I'm in the that process right now. Chase sucks. They do not want to provide services, they just want to collect to money and not do any work. My experiences with my credit union are still limited, but everyone I've talked to feel similar to you do about this CU.
Well, considering that list counted one virus 15 times, another 6 times, a couple twice, and 11 of them were not even for OS X? I'd say this toolkit should be good for a count of 50 or so.
your partially right.. First off, it doesn't track the user, it tracks cell towers. Second, if the phone see the SAME cell tower it doesn't create a new entry, it only updates the time stamp for the current entry. So one could see the most recent time you were near a cell tower about 2 miles from your ex-wife, but they would not know that go there every single night your current wife has been out of town.
I agree with you on preclinical, but let me ask you this. What if the intelligence in the field said that if we did try to capture, he would probably escape. And also, that if escape failed, he was well prepared to take as many of our troops with him as he could, including detonating the bunker if it came to that.
To put it another way, if attempting to take him alive would almost definitely result in more dead US troops, and had a very low chance of taking him alive, would you still disagree with bombing the bunker?
I give the tropes on site the benefit of the doubt that they would have taken alive if they safely could have.
Ok, I'll bite. Of the 43 listed, 11 are for Windows, leaving 32 for mac. (13 unique.) I broke then up into groups.
phishing;
*OSX_JAHLAV.A-M is a tojen that requies a user to download a DMG, install it with an admin password. It then changes the DNS to send to you phishing sites. It is listed 15 times as TM's list puts a seporate entry for each minor variation of the same malware.
*OSX_DNSCHAN.A is also malware masqurating as a video codec. It changes your DNS settings to hosts which are quickly shutdown. It is the same virus as OSX_RSPLUG.A and UNIX_DNSCHAN.A . It is listed 6 times on the list because TM counts each slight variant as a new virus.
backdoors;
*OSX_MUSMINIM.A is a backoriface type backdoor. It requries the user to type in their admin password to install. a simple firewall renderes it ineffective.
*OSX_LAMZEV.A is a backdoor that arrives via trojen. A firewall negates any ability.
*OSX_KROWI.A is a backdoor that was built into pirated version of iWork09.
dead;
*OSX_LEAP.A only infects non-up-to-date 10.4 (current is 10.6, 10.7 is due out soon.)
*OSX_INQTANA.A only infects non-up-to-date 10.4 (current is 10.6, 10.7 is due out soon.)
*OSX_MACARENA.A is a non-propagating proof-of-concept. does not work on any version OS X with all pathces applied.
junkware;
*OSX_IMUNIZATOR.A is a varient of OSX_MACSWEEP.A . It is an application the user must run. It tells the user it found malware and offers to sell them junk to remove it. Concidering a simple banner pop-up is just as dangerous I don't really think it's fair to count this.
worms;
*OSX_TORED.D a true worm, speads via e-mails. Only infects non-up-to-date systems.
games;
*OSX_LOSEGAM.A a game that has to be downloaded and ran by the user. It is a game where wrong moves delete random files on the system.
Same with most propitiatory software. If you go to the store and buy a Win7 upgrade and apply it to your Vista machine, your vista license is technically superseded by the Win7 license. You have no right to use Vista anymore even if you hate win7 for some reason.
1. (A)App Store is part of the iOS version your running. It can not up upgrade separately. (B) Apple doesn't send engineers to your house if your phone isn't working right. (C) I've shopped for houses in Cupertino at one point, if you live nearby Apple you live in a multi-million dollar house. You can afford to replace your cell phone every 4 years, thus solving your problem. (D) All firmware updates are handled by iTunes on any version of the iOS. This is done purposefully so iTunes can create a backup of all your data before it formats your system partition and then reinstall all the system software.
2. You just making things up. No version of iOS has had any airplay features removed. No iPhone or iPod has had the ability to be a remove speaker. Only the Airport Express and the AppleTV. All of which still have those features. No version of the AppleTV has had the ability to send audio to another device.
