Showing posts with label LATEST TECHNEWS NEWS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LATEST TECHNEWS NEWS. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

4TH GENERATION


23 nov
2013

LATEST COMMUNIATION  TECHNOLOGY

C.BAYA PRAKASH REDDY



[4TH GENERATION]
2nd generation to 4th generations.



             LATEST TECHNOLOGY

The fourth generation of mobile communications, to nobody’s surprise, offers extremely high downlink rates and in the case of Long Term Evolution (LTE), this can theoretically reach 100 MB per second. The question is; what is LTE technology all about?

Enter 4G with LTE
LTE is a bundle of improvements to the Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) being worked on by the third Generation Mobile Communications standards, one notch higher than the second generation (2G) of mobile communications. Usually, it is speed that determines the generation any technology falls in. Hence, one of the main benefits of HMTS is its speed.
What makes LTE faster than other mobile communications technologies? The answer lies within the access technique employed by LTE. One the fastest access technique in use for LTE is orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) which increases the amount of information that can be carried over a wireless network.
In frequency-division multiplexing (FDM), multiple signals, or carriers, are sent simultaneously over different frequencies between two points. In OFDM, a mathematical formula is used to ensure that multiple carriers sent out are orthogonal (separated by an angel, so they do not overlap) to each other. Another tool used by LTE is a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) antenna. These are adaptive antennas that can select the best coverage path in real time and accordingly propagate signals.

Transfer seamlessly with NFC
Near field communication (NFC) is a form of high-frequency, wireless communication in which two devices – within 10 centimeters of each other – can exchange data. Some of us may recall electromagnetic induction from our high school physics course. The communication in NFC is carried out through magnetic induction between two loop antennas that interact with each other’s fields, forming an air-core transformer. The rate of communication is up to 848 KB per second.
The main difference between NFC and Bluetooth communication is simply that the latter requires authentication and a series of steps before a connection is established. Hence, it takes time. NFC, which does not need to authenticate, can established a connection within one-tenth of a second.

Bluetooth 3.0 – yes you can!
Bluetooth is a wireless technology that was developed by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG). The first version of Bluetooth (Bluetooth 1.0) was extremely slow and not very efficient. Later versions like Bluetooth 1.2 incorporated adaptive frequency hopping, which reduced interferences issues. Now with Bluetooth 3.0, consumers can expect a speed of 24 Mbps (crazy fast for Bluetooth!).

Upcoming Apple iPhone 5 and iPad 4
Apple is bringing some of the latest and fastest communication technologies in the form of iPhone 5 and iPad 4. Every time they are trying to bring something interesting and new in front of their fans. There is a lot of buzz around the release dates of both these Apple’s products, want to know further! Checkout the Apple’s  and features.

Conclusion
Starting with the 2G standards that made services like short messaging service (SMS) extremely popular and the rollout of 3G services with faster downlink speeds, research has paved the way for further innovations and improvements. 4G is not far off from becoming a popular world standard. Technologies like LTE and NFC will only serve to augment changes in the ways we use our mobile phones today. From mobile payments and downloading full-length movies, to transferring huge files via Bluetooth 3.0, the mobile world is drastically evolving.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Livestream cues up Android app for the masses



Livestream cues up Android app for the masses

exclusive The company in a two-way race to be the Internet's prime live-event streamer catches up with Ustream by adding an Android app to watch and broadcast live video on the go.


    (Credit: Livestream)
    Fresh off powering the first live Internet video stream from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange for Twitter's initial public offering, Livestream is making a public offering of its own.
    The company, which is vying with Ustream to become the go-to place for live Web broadcasting and viewing, Friday launched an app for Android that lets users both broadcast live video and watch it in one program.
    The new app replaces and expands the company's previous app for Android, the Google operating system that holds more than 80 percent of the world's smartphone market. The former app, called Livestream for Producers, was designed only for broadcasting and was meant mostly for professionals.

