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Posts Tagged ‘Frame’

Apple Blindsides More AppStore Developers

June 1st, 2010 06:48 admin No comments

For a while now Apple has said it doesn’t want “widget-like” apps in the store; but where is the boundary of that fuzzy statement? The developers of My Frame, of which three versions had already been approved for the iPhone/iPad, found out that they had already crossed it when Apple pulled their app. My Frame had options to overlay data on whatever photo was displaying: a Twitter stream, weather, etc. When one of the developers wrote to Steve Jobs on a whim to ask what unwritten rule their app had violated, Jobs wrote back: “We are not allowing apps that create their own desktops. Sorry.” “I see now why people are so angry at the ‘murky’ nature of the App Store, and I’m starting to agree with them. My Frame was approved by Apple 3 times (once for each version we released), and… now, at version 1.2 they decide it’s to be removed? How can a company be prepared to invest into a platform that can change at any time, cutting you off and kicking you out, with no course of action but to whine on some no-name blog[?] There is no alternative platform, despite what others may say about Android, it’s immature and their app store(s) are a wild west nightmare. It really is Apple’s way or the highway…” A few blogs have picked up the story.

Source: Apple Blindsides More AppStore Developers

Busting, and Fixing, Frame Busting

May 25th, 2010 05:55 admin No comments

An anonymous reader writes “A study presented last week at the IEEE Web Security and Privacy workshop shows that frame busting code used at popular Web sites is easily circumvented. Frame busting is a widely used technique to prevent clickjacking attacks. The researchers propose better frame busting code and suggest that Web sites migrate to this new code.”

Source: Busting, and Fixing, Frame Busting

Theoretical Breakthrough For Quantum Cryptography

March 8th, 2010 03:23 admin No comments

KentuckyFC writes Quantum cryptography uses the quantum properties of photons to guarantee perfect secrecy. But one of its lesser known limitations is that it only works if Alice and Bob are perfectly aligned so that they can carry out well-defined polarization measurements on the photons as they arrive. Physicists say that Alice and Bob must share the same reference frame. That’s OK if Alice and Bob are in their own ground-based labs, but it’s a problem in many other applications, such as ground-to-satellite communications or even in chip-to-chip communications, because it’s hard to keep chips still over distances of the order of the wavelength of light. Now a group of UK physicists have developed a way of doing quantum cryptography without sharing a reference frame. The trick is to use entangled triplets of photons, so-called qutrits, rather than entangled pairs. This solves the problem by embedding it in an extra abstract dimension, which is independent of space. So, as long as both Alice and Bob know the way in which all these abstract dimensions are related, the third provides a reference against which measurements of the other two can be made. That allows Alice and Bob to make any measurements they need without having to agree ahead of time on a frame of reference. That could be an important advance enabling the widespread use of quantum cryptography.”

Source: Theoretical Breakthrough For Quantum Cryptography

Google and NSA Teaming Up

February 4th, 2010 02:28 admin No comments

i_frame writes “The Washington Post reports that ‘Under an agreement that is still being finalized, the National Security Agency would help Google analyze a major corporate espionage attack that the firm said originated in China and targeted its computer networks, according to cybersecurity experts familiar with the matter. The objective is to better defend Google — and its users — from future attack.’”

Source: Google and NSA Teaming Up

Tablet Photos Look Like Real Deal

January 27th, 2010 01:04 admin No comments

These photos purportedly show the Apple Tablet, locked down in a security frame. They were sent by an undisclosed source to Engadget, and, to my eye at least, appear to be the real thing.

Source: Tablet Photos Look Like Real Deal

Kodak Wireless Picture Frames Open To Public

January 5th, 2010 01:07 admin No comments

Jaxoreth writes “The Kodak Easyshare Wireless Digital Picture Frame displays images via a per-frame RSS feed hosted by FrameChannel. Each frame’s URL is identical except for a parameter matching its particular MAC address, enabling public browsing of users’ feeds. And worse, if you reach the feed of a not-yet-activated frame, it gives you the code to activate it, allowing you to preload it with whatever content you choose.”

Source: Kodak Wireless Picture Frames Open To Public