Jun 2009 11:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SNES USB cartridge adapter should set eBay aflame

Sick of having to use your inconvenient mouse and keyboard to do “internet searches” for ROMs of your favorite retro games? Well a gentleman named Matthias might just have the answer to your prayers — a USB SNES cartridge adapter. The enterprising DIY’er has created a combo hardware and software solution that allows you to plug in your dusty carts directly to your rig, and see the ROMs appear as standalone files which you can then load into the emulator of your choice. Apparently there are still some kinks to work out (like getting data rates up for larger games), and Matthias already has plans underway for a multi-system solution. Still, this is impressive stuff, even if it means we’ll have to repurchase any titles we’re missing from reputable online auction houses. Hey, at least it’ll cut down our visits to “Russian porn sites.” Check out the video of the whole thing in action after the break.

Continue reading SNES USB cartridge adapter should set eBay aflame

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SNES USB cartridge adapter should set eBay aflame originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 21 Jun 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pwnage Tool for iPhone OS 3.0 now live, ultrasn0w still on standby

That iPhone OS 3.0 jailbreak we saw the iPhone Dev-Team pull off earlier this week? It’s out now, or at least, part of it is. Pwnage Tool is now flooding torrents, but there’s lots of caveats here. Most importantly, this isn’t Ultrasn0w, which means if you’re wanting to use your toy on T-Mobile or another unofficial carrier, be patient — it’s also worth noting that the jailbreak doesn’t jibe with yellowsn0w, so those who rely on it should stay away for the time being. No compatibility with the 3G S, or at least, it probably hasn’t been tested… we wouldn’t recommend anyone setting the precedent here. You’ll need Mac OS X to run it, with QuickPwn for Mac and Windows coming further down the line. Ultrasn0w is also due out at some indeterminate future, so that all said, if you’re just needing right now a jailbroken device with spotlight functionality, hit up the read link for all the pertinent details. It should goes without saying, but they’re might a few negative side effects to it, and one of the big ones we heard is that YouTube might be fubar’d at the moment.

Read – trois, drei, три, három! (Pwnage Tool released)
Read – No YouTube On Jailbroken iPhone 3.0?

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Pwnage Tool for iPhone OS 3.0 now live, ultrasn0w still on standby originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 20 Jun 2009 08:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How to tether your iPhone running OS 3.0 without jailbreaking, for free

Is it simple? Yes. Risky? A bit. Legal? We’ll leave that to the lawyers ’cause we know that you’re aching to give tethering a spin over your newly downloaded iPhone OS 3.0 update. We’ve seen several guides to enable tethering ever since OS 3.0 was first released into beta (and into the wilds) oh so many days ago. However, these were always carrier/country specific and required a bit more command line tampering than the common man could stomach. Now an automated solution has come to our attention that just works, is global, and doesn’t require a jailbreak. Essentially, you use your iPhone to browse to a site that you’ve never heard of (help.benm.at), download a file that promises to reconfigure your local carrier profile, and then switch on tethering as you would had you tithed a monthly tethering fee to your carrier. We’ve confirmed that it works on T-Mobile NL and on O2 UK. There’s obvious risk here so be careful and backup your iPhone first before giving this a shot. And don’t go nuts either — remember, your unlimited data plan likely contains a “fair use” clause and you can bet that carriers won’t be happy to see their bandwidth diminish without compensation. Now brace yourselves and hit the read link for the full procedure… ready, go!

Update: Some are reporting that this procedure could disable MMS and visual voicemail depending on your country and carrier — a fair trade for many.

Update 2: Techradar reports that O2 UK has responded to the tethering hack saying, “we reserve the right to charge customers making modem use of their iPhone or disconnect them.” This assumes O2 can identify such customers.

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How to tether your iPhone running OS 3.0 without jailbreaking, for free originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Jun 2009 03:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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SNES PC Case Mod scores endless style wins; can never bring back your childhood

Face it, not all mods are created equal. Take this SNES PC Case Mod, for instance, built by quangDX and DuPPs (their real names? we think not). Sure, they could’ve just crammed some PC guts in there and called it a day, but with love, care and some Lego spacers, they’ve crafted a true piece of art. The gutted Super Mario World cartridge acts as a slot-loading CD drive, there’s a perfect lineup of connectivity in the back, and the real piece of magic: USB extenders disguised as regular controller plugs, and a reworked SNES controller to plug into ’em. The main guts are courtesy of an Acer Aspire One, and even the webcam and mic have been crammed into the front of that poor shredded cartridge. This is how it’s done, folks.

[Via Gossip Gamers]

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SNES PC Case Mod scores endless style wins; can never bring back your childhood originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Jun 2009 21:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre data tethering is a go, Sprint be damned

Well, that was fast. Just a couple hours after we noted Palm warning against hacking webOS to allow data tethering on the Pre, the first set of instructions has popped up. It’s not the cleanest hack we’ve ever seen — you need to root your phone, enable SSH, and then configure your browser to run through a SOCKS proxy — but it’ll certainly get the job done in a pinch. Just don’t go crazy, alright? We’ve got a feeling Sprint’s watching Pre accounts with an eagle eye.