    The new app is meant for anybody, and it integrates viewing of live or archived video with simple live filming and broadcasting. It introduces push alerts that let users know when one of the accounts they follow is starting to broadcast live, which will come in handy for people who have a favorite Kitten Cam they don't want to miss.
    The app's "featured video" page is populated by the top picks of the Livestream editorial team, and it has a homepage based on what an individual user follows.
    To broadcast an event, you press a camera icon, select either a pre-existing event or create an event right then, and tap a big red button to start streaming. The app instantly provides a URL to share your stream, and you can post a link to Facebook or Twitter while filming, which will create and insert a still frame from the video in your post. As soon as you start streaming, your followers get a notification on their devices, and people can chat with you or other watchers while it's happening.
    Co-founder and Chief Executive Max Haot touted the social integrations as expanding online networks to a new place.
    "There is no social network out there that has yet built that capability to show my friends what is going on right now with video," he said. "You have Skype and Google Hangouts, but that's more one-on-one."
    Except that Livestream's main rival allows that kind of sharing too.
    (Credit: Livestream)
    Livestream is in a two-way race with Ustream to become the predominant live-streaming platform, with companies like Netflix and YouTube already dominating the market for online video on demand. (YouTube has a live division, but it allows broadcasters to stream live only if their channel meets a threshold number of subscribers.)
    Live video has long been a trickier proposition than that of on-demand video, which has the benefit of lead time to prepare and polish its content and the technology behind it before video is viewed. Live-streaming must work toward the goal of getting the most popular content to the most people, while facing a more challenging technological feat: bringing high-definition video at an adaptive bit rate that won't look like a pixelated mess on 50-inch plasma.
    As its technology has advanced to the point at which making live video look good is no longer the biggest hurdle, Livestream and Ustream have been the main platforms emerging for popular use.
    Livestream gets more than 35 million unique visitors per month and has more than 75,000 events per month, with $18.8 million in revenue in 2012 and currently 144 workers.
    Ustream powers about 40,000 streams per day, and hit 2 billion viewer hours earlier this year. It expects to have 20 million registered users by year's end, and it has 200 employees.
    It also already has iPhone, iPad and Android apps that allow users to broadcast live video, with some of those social integrations Haot extolled.
    Livestream, which has an app for iPhone and iPad too, noted that its new Android app is free without ads, while Ustream requires payment for an ad-free experience. Livestream also trumpeted its reliability, saying its previous Android broadcasting app was "the only one Vice reporter/citizen journalist Tim Pool has ever been able to use in fluctuating 3G/4G conditions while covering protest in Turkey, Cairo and Brazil this year."
    "He has been using Ustream for years but switched to Livestream when he started working for Vice because ours was the only app that would work," the company said in an email.
    Livestream is hoping other Android users will too.