TM's only apply to the market they are in. There is absolute no problem with making a store that sells apples, (the fruit,) and calling it Apple Store. You can even get an Apple computer as your cash register if you wanted.
Amazon will loose. "App Store" is a valid trademark. A key distinction is that "App Store" is not actually a store at all. There is no merchandize, they don't buy and sell goods. They run a brokerage. You can call a brokerage "App Store". It is the same as if you ran a tutoring service and called it "Tutor Store". You aren't selling tutors your selling tutoring services. I can find precedence in US trademarks that agrees with this; there is a nightclub called "Liqueur Store".
(1) Your just flat wrong. no app can access the cache info.
(2) that doesn't even make any sense. The phone doesn't track it's actual position, it only tracks each cell tower's location and the last time it's seen it. It isn't even a running log, if it see the same cell tower again, it updates the time stamp, it does not create a new entry.
(3) they have that. it's called loopt. They have it for Android also. How is that relative?
(4) I agree, but again completely irrelevant to the discussion at hand. ANY info you can get out of the cache data you can get via the operator of the cell towers. In your case you'd need a court order either way. At lest if you had the iphone you'd have your own data without a court order.
Your political example would be have to based on logs from the call company. the iOS logs are neither accurate a enough, nor dated in a such way to be useful for your proposed purpse. You would only be able to see the most recent time that I connected to a cell tower in with-in range of a school, ( average US tower has about a 4 mile diameter.)
Again, there is not nearly enough data to compute the rate of travel.
You need to have your iphone users upgrade to iOS 3.0 or newer. Any firmware newer then 2 years old fully supports ActiveSync and policies. Curiously, not all Android phones actually support ActiveSync Policies. Some models simply tell the ActiveSync server they have features they don't. The password spamming behavior your explaining does not happen.
Actually, they raised the price. They just lowered the upfront expenditure.
Original price on the first iPhone, (top model,) was $599. The current top model iPhone4 is $699. AT&T subsidizes the device down to $299 then charges you higher rates to make up for it. (extra money for SMS, extra money for data, etc...)
afex, I have never owned an Android, but I've had iPhone from the beginning. My iPhone syncs mail, calendars, shared calenders, and contacts with my gmail account. Would you please elaborate what do you mean by Android's google account integration abilities?
You own a nice phone, no doubt, However, it's nothing like an iPhone. compared to a Galaxy S;
1. The S is expandable to 32GB. My iPhone has 32GB built-in with no need to worry about selecting the right, (reliable, fast,) SD card at the right price.
2. Unless you actually own a second battery and charger for it this just means your phone is larger and heavier then it needs to be.
3. It doesn't use the standard Apple 30-pin cable that every iPod, iPad, and iPhone has come with since the beginning of time. 3rd party versions commonly purchased anywhere for about $5. You'll need to bother with figuring out if the cable is standard USB, Mini-A, Mini-B, Micro-A, or Micro-B. Will it work the 3rd party device you want to use it with? (car stereo, speaker base, TV, etc...) You do like an iPhone owner and simply look for the "Made for IPod/Works with iPhone" stickers on it. It probably just wont.
4. You can't syncs music, TV, and movies, (purchased from itunes,) automatically across all your computers and mobile devices via itunes. I understand there is some work to create something similar for Android, but so far little has happened. If you don't care about video media, I suppose this is less of issue, as you can, with a little bit of configuring stuff, accomplish this with music only using a kluge of 3rd party software packages and services.
5. Doesn't sync with itunes. If you lose your phone, or drop it water, or it just fails you lose your data. If you had an iPhone you just get the replacement, plug it into your computer and everything is restores exactly the way it was on your last sync.
6. Within 5 minutes of getting an iPhone you cna do things just like an iPhone. Features both devices do evenly really isn't a point in your favor. Lets change this one to, "Within 5 minutes of getting my phone I can deposit checks into my bank account." Oh wait that is an iPhone only feature. oops.
