iOS 4.2 beta 2 now available for iPhone, iPad developers

Hey, would you look at that: if you’re a developer, you can download iOS 4.2 beta 2. We’re installing it right now, and we’ll let you know as soon as we see what’s new — but we’re hoping it fixes some of the nasty bugs we grappled with in beta 1.

Update: We’ve only used beta 2 for a couple minutes, but it’s already so much less buggy than beta 1 we’re weeping with joy.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

iOS 4.2 beta 2 now available for iPhone, iPad developers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 19:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iControlPad to use Bluetooth instead of dock connector

It’s supposedly already headed into production, but it looks like the iControlPad is still undergoing a few last minute changes. The group behind the iPhone game controller peripheral has just announced that the device will actually use Bluetooth instead of an Apple dock connector — a change that’s apparently being done in part due to Apple’s recent litigation with Hypermac, and to avoid any actual licensing issues. As you might expect from such a small project, that’s also put the team in something of a bind, and they’re now looking for help from folks experienced with using Bluetooth in iOS. Of course, while the device is being pitched as an iPhone peripheral to start, there’s also been support for other phones promised, and it’s now been officially confirmed that those other phones will include Android phones with Bluetooth.

iControlPad to use Bluetooth instead of dock connector originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 15:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPod Touch to iPhone Convertor Coming to U.S.

Sometimes hailed as the poor man’s iPhone, the iPod Touch has been a popular device for Apple geeks craving the iOS experience sans the hefty monthly fees. However, a new accessory promises to give the Touch the whole she-bang without the contract.

The Peel, a protective case packed with a SIM card, dock connector and battery, is designed to expand the iPod Touch into a device capable of placing phone calls and sending text messages. Chinese company Yoison Technology developed the gadget, and U.S. company GoSolar announced this month is has signed an agreement to bring the Peel to the states.

“As soon as they arrive, we’ll begin distributing demonstration models to retail buyers across the country,” said GoSolarUSA CEO Tyson Rohde, in a statement. “The amount of interest in this product that we’ve received from distributors has been staggering.”

GoSolar did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but its website suggests that the iPod Touch must be hacked (i.e. jailbroken) in order for it to operate as a phone. And any iOS user is familiar with the fact that Apple regularly wipes out jailbreak hacks with every new iOS update. So in short, as cool as this solution sounds, it sounds less practical than simply using the iPod Touch as a VOIP web phone with third-party apps available through the App Store.

GoSolar did not list a price for the Peel. However, Yoison was selling the gadget for $388 RMB in China, or around $57.

Via IDG News

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Photo: Yolson Technology


Apple Patent Shows Future of Biometrics Isn’t Security

A recent Apple patent and a strongly worded report from the National Research Council suggest that the future of biometrics lies with personalization, not security.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office last week granted Apple a patent for biometric-sensor handheld devices that recognize a user by the image of his or her hand. In the not-too-distant future, anyone in the house could pick up an iOS device — or a remote control or camera — and have personalized settings queued up just for them.

The patent (which Apple first applied for in 2005) protects handheld devices with one or more “touch sensors” — buttons, touchscreens or other interfaces — on any of the device’s surfaces. These sensors can take a pixelized image of a user’s hand, match it to a corresponding image on file, and configure the device’s software and user profile accordingly.

It’s a very different use of biometrics than we’ve seen in the movies. Hand and retina scanners have been touted for years as a futuristic gatekeepers to high-security buildings. This is usually a much-embellished version of their real-world use by businesses and government agencies for whom secrecy is a big deal. In the wider world, tiny fingerprint scanners have been built into laptops, but they aren’t widely used for the simple reason that they don’t work reliably enough.

But while they might be insufficient for security, biometrics might work just fine for personalization. Suppose my family shares a future-generation iPad that supports multiple user profiles and a version of this sensor technology. When my wife or I pick it up, the mail application displays each of our inboxes separately. When our young son picks it up, only games and other approved applications are available. If guests or intruders pick it up, a guest profile would make none of your personal information immediately available to them.

Now, an important caveat: The personal-profile dimension of this technology would frankly be stronger than the security implications. You could outwit a 3-year-old, but not a determined hacker. You could hide a sensitive e-mail from a snooping house guest, but not a practiced identity or information thief.