    Twitter shines on NYSE debut, stock closes 73 percent up on opening day

    Twitter shines on NYSE debut, stock closes 73 percent up on opening day

    twitter_wall_street_reuters.jpg
    Twitter Inc shares jumped 73 percent in a frenzied trading debut that drove the seven-year-old company's market value to around $25 billion and evoked the heady days of the dot-com bubble.
    The strong performance on Thursday is encouraging for the venture capitalists who have backed other consumer Web startups, such as Square or Pinterest, though it sounded alarm bells for some investors who cautioned that the froth was unwarranted.
    "@twitter opening at $45/share? Almost 50x revenues! We are officially in another tech bubble," tweeted financier and investment advisor Steve Rattner.
    The stock closed its first day of trade on the New York Stock Exchange at $44.90 a share after hitting a session-high of $50, nearly double the initial public offering price of $26 set late on Wednesday.
    Twitter could raise $2.1 billion if an underwriters' over-allotment is exercised, as expected, making it the second largest Internet offering in the United States behind Facebook Inc's $16 billion IPO last year and ahead of Google Inc's 2004 IPO, according to Thomson Reuters data.
    Fans believe that Twitter, which has 230 million users, has established itself as an indispensable Internet utility alongside Google and Facebook, and that it has only scratched the surface of its potential as a global advertising medium.
    "When people use Twitter they are following certain people, they're searching for specific information," said Mark Mahaney, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets. "There are powerful marketing signals that are almost Google-esque, something that Facebook doesn't really have."
    The IPO was shadowed for months by Facebook's troubled 2012 debut, in which the shares quickly fell below their offering price amid trading glitches and subjected the company and its lead banker, Morgan Stanley, to accusations that they had been greedy in pricing the deal.
    Twitter's opening appeared to go off without a hitch, prompting Anthony Noto, the Goldman Sachs banker who led the IPO, to write a simple Tweet: "Phew!"
    Still, Twitter may find itself subject to the opposite criticism, that it had priced the shares too low and left more than a billion dollars on the table.
    "In my mind they certainly could've raised the price on this thing and gone into the low 30s," said Ken Polcari, director of the NYSE floor division at O'Neil Securities. "From an outsider looking in I would say they were overly cautious because they didn't want a disaster on their hands ... I'm sure the company didn't want a Facebook debacle, I get that, but I think they were overly cautious and it cost them some money."
    The 70 million IPO shares represent about 13 percent of the company's common shares. Twitter was the most actively traded stock on Thursday, with around 117 million shares changing hands.
    Heavy demand for the IPO was apparent before the final pricing. Twitter was able to price the IPO above an already raised indicative range, and the deal still attracted investor subscriptions that totaled 30 times the number of shares on offer, according to market sources.
    In San Francisco
    At Twitter's headquarters in San Francisco, offices opened early and hundreds of employees flocked to the 9th floor cafeteria to watch the festivities on TV while eating "cronuts," a croissant-donut hybrid, made by Twitter's resident chef, Lance Holton.
    The IPO is the latest milestone for a service that was born out of a nearly-defunct startup in 2006 and was derided by many in its early years as a silly fad dominated by people talking about what they had for breakfast.
    But Twitter quickly began to penetrate popular culture in unexpected ways, with its open design and broadcasting format attracting celebrities, athletes, politicians and anybody who wanted to share short, punchy thoughts with a digital audience.
    Its business potential developed more slowly, and the company appeared to be floundering as recently as three years ago, when it was riven by management turmoil and frequently crippled by service outages.
    Under Dick Costolo, who took over as CEO in October 2010, Twitter has rapidly ramped up its money-making engine by selling "promoted tweets," messages from marketers that are distributed to a wide-ranging but targeted group of users. In the third quarter, Twitter had $168 million in revenue, it said, more than double from a year prior.
    The NYSE, which snatched the listing away from its tech-focused rival, Nasdaq, marked Twitter's debut with an enormous banner with the company's blue bird logo along its Broad Street facade.
    British actor Patrick Stewart, of Star Trek fame, rang the opening bell at the Big Board together with nine-year-old Vivienne Harr, who started a charity to end childhood slavery using the microblogging site.
    "I guess I represent the poster boy for Twitter," Stewart said, adding that he had only been tweeting for about a year.
    Costolo and Twitter's three co-founders - Evan Williams, Biz Stone and Jack Dorsey - appeared on the packed exchange floor to witness the beginning of trade.
    At current valuations, the stakes owned by Williams and Dorsey would be worth around $2.7 billion and $1.1 billion, respectively. Costolo, who invested $25,000 in the fledgling company in 2007, holds a 1.4 percent stake worth about $360 million.
    Sell rating
    Investor enthusiasm for the microblogging company defied traditional valuation analyses. The shares traded at about 22 times forecast 2014 sales, nearly double the multiple at social media rivals Facebook and LinkedIn Corp, even though Twitter is far from turning a profit and posted a loss of almost $70 million for its most recent quarter.
    The hefty valuations were cause for celebration for Twitter insiders and venture capital backers, such as Union Square Ventures, Spark Capital and Benchmark Capital. But some analysts warned that a correction may be in store.
    "With a price that pushes into the high 30s and beyond, Twitter is simply too expensive," Pivotal Research's Brian Wieser wrote in a note cutting his rating on the stock to "sell" from "buy".
    "One way to justify a $45 price in our model would involve presuming that Twitter could generate more than $6bn in annual revenue by 2018. However, we think that would seem overly optimistic."
    Fund managers who got small allocations at the IPO were hopeful the stock would trade down after Thursday's pop.
    "We have a target of $40 and we won't buy more as long as it is trading above that," said Mark Hawtin, portfolio manager of the GAM Star Technology Strategy.
    Jerry Jordan, manager of the $48.6 million Jordan Opportunity Fund, who got a small allocation, said he would buy more of Twitter if it trades down around $30-$35.
    "A lot of these sexy IPOs have a big pop on the first day and then they grind sideways," Jordan said.
    International growth
    As Twitter's stock soared after the opening, the company's market value, including restricted share units and other securities that could be exercised in the coming months, was over $28 billion.
    The company said in its investor prospectus that more than three-quarters of its users are outside the United States. Despite its early reputation as a hangout for Silicon Valley early adopters and tech geeks, some of its most active markets now include Japan, Indonesia, Brazil and Saudi Arabia.
    The fast-moving, mobile service was credited with fueling popular protests that upended the Arab world in 2011. It served as a lifeline to the outside world for its users during natural disasters like Hurricane Sandy, and also instantly relayed news such as early rumblings of the 2011 U.S. raid on Osama bin Laden's compound in Pakistan.
    "Twitter has, when coupled with the increasing distribution of smart phones and reach of the Internet, an impact on global connectivity and transparency," said P.J. Crowley, the former U.S. State Department spokesman. "It has definitely contributed to the acceleration of the news process and helped to expand the availability of information sources to a wide range of people."
    The three most-followed accounts belong to a trio of pop stars: Katy Perry, Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga. U.S. President Barack Obama comes in fourth.
    The 140-character messages have spawned an Internet culture of its own. The "hashtag," a pound symbol devised by early Twitter users to denote the topic of a conversation, has became ubiquitous, with the word even becoming an ironic expression parodied by the likes of "Saturday Night Live."
    Twitter's successful debut is likely to stoke interest in other up-and-coming consumer Internet companies such as ride service Uber, scrapbooking site Pinterest, accommodation service Airbnb and the payment start-up Square, all of which boast private-market valuations well north of a billion dollars and could go public in the coming years.
    Kevin Hartz, CEO of Eventbrite and an early investor in Pinterest and Airbnb, said the IPO floodgates might open now.
    "The pendulum is swinging back in a surprising way," Hartz said. "There's a pent-up supply of a lot of quality companies."
    Still, two early social media success stories, Groupon Inc and Zynga Inc, have suffered major reversals since going public. Groupon, despite big gains in its shares this year, still trades at less than half its 2011 IPO price. Zynga is worth about a third of its 2012 IPO price.
    And first-generation social media firms such as MySpace have all but vanished as fickle users moved on to the next big thing.