7. I can't use the same response here, because there isn't feature parity. You can not copy and paste anything buy txt.
9. Wow, you mean just like an iPhone?
10. That is partially true, (the rules have always seemed pretty clear to me,) but I can run A LOT more software and get accomplish more tasks then anyone with an Android anything.
11. My computer came with the development tools for iOS included.
12. Yay, again, just like an iphone!
I'm surprised at all the tech people here whom are so far behind the tech curve. Being able to use a computer is no longer a specialty. It is expected of any worker to be able to use and maintain a computer for job specific tasks. While I have meet some admins that were very restrictive of their networks, they usually did so out of fear and ignorance. They didn't want anything they didn't issue because they didn't know what might happen. Most professionals realize that a computer not issued by them is not the boggie-man.
I thought the pop-up comes up before the buy it screen.... regardless, the issue your describing is not existent. All of the apps you have installed are sync into your iTunes. You don't have to do any redownloading. Just plug iphone into iTunes, it'll sync, then click restore, (wait,) select if you want to restore your profile or start clean, it restores everything you had including your Apps, or if you went with a clean slate it will install every app you have in your iTunes. I have apps I bought on my Original launch-day iPhone that are still on my phone, several replacements and upgrades later.
Your purchase history is accessible via iTunes for mac or PC. Not via your itunes for iOS. But, then again the chase.app and esurance.app also only offer limited information over their iOS app. How much info go your banking and insurance companies offer you via an iOS app? All your apps will be restore during your first sync, which is started automatically as the last step in a restore. Get a mac. iTunes is pretty good for mac. I do agree it's not that it just doesn't translate well to windows. The design concepts and process flow are too foreign.
I agree that Safari in windows is a completely different experience then safari on OSX. On OSX I use Safari exclusively. On Windows I use a mix of Firefox and Chrome.
no there is not difference. People whom think there is do not understand the meaning of the word.
I'm in the that process right now. Chase sucks. They do not want to provide services, they just want to collect to money and not do any work. My experiences with my credit union are still limited, but everyone I've talked to feel similar to you do about this CU.
Dr. Who uses macs. In fact in the (Dr. Who) future everyone uses mac. http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2008/06/doctor-who-uses/
Well, considering that list counted one virus 15 times, another 6 times, a couple twice, and 11 of them were not even for OS X? I'd say this toolkit should be good for a count of 50 or so.
your partially right.. First off, it doesn't track the user, it tracks cell towers. Second, if the phone see the SAME cell tower it doesn't create a new entry, it only updates the time stamp for the current entry. So one could see the most recent time you were near a cell tower about 2 miles from your ex-wife, but they would not know that go there every single night your current wife has been out of town.
um... I mean, "I agree with you on principal" preclinical does not make any sense at all.
I agree with you on preclinical, but let me ask you this. What if the intelligence in the field said that if we did try to capture, he would probably escape. And also, that if escape failed, he was well prepared to take as many of our troops with him as he could, including detonating the bunker if it came to that. To put it another way, if attempting to take him alive would almost definitely result in more dead US troops, and had a very low chance of taking him alive, would you still disagree with bombing the bunker? I give the tropes on site the benefit of the doubt that they would have taken alive if they safely could have.
