Pitseleh: A Beautiful Theme for Jailbroken iPhones

phonetext
Did you take our advice and jailbreak your iPhone? Here’s another good reason to hack away at your beloved device: themes. By downloading some unauthorized freeware through Cydia, you can give your iPhone user interface a makeover if you’re getting sick of Apple’s black and bubbly aesthetic. I installed a slick, old school theme called Pitseleh. (Admittedly, the name caught my eye because it’s the title of my favorite Elliott Smith song.)

If you’re convinced by the beautiful screenshots above and below, be warned: The procedure isn’t as easy as installing a single app and choosing the theme. You have to download five pieces of software, and there’s a manual part of the setup, too, requiring some finger work. The entire setup takes 30 minutes, and I followed an extremely helpful guide at Apple iPhone School.


Another forewarning: The theme is somewhat impractical, and more for the sake of showing off. It breaks your home screen into six categories (Phone, Text, iPod, Web, Games and Apps), and you have to follow the instructions exactly to match the theme’s skin, so there isn’t much room to customize. The most annoying part is that the Apps category is all the way on the right, requiring five swipes to access it to launch a third-party app such as Tweetie. You won’t be able to find your apps through Spotlight search anymore, either, since they’re stuffed in a category folder. Long story short: If you’re a “power user,” don’t bother. I mainly did this for fun, and I’ll likely uninstall it in the next week.

Update: As our readers EPICpod and markii point out, there’s a free app to enable Spotlight search for categorized apps in this theme. It’s called SpotBright, also available through Cydia. It works great and completely fixes the problem!

gamesipod

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Judge Dismisses Mac Cloner Psystar’s Bankruptcy

picture-4A judge has granted Mac cloner Psystar’s motion to dismiss its bankruptcy filing under the stipulation that the company could not file for bankruptcy again for six months, which would stall Apple’s lawsuit.

Psystar in May filed a voluntary petition for bankruptcy protection with the Florida courts. The move temporarily put Apple’s legal case on hold while the bankruptcy court began proceedings. Then Psystar moved to drop the bankruptcy saying it could not handle two cases simultaneously.

Judge William Alsup granted Psystar’s request to dismiss the bankruptcy filing under the condition that for a period of six months, the company could not file for bankruptcy a second time to continue to stall Apple’s lawsuit. (For a more detailed report written in legalese, see MacObserver’s article.)

Apple in July 2008 filed suit against Psystar alleging copyright, trademark and shrink-wrap license infringement — three months after Psystar opened its Mac clone business, selling a PC hacked to run Mac OS X Leopard.

Apple forbids its operating system to be installed on anything but Apple products. The corporation alleges Psystar is violating the Mac OS X end-user agreement, which states, “You agree not to install, use or run the Apple Software on any non-Apple-labeled computer, or to enable others to do so.” The corporation also alleges Psystar is committing copyright infringement by installing OS X on non-Apple hardware.

Psystar and Apple are scheduled for a Jan. 11. 2010 trial unless a settlement on summary judgment is reached before that date.

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Image: Psystar


How to Insert HTML Signatures in Gmail

This article was written on February 12, 2007 by CyberNet.

Gmail Signature Gmail has always been my choice of online email clients, but one thing that is frustrating is that HTML signatures aren’t supported within the composition area. Well, Gmail can actually handle them there is just no easy way to have the signature automatically inserted with each message…until now.

Garett Rogers from Googling Google has stepped up to the plate and has figured out a way to automate the insertion of an HTML signature into the messages that you compose. The trick is nothing too extravagant but you will need to have Greasemonkey installed to get the job done. Here is what you have to do:

  1. Download and install Greasemonkey if you don’t already have it.
  2. Install the script
  3. You’ll need to have the HTML code for the signature that you want to insert. Once you have that just go to the Greasemonkey script manager and edit the script’s HTML signature. I have a screenshot of my code below.

So it is pretty easy to setup. To test it out I added the script to my Greasemonkey then went to the Greasemonkey script management window and edited the script from there. Here is a screenshot of the HTML text I used to generate the signature pictured above:

Greasemonkey HTML signature

The image in the signature is compliments of the Feedburner Headline Animator which I discuss in this post about making email signatures. It is an effective way to show off the latest posts from your blog or site, and the background is customizable so that you can make it unique to your site. Using that together with this Greasemonkey script is a great solution for anyone looking to attract new readers…especially if you send out a lot of emails. The great thing about this script is that a nice looking signature is no longer a pain to use in Gmail. Thanks Garett!