    Friday, October 11, 2013

    Microsoft paid over $28,000 Rewards to Six Researchers for its first ever Bug Bounty Program

    Microsoft paid over $28,000 Rewards to Six Researchers for its first ever Bug Bounty Program
    Microsoft today announced that they had paid more than $28,000 in rewards to Security Researchers for its firstBug Bounty program, that went on for a month during the preview release of Internet Explorer 11 (IE11).


    The program was designed to run during Internet Explorer 11’s browser beta test on June 26 and went on till July 26. They said it would pay researchers up to $11,000 for each Internet Explorer 11 vulnerability they found.
    In July, the company announced that the first such bounty award was given to a current employee of Google, Ivan Fratric. Today Microsoft has released the names of all the people who the company said found vulnerabilities that qualified for a bounty and paid out $28k a total of six researchers for reporting 15 different bugs.
    • James Forshaw, Context Security
      • 4 Internet Explorer 11 Preview Bug Bounty - $4,400
      • 1 Bonus for finding cool IE design vulnerabilities - $5,000
    • Jose Antonio Vazquez Gonzalez, Yenteasy - Security Research
      • 5 Internet Explorer 11 Preview Bug Bounty vulnerabilities - $5,500
    • Ivan Fratric, Google, Inc security team
      • Internet Explorer 11 Preview Bug Bounty $1,100 - Donated to Save the Children Fund
    • Masato Kinugawa
      • 2 Internet Explorer 11 Preview Bug Bounty vulnerabilities - $2,200
    • Fermin J. Serna, Google, Inc
      • 1 Internet Explorer 11 Preview Bug Bounty $500 - Donated to Save the Seattle Humane Society
    • Peter Vreugdenhil, Exodus Intelligence
      • 1 Internet Explorer 11 Preview Bug Bounty – Tier 1
    Interestingly some submissions were from Google engineers, but the money was donated to the Save The Children Fund and other Charities.

