Wed November 03 2004
RSA Security plans to infest your PDA with DRM
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03:57 AM by Colin Dunstan in E-Book General | News
Converging technologies in the mobile device market have created new opportunities to deliver high-value digital content - music, video, games - to consumers over next-generation networks. To date, many solutions that protect content owners' rights have proven easy to circumvent or provide an unacceptable consumer experience due to limited device portability. RSA Security's solutions help solve these concerns through a security platform based on open industry standards, including the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) Digital Rights Management 2.0 standard and the Open Digital Rights Language (ODRL) v1.1. The software will be available in January 2005. I hope they will find noone interested in buying it! |
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iTunes 4.7 - Unfix for the "Fix"!
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03:40 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Portable Audio/Video
It turns out that Apple's system for disabling the plugin uses a blacklist of disallowed iTunes additions in the iTunes binary. If you open the binary in a hexadecimal editor, like HexEdit, you can find the area where Apple has inserted the string "iPod Download" in its blacklist and simply replace the text with something else (in fact, I think you could probably just change one character) and your iTunes's original functionality will be restored. The origin of the hack appears to be Hardmac.com. |
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palmOne dementi: PalmSource not with PPC
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03:29 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
PalmOne [PalmSource's biggest customer] representatives disputed the contents of the research note, from Needham & Co. The note said that PalmOne "tacitly admitted" it was working to make Microsoft's operating system available on the popular Treo line of phones...PalmOne representatives said the report was based on a misunderstanding, adding that the company is platform-agnostic. The representatives also said the company as a policy does not comment on products that may or may not be under development. How interesting that PalmSource declines to commend on the report, and that palmOne is the one who tries to clean up the mess. |
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Nokia 7710 - Smart phone for smart people
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03:21 AM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
The 7710 is Nokia's first handset featuring a screen that lets users access functions with a stylus, pitting it against PDA rivals such as PalmOne. In addition, the handset can also function as a souped-up smart phone, featuring a digital camera, radio, Internet browser and music player, using the Symbian OS. Specs: - 8x4 cm 65,536-color wide screen with pen input The 7710 will be available in Asia later this year and in Europe and Africa early in 2005, Nokia said. It's priced at 500 (US $638). Sounds like a "smart move" to me, even though I haven't had experience with Symbian OS (yet). |
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Tue November 02 2004
Novel writing on the go...
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12:03 PM by divajess in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
Last year I decided to sign up, but never got much past my first 1,000 words due to complications of the real life kind. This year I decided to give it another shot, and I am determined that I will finish. The key to my success? My Pocket PC. I love writing by hand, but writing 50,000 words that way seemed like quite a daunting task. I also don't think that carrying around my 5 pound laptop is a very viable solution. I might have 50K by the end of the month, but I would also have huge back problems. But that's why we have PDAs, right? My beautiful new Dell Axim (with Calligrapher 7.0) plus my Targus IR keyboard is the perfect portable word processor. They both fit into my small handbag and I never leave home without carrying at least the Axim, if not also the keyboard. Even just one day into NaNoWriMo my setup has proven its worth. I had lots of errands to run last night, including a trip to the emergency vet with my cat, but I was able to churn out about 500 words on my PPC instead of leafing through 10-month-old magazines. It was much better than reading old magazines! Are any other writers out their using their PDAs as a mobile writing solution? Any fellow NaNo'ers? I want to hear from you! |
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Mon November 01 2004
iTunes 4.7 - Apple digging its own grave?
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04:19 PM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Portable Audio/Video
Remember when Microsoft CEO Steve Balmer stated that most iPod users were thieves using stolen music? The Apple fan community was aghast and had certainly no nice words left for Balmer: This from a company that knows nothing about "Fair Play". Balmer is trolling and is also a ****ing retard. Monkey Boy. This is very typical from Microsoft. They think that if you competitior is doing better than you, you should buy them. If you can't buy them, create bad publicity. I have a couple of words to say to Mr. Balmer. Unfortunetly, MacRumors' filter would turn them into a bunch of *s. Microsoft must be ashamed. Can we say "Inferiority Complex" or "Why didn't we steal that too?". How ironic, in retrospetive |
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PalmSource - rough times ahead?
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03:40 PM by Colin Dunstan in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones
As a result, PalmSource shares slumped more than 9 percent today. The fact that the Treo is supposed to be ported to Pocket PC makes all my alarm bells ring. Did you hear about that before? I try to read all the news, but somehow it must have slipped me that PalmSource (or is it palmOne?) wants to step into the realm of Pocket PC. What do you make of it? |
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New Messaging Standards
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10:32 AM by sUnShInE in Archive | Handhelds and Smartphones According to the Associated Press, a new standard for multimedia messaging has been adopted by the wireless industry, allowing customers from different wireless companies to exchange photos, video, and audio just like e-mail. While the standard has been adopted it will take some time for companies to change and integrate everything. Until then, multimedia services will remain more like the current status of instant messaging, where users of services from AOL, Yahoo! and MSN still cannot chat directly. The lack of interoperability has been a huge stumbling block for wireless carriers and their capabilities. For example, most cell phones today have cameras, but users wouldn't or couldn't share their pictures because their friends and family do not use the same wireless service. At a base-level short messaging service, or SMS, enabled a common standard of interoperability. The establishment of a new multimedia message standard will encourage the exchange of photos and other multimedia content no matter what wireless company or technology a customer may be using. This will drive wider use of the technology and could lead to expanded multimedia services from wireless providers. Cingular will be using a company call Mobile 365. VeriSign also announced an inter-carrier multimedia messaging service that wireless companies can take advantage of. |
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RSA Security
Thanks to BoingBoing (love you guys!) for reporting how to do a small binary patch to enable iPod download again for iTunes 4.7:
Thanks to Laurens for bringing
"Smart Moves" is this year's theme of the
As some of you crazy writers might be aware, November is
Yesterday I read the amusing yet disturbing article
Balmer was perhaps trying to make some bad press about his competitor, but Apple is now the one who is, in BoingBoing's words, devoting time, money, and lawyer- and engineer-hours to breaking your iPod and selling it to you as a "fix." I feel sorry for all loyal Apple lovers, who must feel like being stabbed in the back! (not without a big smirk in my face)
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