Copyright © 2009 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Plungercam: DIY Tilt-Shift Lens

3763460184_778900fb65Tilt-shift photography is all what all the cool kids are doing right now. Originally (and still) used to control the plane of focus by tilting the front part of the lens, or shifting it up and down, the tilt-shift lens finds use in architectural and high-end product photography.

It also makes some amazing special effects, enabling you to make a real-life scene look like a tiny model, for example, and is so popular that there is even an iPhone app to apply the effect in post. But the real lenses give the best results, mostly because of the analog unpredictability they introduce. The problem is they cost a fortune.

The Plungercam is a DIY version, using a second-hand lens, a T-mount (camera lens-mount adapter) and some plumbing supplies (hence the name). Version 1.0 used a plastic body-cap to hold the assembly in place, but the T-mount means it is now much more secure on the camera. The lens itself is squished around inside the rubber tubing until you get the effect you want, and is strictly just a tilt-lens (no shift up or down). Think of this as a home-made Lensbaby and you’ll know what to expect.

It was made by Flickr user Captin Nod, and here on his photostream you can see the results of this lens shooting video on a DSLR.

Plungercam 2: cheaper and more predictable [Cow Mooh via Make]

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6 Reasons to Jailbreak Your iPhone

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Hacking your iPhone to run unofficial, third-party apps may seem unnecessary since Apple hosts its own App Store. But the corporation’s recently enforced prohibitions on some apps, such as the banning of Google Voice, are reviving the incentive for customers to jailbreak their iPhones once again.

Thanks to Cydia, an unauthorized app store open to jailbroken iPhones, consumers can still access some software that Apple won’t allow. Think free text-messaging and cheap international calls thanks to a Google Voice app that Apple banned. Or features that we can’t have yet, such as multimedia messaging and tethering. Here, we round up a list of the most compelling reasons to jailbreak your iPhone.

gvoice11. Google Voice

Apple recently rejected and banned Google Voice apps from its App Store. The apps would have augmented the search giant’s new voice service, which enables users to rely on a single phone number to ring all their phones, while also delivering the gift of free text messages, voicemail service and cheap international calls. The move stirred so much controversy that even the Federal Communications Commission is inquiring about the prohibition.

Thankfully in the Cydia store there’s GV Mobile, an unofficial Google Voice app. In light of Apple’s blanket ban of Google Voice apps, GV Mobile is the no. 1 reason to jailbreak your iPhone (if you weren’t one of the lucky few to grab a copy before Apple banned it). Overall the app is really sweet, despite having room to improve in terms of performance (connecting to Google’s server each time you launch the app can be a drag). Your contacts list is nicely integrated into the phone dialer and SMS sender; the overall UI is slick and cool. After a few minutes you’ll be sending free text messages, and maybe even dialing your relatives in Taiwan for once with cheap international VOIP calls. The best part? The app’s free.

unrestrictor2. Unrestricted 3G Privileges

AT&T iPhone owners pay $30 per month for “unlimited” 3G data access. But your access isn’t truly unlimited, thanks to restrictions that Apple imposed on some apps. SlingPlayer, an app that streams television from a Slingbox device, was crippled to work only on a Wi-Fi connection at the request of Apple and AT&T. And the Skype VOIP app only works on Wi-Fi, too, rendering it impractical.

This is where 3G Unrestrictor comes in handy. The $2 app enables jailbroken iPhone users to select any app that they wish to use over 3G, including Skype and SlingPlayer. Also, by default the App Store won’t let you download files larger than 10MB on the 3G network, and 3G Unrestrictor will remove that regulation, too. Free your apps and download away!

3. Tethering

Apple promised the new iPhone 3.0 OS would deliver tethering, but AT&T customers have yet to see that promise fulfilled. AT&T promised tethering would arrive “late summer.” Well, we’re waiting, and it’s not here yet. Some iPhone 3.0 users have figured out a roundabout way to turn on tethering without hacking, but that solution is only temporary.