    Microsoft is set to release the final version of Internet Explorer 11 for Windows 8 and RT on October 17 alongside Windows 8.1.

    Microsoft is also running two more software bounty programs. One will pay up to $100,000 to developers who find truly novel exploitation techniques in Windows 8.1, while the other will pay up to $50,000 for defensive ideas that block a qualifying mitigation bypass technique.

    Wednesday, September 25, 2013

    An Engine's Eye View Of Virgin Galactic Spaceship Flight

    In case you didn’t get enough ofVirgin Galactic‘s successful powered flight of SpaceShipTwo on Thursday, here’s another treat for you: the company has released footage of the flight from a camera on the spacecraft’s tail, so you can see the rocket engine fire up close and personal.
    The engine itself isn’t the creation of Virgin Galactic. It was developed and built for SpaceShipTwo by the Sierra Nevada Corporation.
    The engine is a hybrid propulsion system that uses nitrous oxide as an oxidizer and Hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene (HTPB) as fuel. (In rocket parlance, a hybrid engine is one where the propellants are in two separate states of matter. In this case, the HTPB is a solid.) The benefit of this setup is that the fuels are non-toxic, and the burn itself is very low emission compared to other rocket fuels.
    “Today’s test has once again proven the safety and reliability of our hybrid rocket engine technology,” Sierra Nevada VP Mark Sirangelo said in a statement Thursday. “We have now supported two successful crewed flight tests for Virgin Galactic.”
    In addition to developing the engine for Virgin Galactic, Sierra Nevada is also developing it for its own reusable spacecraft known as the Dream Chaser. The Dream Chaser is a competitor to SpaceX’s Dragon capsule, and when fully functional it will aim to transport cargo and up to seven crew members to the International Space Station. Unlike Dragon, which resembles the capsules of the old Apollo program, Dream Chaser looks almost like a mini-Space Shuttle, and will be capable of runway landings.
    On August 22, Dream Chaser had a successful “captive-carry” test flight. During this test, the spacecraft had its systems successfully evaluated while hanging from the bottom of another aircraft. This successful test was another checkbox on its list of milestones it needs to meet for NASA. Sierra Nevada and NASA both expect that all of Dream Chaser’s milestones will be met by the end of 2014.
    But while we wait for a full powered flight from the Dream Chaser, you can watch the footage of SpaceShipTwo’s flight as seen from the tail camera below.


    Life On Earth Likely Arose Only Once

                     Life On Earth Likely Arose Only Once


    Earth’s “Perfect Sky” as photographed from the International Space Station’s Panoramic Cupola. Credit: ESA
    Could life arise twice on the same planet?
    That’s the question I posed to both Oleg Abramov, a research space scientist at the USGS Astrogeology Science Center in Flagstaff and Steve Mojzsis, a geologist at the University of Colorado in Boulder.