This “soft security” approach may actually be the right approach for technology companies to take with biometrics. Last week the National Research Council issued a report (sponsored by the CIA, Darpa and the Department of Homeland Security, among others) on the state of the art of automated biometric-recognition security. The report argues that existing technologies as implemented are inherently fallible, and that more research and better practices are needed before they can be relied upon in high-security contexts.

Joseph N Pato, HP Labs distinguished technologist and chair of the “Whither Biometrics?” committee that wrote the report, wrote that we’ve been misled by spy-movie fantasies about palm-and-retina-scanning doors: “While some biometric systems can be effective for specific tasks, they are not nearly as infallible as their depiction in popular culture might suggest.”

Thinking for a moment about Apple’s user-sensitive iPad shows the limitations of biometric recognition systems. What if I put my hands in the wrong place, or can’t get the device to load the proper profile? What happens when my son grows up and his hands get bigger? Image-based recognition systems have to be probabilistic, with a certain amount of give, or they won’t work at all.

In fact, when the security thresholds are set too high, the committee found that the sheer number of false alarms led users to ignore them altogether — definitely a dangerous result, but one familiar to anyone who’s disabled an uncooperative smoke alarm or software “security feature.” And even in such high-security cases, an individual’s biometric traits can be publicly known or accessed, in much more prosaic and less gruesome ways than the cinematic fantasy of cutting off a hand or pulling out an eyeball.

Nope — the biometric future probably isn’t a world of impregnable security corridors protected by perfect technology that only the perfect hack can defeat. Instead, it’s a media player that — 90 percent of the time — knows your son likes Curious George more than your Office spreadsheets. Actually, that isn’t too bad.

Image: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office

Apple granted patent for handheld that recognizes your hands [Engadget]
United States Patent 7,800,592 (Sept. 21, 2010) [USPTA]
Automated Biometric Recognition Technologies ‘Inherently Fallible,’ Better Science Base Needed (Press Release) [National Research Council]
Biometric Recognition: Challenges and Opportunities (Full Report) [National Research Council]

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Apple Remote app 2.0 adds support for new Apple TV, iPad

No surprises here, but Apple’s just released version 2.0 of the Remote app for iPhone and iPad, which adds in support for the new iOS-based Apple TV in addition to iTunes on OS X. The interface is mostly the same — a trackpad-like screen for ATV remote control and an iPod-like interface for more direct media playback — but it’s now optimized for the Retina display on the iPhone 4 and the larger screen size of the iPad. Since the new Apple TV is streaming-only, Remote also now has better support for controlling shared music libraries, making remote control of iTunes on your HTPC slightly easier as well. It’s available now and it’s free, so go grab it.

Apple Remote app 2.0 adds support for new Apple TV, iPad originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 11:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Growing at Same Rate as Android, Globally?

MobileOSoct09tosep10.png

Numbers don’t lie, right? Now, granted, they don’t always tell the full picture, but these numbers from Statcounter seem fairly straightforward. The lines that you see on the above chart are global numbers pulled from the past year.

Apple’s iPhone has taken a bit of a dip after a couple years of relatively astronomical growth. Symbian, still the leader of the global pack, stumbled a bit, briefly overtaken by Apple, but has more or less maintained its position.

As for BlackBery and Android, the second a third place operating systems have both grown pretty steadily over the past twelve months–and at what looks to be roughly the same rate.

Given what appears to be occurring on the hardware sign of things, these numbers seem surprising. Android really appears to be ready to overtake RIM in a big way. Keep in mind, however, that, again, these are global numbers–the US tends to be its own beast when it comes to mobile operating systems.

Symbian? What’s that?

PlainText: iPad Text-Editor from the Makers of WriteRoom

Hog Bay Software, maker of the cult-favorite distraction-free text-editor Writeroom, has released its long-awaited iPad app, PlainText. When it was first announced, I was very excited to see a Dropbox-syncing, Textexpander-expanding writing app for the iPad. Now, though, it launches into a crowded field.