Guess what? There’s a tethering app in Cydia, too. It’s a $5 app called Tether. The steps on setting up tethering aren’t as simple as Apple’s, but hey, you don’t even have to pay a monthly fee to use the service. The app even includes a feature to set a data cap in case you’re worried about extra charges incurred on your account if AT&T catches you tethering. It’s a little rough around the edges thanks to the network setup taking a few minutes, but we still love it.

overseas4. Overseas Travel

Need to travel? Your iPhone can only go so far thanks to its carrier-tied SIM card, unless you wish to receive bills up the nostril thanks to international roaming costs. Jailbreaking will actually enable you to follow a process to unlock your iPhone to work with other carriers’ SIM cards overseas.

5. Pissing off Apple

Whether you’re a developer who has a beef with Apple, or if you’re a consumer who’s pissed at Apple, or if you’re a kid whose puppy was run over by an employee of Apple, then you may want to exact revenge by jailbreaking your iPhone. That’s because Apple clearly doesn’t like it when users jailbreak their iPhones. The company claims the process is illegal, and goes as far as to say jailbreaking will crash cellphone towers. So far these are empty threats, although buyer beware: Future court decisions, laws or FCC regulations may put teeth into Apple’s claims.

6. Pissing off AT&T

Frustrated with AT&T’s brainless customer service, spotty network reception and passive-aggressive totalitarian rule over the App Store? Jailbreaking for any of the reasons above will piss off AT&T, mostly by enabling your applications to use its 3G network without restriction. Or, if you like, you can take your protest a step further and unlock your jailbroken phone, enabling it to work with with T-Mobile or any other GSM-based carrier. It’s not a tea party, it’s an AT&T party!

So what are you waiting for? We won’t tell you how to jailbreak your phone, but you can find the necessary tools and instructions on iPhone Dev-Team’s blog. We also found YouTube user Rizzo893’s video really helpful, too.

Photo: William Hook/Flickr, Jason-Morrison/Flickr, jorgeq/Flickr


Apple Patches iPhone SMS Security Hole With Software Update

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Apple has released a minor software update for iPhone, patching a security flaw revealed just yesterday.


Security researchers Charlie Miller and Collin Mulliner on Thursday revealed a memory corruption bug that could be easily exploited by crashing an iPhone with a series of invisible text messages, which would then enable a hacker to hijack the device. From thereon, a hacker could control all the functions on the iPhone — most alarmingly, he could send more text messages to hijack even more iPhones.

The researchers demonstrated the SMS security hole at the Black Hat cybersecurity conference in Las Vegas. They also demonstrated the flaw by sending an attack to crash a CNET reporter’s iPhone.

On Friday morning, Apple released iPhone OS 3.0.1. Available through iTunes, the update “Fixes SMS vulnerability,” according to its description.

“We appreciate the information provided to us about SMS vulnerabilities which affect several mobile phone platforms,” an Apple spokeswoman said in a phone interview with Wired.com. “This morning, less than 24 hours after a demonstration of this exploit, we’ve issued a free software update that eliminates the vulnerability from the iPhone. Contrary to what’s been reported, no one has been able to take control of the iPhone to gain access to personal information using this exploit.”

Apple moved even faster than necessary to fix the problem: Miller told Wired.com it took him two and a half weeks to discover the exploit. A hacker “really smart and lucky” could take a few days to replicate the attack, but that’s unlikely because “not many people in the whole world” have these skills, he said.

“Still, it just takes one bad guy a couple of weeks, and every iPhone could be attacked,” Miller told Wired.com in a phone interview.

Nonetheless, Jonathan Zdziarski, another iPhone security researcher, said he felt Miller sensationalized the problem with this stunt. He noted that many devices have vulnerabilities “in the wild” that nobody has exploited, and it’s unlikely a hacker would’ve devoted much energy to replicating Miller’s SMS attack, because there isn’t much to gain beyond annoying iPhone users.

“Every time we find a bug it’s been there for a year or more,” Zdziarski said. “At the very least it’s been six months, maybe longer.”

Miller acknowledged that the iPhone’s SMS weakness has probably existed for years; he first discovered the flaw in iPhone OS 2.0, which launched in 2008.

“The problem has been in the phone for year, but no one’s known about it,” he said in a phone interview Thursday. “Now that it’s out in the open, [Apple] can fix it.”

Updated 12:45 p.m. PDT with a comment from Apple.