    “Life evolves, adapts and spreads pretty quickly on timescales of millions of years,” said Abramov. “So, it’s pretty difficult to sterilize a planet.”
    However, because earth was habitable long before the era of massive, surface-sterilizing asteroidal and cometary impacts had ended, a few researchers think there’s a chance that life might have even evolved more than once.
    Aside from a highly-anomalous moon-forming type impactor, once life takes hold on a given planet, it’s actually more resilient than commonly thought. So, impactors of the sort that would actually sterilize a life-rich planet in order for it to emerge all over again are actually few and far between.
    That’s because microbes can survive deep in our crust. So-called thermophile bacteria are arguably our most distant ancestors. It’s thought that these high-temperature loving micro-organisms could ride out massive bombardments by surviving in very warm environments; like near deep-sea hydrothermal vents, or even kms beneath earth’s crust.
    Abramov says that even impacts during the Late Heavy Bombardment (or LHB), the putative spike in the number of impacts from Main Belt Asteroids some 3.9 billion years ago would probably not have been enough to vaporize the oceans.
    Thus, Mojzsis says the commonly held view is that life on earth emerged sometime at or before the LHB. That’s well “after” the cataclysmic impact event that formed our moon, some 4.53 billion years ago.
    Hence the “window” for the emergence of life on our planet, says Mojzsis, is in earth’s geological “dark ages” between 4.51 and 3.9 billion years ago.
    “I strongly suspect that the origin of life happened on [earth], not much later than 4.4 billion years ago,” said Mojzsis. “That’s when we have the first direct evidence for chemically evolved crust interacting with liquid water in the form of the oldest terrestrial minerals from Western Australia.”
    Abramov points out that living microbes have been found kms below the surface deep in the earth’s crust. Thus, he reasons that if those areas were already colonized at the time of the Late Heavy Bombardment, then it would have been exceedingly difficult to sterilize such deep subsurfaces.
    “I’m running computer models that simulate the thermal conditions in the entire crust of the earth during various bombardment scenarios,” said Abramov. “What I’m seeing from the vast majority of my simulations is that it’s quite difficult to sterilize the planet using impacts.”
    If a bombardment-type scenario is not enough to sterilize a planet once life had started, what would be enough to do it?
    An extremely large impact, like the impact that formed the moon, says Abramov.
    “Essentially, you would have to melt most of the crust and heat the remainder of the crust to a temperature that’s not survivable by any kind of micro-organism,” said Abramov.
    What are we learning about how life evolved and held on here on earth that can be applied to astrobiology in general?
    Impacts and planetary bombardments, Abramov says, may in fact have a net positive effect on the processes leading to the origin and evolution of early life. They not only deliver essential elements for life, he says, but also create hydrothermal systems that may have provided a site for life’s origin.
    Hydrothermal vent tubeworms get organic compou...
    Hydrothermal vent tubeworms get organic compounds from bacteria that live in their trophosome. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
    Mojzsis says no one knows how life originates, but geologists can answer the question “when could life have emerged?” using geochemical tools and physical models.
    He notes that after the moon-forming event about 30-80 million years after the solar system formed, it took something like 2-3 million years for the earth to cool sufficiently to have a rocky surface rind (proto-crust) upon which liquid water could condense.
    “Once you have that at the global scale,” said Mojzsis, “then the planet’s pre-biotic chemical reactor could perform its work.”
    Could earth life have arisen before the moon-forming impact?
    “If there was life on earth before the giant impact that formed the moon, it was completely destroyed,” said Mojzsis. “But [since] Mars did not experience a moon-forming impact on the scale of earth’s, perhaps Mars is where we can answer [this] question.”
    Martian subsurface hotspots that still generate occasional hydrothermal activity might provide habitats for life even in the present day, says Abramov. Even so, he says, we’d have to drill several kms down to get to them.
    But from what we know now, is microbial life likely to be ubiquitous in the galaxy?
    “That’s still a big open question,” said Abramov. “We just don’t know if what happened on earth was unique or, given the right conditions, life starts easily.”

    iOS 7 Bug Lets Anyone Bypass iPhone's Lockscreen To Hijack Photos, Email, Or Twitter

    iOS 7 Bug Lets Anyone Bypass iPhone's Lockscreen To Hijack Photos, Email, Or Twitter