Ok, I'll bite. Of the 43 listed, 11 are for Windows, leaving 32 for mac. (13 unique.) I broke then up into groups. phishing; *OSX_JAHLAV.A-M is a tojen that requies a user to download a DMG, install it with an admin password. It then changes the DNS to send to you phishing sites. It is listed 15 times as TM's list puts a seporate entry for each minor variation of the same malware. *OSX_DNSCHAN.A is also malware masqurating as a video codec. It changes your DNS settings to hosts which are quickly shutdown. It is the same virus as OSX_RSPLUG.A and UNIX_DNSCHAN.A . It is listed 6 times on the list because TM counts each slight variant as a new virus. backdoors; *OSX_MUSMINIM.A is a backoriface type backdoor. It requries the user to type in their admin password to install. a simple firewall renderes it ineffective. *OSX_LAMZEV.A is a backdoor that arrives via trojen. A firewall negates any ability. *OSX_KROWI.A is a backdoor that was built into pirated version of iWork09. dead; *OSX_LEAP.A only infects non-up-to-date 10.4 (current is 10.6, 10.7 is due out soon.) *OSX_INQTANA.A only infects non-up-to-date 10.4 (current is 10.6, 10.7 is due out soon.) *OSX_MACARENA.A is a non-propagating proof-of-concept. does not work on any version OS X with all pathces applied. junkware; *OSX_IMUNIZATOR.A is a varient of OSX_MACSWEEP.A . It is an application the user must run. It tells the user it found malware and offers to sell them junk to remove it. Concidering a simple banner pop-up is just as dangerous I don't really think it's fair to count this. worms; *OSX_TORED.D a true worm, speads via e-mails. Only infects non-up-to-date systems. games; *OSX_LOSEGAM.A a game that has to be downloaded and ran by the user. It is a game where wrong moves delete random files on the system.
my AT&T plan sans data and txt is $33/month. If I switched phones to a non-iphone it would still be $33/month + txt
Same with most propitiatory software. If you go to the store and buy a Win7 upgrade and apply it to your Vista machine, your vista license is technically superseded by the Win7 license. You have no right to use Vista anymore even if you hate win7 for some reason.
1. (A)App Store is part of the iOS version your running. It can not up upgrade separately. (B) Apple doesn't send engineers to your house if your phone isn't working right. (C) I've shopped for houses in Cupertino at one point, if you live nearby Apple you live in a multi-million dollar house. You can afford to replace your cell phone every 4 years, thus solving your problem. (D) All firmware updates are handled by iTunes on any version of the iOS. This is done purposefully so iTunes can create a backup of all your data before it formats your system partition and then reinstall all the system software. 2. You just making things up. No version of iOS has had any airplay features removed. No iPhone or iPod has had the ability to be a remove speaker. Only the Airport Express and the AppleTV. All of which still have those features. No version of the AppleTV has had the ability to send audio to another device.
nono, your misinformed! They now paint the glass with a different color paint!
Also, Apple only purse cases where they company using "pod" in reference to an iPod, mp3 player, itunes, or something related to them.
TM's only apply to the market they are in. There is absolute no problem with making a store that sells apples, (the fruit,) and calling it Apple Store. You can even get an Apple computer as your cash register if you wanted.
Amazon will loose. "App Store" is a valid trademark. A key distinction is that "App Store" is not actually a store at all. There is no merchandize, they don't buy and sell goods. They run a brokerage. You can call a brokerage "App Store". It is the same as if you ran a tutoring service and called it "Tutor Store". You aren't selling tutors your selling tutoring services. I can find precedence in US trademarks that agrees with this; there is a nightclub called "Liqueur Store".
(1) Your just flat wrong. no app can access the cache info. (2) that doesn't even make any sense. The phone doesn't track it's actual position, it only tracks each cell tower's location and the last time it's seen it. It isn't even a running log, if it see the same cell tower again, it updates the time stamp, it does not create a new entry. (3) they have that. it's called loopt. They have it for Android also. How is that relative? (4) I agree, but again completely irrelevant to the discussion at hand. ANY info you can get out of the cache data you can get via the operator of the cell towers. In your case you'd need a court order either way. At lest if you had the iphone you'd have your own data without a court order. Your political example would be have to based on logs from the call company. the iOS logs are neither accurate a enough, nor dated in a such way to be useful for your proposed purpse. You would only be able to see the most recent time that I connected to a cell tower in with-in range of a school, ( average US tower has about a 4 mile diameter.) Again, there is not nearly enough data to compute the rate of travel.
You need to have your iphone users upgrade to iOS 3.0 or newer. Any firmware newer then 2 years old fully supports ActiveSync and policies. Curiously, not all Android phones actually support ActiveSync Policies. Some models simply tell the ActiveSync server they have features they don't. The password spamming behavior your explaining does not happen.