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Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


The State of Hackintosh: Which Netbooks to Hack

BoingBoing Gadgets’ netbook compatibility chart is a great resource for putting Mac OS on netbooks. But before taking the Hackintosh plunge, here are the major contenders’ strengths, pitfalls and quirks to consider, plus guides for when you (carefully) jump in.

Rob’s chart, with all its scary red marks and mysterious orange ovals, has the tendency to give the impression that the outlook is fairly bleak; almost every row of “confirmed working!” ticks is broken up by at least one pesky caveat, and some netbooks on the list are not sold anymore. But your prospects really aren’t so bad. Buck up, kids! Here’s what that chart means, practically, with a real-world rundown of what these netbooks can offer, what they can’t, and how best to try your hand at Hackintosh.

The HP Mini 1000
Status: In production
Now that the Dell Mini 9 has passed on, in retail terms, this is your best option. Main components are compatible across the board.
What you get: A well-styled 10.2-inch machine with respectable guts, a notoriously great keyboard and an increasingly reasonable price. In fact, the slightly smaller Windows-less 16GB SSD version, a prime candidate for OS X-ification, is listed on Best Buy’s site for $280 right now.
What you sacrifice: I think the styling works; some people get turned off by the large bezel around the screen, though it’s on par with other 10-inch netbooks. Many Hackintoshers find little gremlins after install—lack of fan speed control and temperamental Wi-Fi control, to name two—which can generally be fixed, though rarely simply. By and large, though, this is as good as OS X gets on a cheap netbook.
Resources: Install guide, with video; support forums.

Dell Mini 9
Status: Out of production
This was, and still is, a fantastic candidate for Hackintoshing. As such, they’re not that easy to find for a reasonable price. Even Dell’s been getting in on the post-Mini-9 action, rereleasing the little laptop for brief period last week. UPDATE: The Vostro A90, the Mini 9’s equally Hackintoshable business counterpart, is still around in some retail channels.
What you get: Just like the HP, Dell’s Mini 9 lays claim to near-total hardware compatibility, including mobile broadband support. The fact that everything just kinda works is pretty wild, if you think about it.
What you sacrifice: Battery life isn’t great. And since release, the Mini 9’s hardware has aged a bit. That said, entry-level netbooks all more or less live on the verge of obsolescence by definition, so having a slightly older Atom processor than your friends shouldn’t be much of a concern.
Resources: Our definitive install guide; support forums.

Dell Mini 10v
Status: In production
For some time after release this Mini 9 replacement was held up by Mac driver difficulties. Now it works fairly well, and could serve as a replacement Mini 9 for some Hackintoshers.
What you get: In some ways, this is better than the Mini 9. It’s a newer unit, updated to address some of the general population’s broader problems with the Mini 9: The screen is slightly larger, and more importantly, the keyboard has some room to stretch. It’s cheap—often cheaper than the a coveted used Mini 9—at about $300 new.
What you sacrifice: The Mini 10v is patchier than its predecessor across the board. The onboard microphone is difficult to get working, video drivers are still a little precarious, often causing crashes when external monitors are connected, and sleep and hibernation modes aren’t very reliable, which is crucial for a totable netbook. If you’re willing to bet on driver support improving, it’s a prudent purchase. That’s a big if, by the way.
Resources: The Anguish Install+Fixes Guide; User forums.

Lenovo S10
Status: Out of production
Like the Mini 1000, the S10 is a worthy replacement for the Mini 9. Or, it was, before it was replaced by a touchier, more erratic S10-2. (More on that below).
What you get: Another capable machine, though it was—and still is—a little too expensive for what you get. Hardware works across the line, down to the webcam and two-finger touchpad scrolling.
What you sacrifice: Ethernet doesn’t work, which could kill the S10’s usefulness as a travel device (old hotels, etc) and the 3-cell battery is a little anemic. It too suffers from age: The cheapest version and most popular spec comes with 512MB of RAM, which will suck the joy right out of your OS X experience.
Resources: Multi-boot guide (attached to linked post in PDF); User forums.

Lenovo S10-2
Status: In production
This bears the outward appearance of a minor update to the S10. As far as Hackintoshing is concerned, it’s a major step backwards.
What you get: Compared to the S10, a better touchpad, bigger keyboard, nicer case design, slimmer profile, more default RAM, and lower price. Great!
What you sacrifice: Any semblance of usability in OS X. Adding to the lack of ethernet support, everything from sleep to external video to stability is lost, to the point that the S10-2 isn’t really much of an option.
Resources: The same S10 guide, with caveats; User forums.