    Forget the debate around the security or insecurity of the iPhone 5s’s fingerprint reader. The latest version of the iPhone’s operating system currently offers a gaping hole in its old-fashioned passcode lockscreen.
    Jose Rodriguez, a 36-year-old soldier living in Spain’s Canary Islands, has found a security vulnerability in iOS 7 that allows anyone to bypass its lockscreen in seconds to access photos, email, Twitter, and more. He shared the technique with me, along with the video above.As the video shows, anyone can exploit the bug by swiping up on the lockscreen to access the phone’s “control center,” and then opening the alarm clock. Holding the phone’s sleep button brings up the option to power it off with a swipe. Instead, the intruder can tap “cancel” and double click the home button to enter the phone’s multitasking screen. That offers access to its camera and stored photos, along with the ability to share those photos from the user’s accounts, essentially allowing anyone who grabs the phone to hijack the user’s email, Twitter,Facebook FB +2.67% or Flickr account.
    I tested the technique on an iPhone 5 running iOS 7, and it worked. Rodriguez’s video shows it working on an iPad, too. It’s not yet clear if the same exploit can bypass the lockscreen of an iPhone 5s or 5c, but Rodriguez tells me he believes it will. I’ve reached out to Apple for comment and I’ll update this post if I hear from the company. Update: A spokesperson from Apple tells me that the company “takes security very seriously and we’re aware of this issue. We’ll deliver a fix in a future software update.”
    Rodriguez has a track record of finding lockscreen bypass bugs in iOS, many of which he says he dug up while killing time in his old job as a driver for government officials. “I had a lot of time to look at the scenery, break the phone or write poetry while waiting for my boss, and I don’t write poetry and already knew the landscape by heart,” he tells me via instant message and Google translate. So he spent hours “trying everything that goes through my head…I submit my iPhone to cruel methods of torture.”
    Rodriguez found a trick to bypass the lockscreen of iOS 6.1.3 in March, and then another one in iOS 7 beta. Though that beta bug was fixed in later versions of iOS 7, Rodriguez was able to find a new one within an hour of downloading the latest iPhone operating system by adapting tricks that worked on iOS 5 and 6. (He also tells me that this will be his last “hunting trip” for iPhone lockscreen bugs, as he has a new office job that demands more of his time.)
    The latest version of iOS patches 80 security vulnerabilities, according to a post on Apple’s security mailing list. Clearly the company’s security team also missed a big one.
    Update: A reader points out that anyone hoping to avoid this vulnerability until Apple issues a fix can prevent control center from appearing on their lockscreen by accessing “settings,” then “control center.” Some users are also reporting the trick isn’t working on their phones and tablets, though it may just take a little finesse to figure out the timing.

    Trouble Using iOS 7? Here Are 15 Tricks To Make The Transition Easier2


    Trouble Using iOS 7? Here Are 15 Tricks To Make The Transition Easier



    9.) Block People From Calling, Texting, And/Or “FaceTiming” You
    One of the features that I am most excited about is the ability to block someone from calling, messaging, or trying to FaceTime with you. Sometimes telemarketers that I have hung up on keep calling back.  Now I can easily block them after saving the number as a contact. If there is someone that keeps harassing you like a telemarketer or an ex-boyfriend, then you can simply block them.  This feature can be accessed from Settings -> Phone -> Blocked.
    10.) App Folders Are Now Paged
    In the previous version of iOS, each folder was limited to only 12 apps. The new version of iOS lets you add a lot more apps. This is supported through the use of multiple pages in each folder.  You can drag apps into folders by pushing down on an app icon until it starts wiggling.  Drag the app on top of another app or into a folder from there.  When adding a 10th app into a folder, the folder will create an additional page.
    11.) List View In Calendar
    One of the features that appears to be missing on first glance in the iOS 7 calendar is the list view. It is actually there, but is hidden from plain sight.  The list view feature is now tucked within the Calendar’s search function.  You can find the List view when opening the Calendar app and tapping on the magnifying glass icon at the top right.
    12.) Change Siri’s Language Or Voice To Male
    Ever since Apple announced Siri’s voice in the iPhone 4S model, it has always been a female voice. If you want to mix it up and change Siri’s voice and language, this can be adjusted under Settings -> General -> Siri.  Siri’s language can be changed from English to Cantonese, Mandarin, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, and Spanish.
    13.) Restrict Certain Apps To WiFi Only
    Some apps can be bigger cellular data usage hogs than others. For example, your Netflix app likely consumes more data than the Pandora app. There is a new feature in iOS 7 that lets you figure out what apps consume the most cellular data and then you can restrict them to WiFi only. This feature can be accessed by tapping on Settings -> Cellular and scrolling towards the bottom.
    14.) Background App Refresh Helps You Save Battery Life By Disabling Apps From Running In The Background
    A major reason why your battery gets drained throughout the day is because some apps collect data in the background. Now you can block apps from running in the background using iOS 7. To access this feature go to Settings -> General -> Background App Refresh. You can disable every app running in the background with one toggle switch or disable specific apps individually.
    15.) Mail Search Improved
    The search feature in the Mail app in previous versions of iOS had major issues. Sometimes when searching for an e-mail in previous iOS versions, it would say “Continue search on server,” only to give up without any results. Now the search feature in the Mail app actually works! For example, I did a search for “Delta” in my inbox and it actually found all of the results ranging from the most recent e-mail back all the way back to 2005 when I first started getting e-mails from the airline.
    Are there any iOS 7 features that you enjoy that was not mentioned in the list?                                           Please let us know in the comments!