PlainText has two tricks. It has folders, which apps like Elements don’t support, and it looks gorgeous. The developer, Jesse Grosjean, has clearly spent a lot of time polishing the UI. From the wide margins to the minimalist black-on-gray interface, it looks classy, and makes you want to write. Navigating is easy once you have learned a few tricks: you rename a document by opening it and editing the name in the title bar, for example, and swipe-to-delete files and folders as you’d expect.

After that, though, PlainText falls behind. A recent update to Elements has added a feature that searches within your files, and it already has a word-count and the excellent scratchpad we love here at Gadget Lab. And the newly released iA Writer, profiled last week by our own Tim, wins for its extra row of writing-specific keys and its easy-to-edit typeface.

Plaintext scores big points by being free, and it also lets you specify which folder in your Dropbox it will sync to (choose this before logging into Dropbox from the app), so you can share documents with other iPad apps. It’s certainly worth a look, and we’ll be keeping an eye on updates, but for now, most iPad writing needs are covered elsewhere.

PlainText [Hog Bay / iTunes]

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Four Full Bars + Crappy Service = ‘iPhone’ of Nightclubs

San Francisco bar owner Jay Siegan decided to express his hatred for AT&T with the marquee outside his night club, shown in the photo above. This is visual proof that actions speak louder than words (especially when your iPhone’s reception is so bad), but those are some clever words, too.

Big thanks to San Francisco culture blog SFist.com for letting us repost this photo.

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Photo courtesy of Jay Siegan


Steve Jobs Attacks Kindle Android

This article was written on January 16, 2008 by CyberNet.

Mac Geek The New York Times managed to get some time with Steve Jobs yesterday after his keynote, and there were some interesting remarks in the interview from Jobs. Apparently his mother never taught him that if he didn’t have anything nice to say, not to say anything at all.

First up was the Amazon Kindle (review). This is portable reading device designed by Amazon that is able to download digital books without ever needing to be connected to a computer. Amazon can’t even keep the device in stock, but Jobs said that:

It doesn’t matter how good or bad the product is, the fact is that people don’t read anymore. Forty percent of the people in the U.S. read one book or less last year. The whole conception is flawed at the top because people don’t read anymore.

Then he went on to talk about the Google Android (review) mobile operating system which is expected to be released later this year. Interestingly enough Apple has worked with Google to provide specialized services on the iPhone, such as mapping and YouTube videos, but that didn’t hold Jobs back from expressing his true feelings:

Having created a phone its a lot harder than it looks. We’ll see how good their software is and we’ll see how consumers like it and how quickly it is adopted. I actually think Google has achieved their goal without Android, and I now think Android hurts them more than it helps them. It’s just going to divide them and people who want to be their partners.

The thing is that Google isn’t actually creating phones, instead they are developing the software to run on the phones. It’s likely that there will be dozens of different devices running Android when it is released, and that will help speed up the adoption rate. Particularly if they are more affordable than the iPhone.

I can’t wait to see what the future holds for both Kindle and Android, and to see just how accurate Jobs’ predictions are.

New York Times [via Gizmodo]
Thanks to “Google” for the tip!

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iPhone 4 hits UAE and Qatar, but without FaceTime installed

The iPhone 4 launched this weekend in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, but buyers wound up with a surprise — their handset’s front-facing cameras couldn’t do FaceTime. The National reports that the video chat feature is missing from phones sold at UAE carriers Etisalat and du, as well as those from Vodafone Qatar. Carriers are blaming Apple for the missing feature, and spokespersons from both Etisalat and Vodafone say they’re speaking to Cupertino about reinstating FaceTime post-haste; It was reportedly advertised on Middle Eastern versions of Apple’s iPhone website until around September 20th, when all references to FaceTime were removed. TUAW reports that some UAE denizens have actually tested FaceTime on phones bought abroad and found it working just fine, but that the functionality disappears after installing the local version of the iOS 4.1 update.

RIM’s Mike Lazaridis famously warned that countries threatening to ban the BlackBerry might thumb their nose at other forms of internet transmission too, but if’s far too early to tell if Apple was pressured into removing FaceTime or chose to for another reason entirely. It’s worth noting that both the UAE and Egypt (also missing FaceTime website ads) have banned certain VoIP services in the past.

[Thanks, Mohammed]

iPhone 4 hits UAE and Qatar, but without FaceTime installed originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 26 Sep 2010 13:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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