MSI Wind U100
Status: Out of production
A perennial Hackintosh classic, it’s still a safe choice, and fairly easy to track down used.
What you get: A Mini 9 level of compatibility, with very similar hardware. Styling is clean, but not as pleasing as the Dell, Lenovo, or HP alternatives, and the keyboard is usable.
What you sacrifice: Again, we’re dealing with old-ish hardware here, and again, the three-cell battery won’t run marathons. The touchpad is janky, and, I almost forgot, this guy really doesn’t like them.
Resources: A whole bunch of install guides and support info.

Acer Aspire One
Status: In production
A hugely popular, widely available and all-around decent netbook, the Aspire One is a cautionary tale: No matter how tempted you are to pick one up, Hackintosh development has come too slowly to justify buying one for that. This rule applies to other netbooks not shown, too.
What you get: An expensive-looking, cheap-as-chips workhorse.
What you sacrifice: Virtually everything, including the biggest dealbreaker of them all: Wi-Fi. Lots of netbooks don’t work, but I wanted to include this one as an example: Just because a netbook is wildly popular and bolstered by a huge community of support forums doesn’t mean that Hackintosh will eventually work. Some hardware and software issues are just beyond the hobbyists’ purview, so don’t buy a netbook with the hopes that issues will be resolved. They might not be, and you’ll be stuck swapping out hardware components just to get basic features working.
Resources: Install guide with some fixes, wi-fi recommendations; user forums.

Despite losing its greatest soldier (well, almost), the Hackintosh netbook movement is still alive and well, to the point that buying one of the more compatible netbooks listed above with the express purpose of turning it into an unofficial mini-MacBook is a great idea. Take your pick.

Bug With Hacked iPhones Is Broadcasting IMs to Random Recipients

18630461Have a jailbroken (hacked) iPhone? Be careful what you instant message. An iPhone developer has discovered what may be a privacy leak that broadcasts your IMs to random, unintended recipients.

The issue is occurring in push IMs, which appear as alerts — a function enabled by Apple’s new push-notification feature in the latest iPhone 3.0 operating system, according to Till Schadde, founder of development company Equinux. Schadde said he discovered the error while testing push IMing in the AIM application. Schadde claims he sent an IM from his desktop to his jailbroken iPhone and received a reply from a random recipient.

The problem is likely tied to Apple’s push-notification server, which hosts messages from each iPhone based on its identifier. The theory, then, is jailbreaking the iPhones may be confusing the server, crossing over some IDs.

AOL is currently investigating the issue, according to Schadde.

Any jailbroken iPhone users out there experiencing this problem? Let us know in the comments below.

iPhone Push problem broadcasts your AIMs to random recipients, could affect jailbroken/unlocked phones [CrunchGear]

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Android x86 LiveCD now available, lets you run Android on your desktop

Sure, the whole world and Steve Ballmer might be buzzing about Chrome OS, but a dedicated duo of hackers has been hard at work porting Google’s other operating system to x86, and they’ve just released an .02 version of their Android LiveCD build. That means you’re now free to boot and run the ‘droid from your optical drive, install it in a virtual machine, install it for real on your old laptop, whatever — just don’t get upset if it bugs out on you. Anyone gonna do some ‘sploring?

[Via DownloadSquad]

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Android x86 LiveCD now available, lets you run Android on your desktop originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Jul 2009 20:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm Pre hacked and running on Verizon

It’s not the fabled GSM Pre, but PreCentral forum member Cleanser has apparently managed to unlock his Pre’s CDMA radio and get voice and SMS service on Verizon — data’s still a no-go, but he’s working on it. Other devices have been flashed between the networks for years, so we’ve no doubt that this is possible, but we doubt it’ll ever be super-easy — according to Cleanser, the hardest part was getting someone to add his device’s MEID to the system, and that’s always gonna be tough, regardless of VZW’s big talk about open network access. Still, it’s heartening to see a webOS device on another carrier — Palm, you want to maybe do this up official sometime? Video after the break.

[Via PreCentral]

Continue reading Palm Pre hacked and running on Verizon

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Palm Pre hacked and running on Verizon originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Jul 2009 11:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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