    Trouble Using iOS 7? Here Are 15 Tricks To Make The Transition Easier


    Trouble Using iOS 7? Here Are 15 Tricks To Make The Transition Easier



    Apple AAPL -0.32% sold 9 million iPhones over the weekend and 200 million devices have upgraded to iOS 7 already.  This means that iOS 7 is the fastest software upgrade in history.  When Apple released iOS 7 to the public earlier this month, it was met with a lot of criticism.
    Many people believed the changes in iOS 7 were not as innovative as features like FaceTime and Siri. A lot of improvements have been made in iOS 7 from previous iOS versions though. Some changes are apparent, but many of the best features are hidden. Here are 15 of the best iOS 7 tricks that I found when upgrading over the weekend:
    1.) New Notification Center Settings
    Apple made many changes in the Notification Center. You can find the Notification Center when swiping from the top. The notifications are now grouped into “Today,” “Tomorrow,” and “Missed.” You can toggle these options under Settings -> General -> Notification Center.  Under these settings you can control items like Today Summary, Next Destination, Reminders, Stocks, and Tomorrow Summary from the Notification Center Settings console.
    2.) Swipe Up For Control Center
    One of the new features built into iOS 7 is called the Control Center.  The Control Center lets you quickly adjust the volume, Bluetooth, brightness, Airplane Mode, and portrait orientation.  There are also icons to quickly pull up apps like Flashlight, Camera, Calculator and Clock.  You can quickly access Control Center by swiping your finger from the bottom to the center.
    3.) Swipe From Center-To-Down For Search
    In the older versions of iOS, you could find the Spotlight Search feature by swiping all the way to the left. Search is no longer all the way to the left in iOS 7, but there is still a quick way to access search. Simply swipe your finger from the center of the screen to the bottom to pull up the Spotlight search bar at the top of the screen.
    4.) Adjusting The Text
    One of the best features added to iOS 7 is the ability to adjust text sizes and properties. You can find the text size properties under Settings -> General -> Text Size. You can also make the text bolder by adjusting the settings under Settings -> General -> Accessibility.
    5.) Automatic App Updates
    The App Store now has the ability to have apps automatically updated. You can set this up by going to Settings -> iTunes & App Store. Scroll towards the bottom until you see “Automatic Downloads.” Toggle the “Updates” switch so that it is on. By default, app updates require WiFi. You can set it to “Use Cellular Data” if you are not concerned about data usage caps.
    6.) Add Apps To Wish List From App Store
    There is a new feature within the App Store called “Wish List.” You can add paid apps to the “Wish List” as a future reference for apps that you want to buy later.  This feature can be used in the context of apps to buy your kids if they get a good grade in math class as a reward.  Some people may use this feature as a list of apps to buy when getting their next paycheck.  You can access this feature by opening the App Store and searching for a specific app.  Once the app is open, tap on the icon with the three lines at the top right.  Tap on the “Add To Wish List” icon from there.
    7.) Live Camera Photo Filters
    iOS 7 has built-in live photo filters so you no longer need to use Instagram to make your photos look creative. You can access this feature by opening the Camera app and tapping on the icon with three circles overlapping each other.  Most other photo filter apps requires you to take a photo first and then import them so a filter can be applied.  Seeing photo filters applied in real-time can be a major time-saver for photographers.
    8.) Reveal All Timestamps In Messages
    One of the most irritating issues in previous iOS versions was the lack of timestamps for every text message, iMessage, and SMS. In many cases, I would not know if a message was sent to me at 8:10PM or 8:15PM. Messages were lumped together under one timestamp. Now Apple lets you see individual timestamps by opening your messages and sliding your finger from right to left in a dragging motion.


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