Actually, they raised the price. They just lowered the upfront expenditure. Original price on the first iPhone, (top model,) was $599. The current top model iPhone4 is $699. AT&T subsidizes the device down to $299 then charges you higher rates to make up for it. (extra money for SMS, extra money for data, etc...)
afex, I have never owned an Android, but I've had iPhone from the beginning. My iPhone syncs mail, calendars, shared calenders, and contacts with my gmail account. Would you please elaborate what do you mean by Android's google account integration abilities?
You own a nice phone, no doubt, However, it's nothing like an iPhone. compared to a Galaxy S; 1. The S is expandable to 32GB. My iPhone has 32GB built-in with no need to worry about selecting the right, (reliable, fast,) SD card at the right price. 2. Unless you actually own a second battery and charger for it this just means your phone is larger and heavier then it needs to be. 3. It doesn't use the standard Apple 30-pin cable that every iPod, iPad, and iPhone has come with since the beginning of time. 3rd party versions commonly purchased anywhere for about $5. You'll need to bother with figuring out if the cable is standard USB, Mini-A, Mini-B, Micro-A, or Micro-B. Will it work the 3rd party device you want to use it with? (car stereo, speaker base, TV, etc...) You do like an iPhone owner and simply look for the "Made for IPod/Works with iPhone" stickers on it. It probably just wont. 4. You can't syncs music, TV, and movies, (purchased from itunes,) automatically across all your computers and mobile devices via itunes. I understand there is some work to create something similar for Android, but so far little has happened. If you don't care about video media, I suppose this is less of issue, as you can, with a little bit of configuring stuff, accomplish this with music only using a kluge of 3rd party software packages and services. 5. Doesn't sync with itunes. If you lose your phone, or drop it water, or it just fails you lose your data. If you had an iPhone you just get the replacement, plug it into your computer and everything is restores exactly the way it was on your last sync. 6. Within 5 minutes of getting an iPhone you cna do things just like an iPhone. Features both devices do evenly really isn't a point in your favor. Lets change this one to, "Within 5 minutes of getting my phone I can deposit checks into my bank account." Oh wait that is an iPhone only feature. oops. 7. I can't use the same response here, because there isn't feature parity. You can not copy and paste anything buy txt. 9. Wow, you mean just like an iPhone? 10. That is partially true, (the rules have always seemed pretty clear to me,) but I can run A LOT more software and get accomplish more tasks then anyone with an Android anything. 11. My computer came with the development tools for iOS included. 12. Yay, again, just like an iphone!
I'm surprised at all the tech people here whom are so far behind the tech curve. Being able to use a computer is no longer a specialty. It is expected of any worker to be able to use and maintain a computer for job specific tasks. While I have meet some admins that were very restrictive of their networks, they usually did so out of fear and ignorance. They didn't want anything they didn't issue because they didn't know what might happen. Most professionals realize that a computer not issued by them is not the boggie-man.
I thought the pop-up comes up before the buy it screen.... regardless, the issue your describing is not existent. All of the apps you have installed are sync into your iTunes. You don't have to do any redownloading. Just plug iphone into iTunes, it'll sync, then click restore, (wait,) select if you want to restore your profile or start clean, it restores everything you had including your Apps, or if you went with a clean slate it will install every app you have in your iTunes. I have apps I bought on my Original launch-day iPhone that are still on my phone, several replacements and upgrades later.
Your purchase history is accessible via iTunes for mac or PC. Not via your itunes for iOS. But, then again the chase.app and esurance.app also only offer limited information over their iOS app. How much info go your banking and insurance companies offer you via an iOS app? All your apps will be restore during your first sync, which is started automatically as the last step in a restore. Get a mac. iTunes is pretty good for mac. I do agree it's not that it just doesn't translate well to windows. The design concepts and process flow are too foreign.
I agree that Safari in windows is a completely different experience then safari on OSX. On OSX I use Safari exclusively. On Windows I use a mix of Firefox and Chrome.
It is the same suckitude on windows, just people are used to their computers being shit they don't notice.