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Palm Pre data tethering is a go, Sprint be damned originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Jun 2009 14:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm webOS system upgrades mandatory; hacking scene forbidden from tethering

We’ve seen a tremendous explosion in the webOS hacking scene ever since the Pre’s firmware image leaked out — between the easily-accessible restore more, Linux foundations and the directly-accessible HTML / CSS / Javascript application code, we’ve already seen everything from minor tweaks to full on NES emulation to Sprint activation hacks. In short, things are wide open at the moment, and people (including us) are excited by the possibilities — but that doesn’t mean Palm has to play along. In fact, two recent developments have us worried for the future of this happy little scene — first, Palm’s apparently forbidding the Pre Dev Wiki from posting any information about data tethering during the Sprint exclusivity period, and apparently threatening to have the site shut down if it happens:

We have been politely cautioned by Palm that any discussion of tethering during the Sprint exclusivity period (and perhaps beyond-we don’t know yet) will probably cause Sprint to complain to Palm, and if that happened then Palm would be forced to react against the people running the IRC channel and this wiki.

Yeah, that’s pretty aggro for a company that needs to court all the developer support it can. We’re not sure what’ll happen after Sprint’s exclusivity runs out, but we can’t imagine any other carriers are going to be thrilled about hacked tethering options either, so we’d say Palm’s going to keep the pressure on until unlocked GSM webOS devices hit the scene — and we can almost guarantee that tethering hacks are going to make it into the wild regardless of Palm’s actions.

Even worse for hackers, Palm’s taking an unusually aggressive approach to webOS system updates — they’re mandatory. According to the support docs, webOS updates are automatically downloaded in the background within two days of being available, and they’re required to be installed within a week of the download — after seven days and four install prompts, the phone will give you a ten-minute countdown and then automatically begin installing the update. Sure, we can understand why Palm would want all of its devices to be updated, and we know that a lot of webOS system foundations are in flux while the Mojo SDK is being finalized, but forced updates seem extremely heavy-handed to us — it’s one thing to try and maintain control over a platform, it’s another to keep it with an iron fist. Of course, it’s probable that we’ll see a hack to bypass all of this extremely soon, so maybe it’ll all work itself out, but we’d really like to see Palm develop an official policy friendly towards hacking and homebrew and stick to it — the Pre and webOS have attracted a lot of talent in the past two weeks, and it’d be a shame to lose it.

[Via PreThinking; thanks, Justin]

Read – Pre Dev Wiki tethering policy
Read – Palm webOS updates support doc

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Palm webOS system upgrades mandatory; hacking scene forbidden from tethering originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Jun 2009 11:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Homebrew Pre firmware just a button, cable away?

If you were to put the Pre on a scale of hacker friendliness from 1 to 10, where 1 is the iPhone (remember how long it took for the first jailbreaks back in the day?) and 10 is, say, OpenMoko, we’re starting to get the impression that Palm’s latest effort falls somewhere way past the 5 mark. We got out first hint that they’re being good sports about letting developers play with the Konami code access to developer mode, and now we’ve got news that it’s easy — nay, trivial — to run whatever firmware you’d like on the phone. It seems all you’ve got to do is hold down the volume up key when connecting the Pre to your computer via USB, then you can flash the phone ’til you’re blue in the face; even better, the enterprising dev who found the trick says that it’s mega simple to modify the stock build and he’d wiped out the activation check with minimal effort. This can only be good news for tweakers and anyone wanting to walk off the App Catalog’s beaten path, and if this ultimately means we’re a few solid steps closer to a Pre running WinMo 6.1, sign us up. Way up.

[Via Daring Fireball]

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Homebrew Pre firmware just a button, cable away? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Jun 2009 20:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Johnny Chung Lee joins Project Natal team, puts Wii hacking experience to good use

In this time of economic hardship, it warms the heart just to hear that someone’s found any job. But when our main man Johnny Chung Lee lands a position on Microsoft’s Project Natal team, it’s high fives and handshakes all around. And really, it’s a perfect fit — among the many hacks of his illustrious career, he’s put together a VR head tracker (and utilized it in a first-person shooter) for the Wii game console. Apparently, Lee’s part of the group that is taking the tech we saw at E3 and getting it ready for prime time. As you’d expect, the man is pretty stoked to have landed his dream job. “The 3D sensor itself is a pretty incredible piece of equipment, he says, “similar to very expensive laser range finding systems but at a tiny fraction of the cost.” Congratulations, Johnny! If you should feel the need to leak any product pics, you have our email address.

[Via Joystiq]

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Johnny Chung Lee joins Project Natal team, puts Wii hacking experience to good use originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Jun 2009 11:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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WebOS homebrewers say ‘Hello World!’ to Palm Pre

It’s begun. Although lacking a general release of the SDK, the first homebrew apps have emerged thanks to last night’s leaked WebOS root image. The first application puts a stake in the ground by displaying a simple “hello world” on the screen. Unfortunately, the code overwrote the pre-installed Sprint Nascar application… oh wait, that’s probably a good thing. Devs have also started tampering with existing code to disable the shutter sound on the camera while leaving the rest of the sounds enabled. Now why would somebody want to do that?

Update: New image from an excited developer that shows scm6079’s work over at PreCentral evolving with a 5-second photo timer and more. We’re being told that several members of the Pre hacking team consist of old-school PalmOS hackers from the Samsung i300 days. Now if Palm can just lure back the rest of its developers smitten by Android and the lure of App Store riches then they might just make something of this fledgling smartphone platform.

[Thanks, Scott M. and C.J.]

Continue reading WebOS homebrewers say ‘Hello World!’ to Palm Pre

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WebOS homebrewers say ‘Hello World!’ to Palm Pre originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 10 Jun 2009 05:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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