Beware that many jailbreakers also install SSH on their devices. SSH comes with a default password "alpine" for the two users present on an iOS device (root and mobile). Both of them obviously need to be changed.
If a jailbreaker forgets to change both default passwords SSH access is wide open and malware can easily be installed from outside.
Actually I have always found the GUI part of Mac OS X Server troublesome, for the most part because the GUI actually modifies many of my regular.conf files and you can never be quite sure what they do.
I manage a few Mac OS X 10.6 Servers providing mail and web services. All configuration except (at the moment) for the addition/deletion of user accounts is done using SSH and home made configuration scripts. Much faster too.
I do not see what the title "Australia Considering IPhone App Censorship" has to do with the story. It's not about Apple nor about the iPhone or iPhone Apps and the title seems to refer to Apple's much discussed censorship on iApps which is not what this is about at all. Please change the title into "Game developers may drop Australian market" or something more appropriate.
That's a great summary of the situation. And in my view that's exactly what makes the difference between the iPad/iPhone and any more regular computing system like a PC, Linux or Mac box.
And cars can be chipped. And iPhones can be jailbroken. Jailbreaking an iPhone is so simple today that anyone could do it*, instead we complain that the system is too closed. By the way, some developers that were refused by Apple's store turn to Cydia instead. Cydia is an alternative appstore for jailbroken phones were you can get both free and commercial apps too.
My iPhone is indeed jailbroken. Not to install pirated software or to make it simlock free, instead I did it to overcome some major annoyances such as the lack of an easy switch to turn that annoying auto-rotation off. I can now internet laying on my side in bed.:-) SBSettings is a blessing. Maybe Apple should "invent" that too;-)
*but if you are so "adventurous" to install ssh please change both passwords (root & mobile)!
ClickToFlash http://clicktoflash.com/ is a godsend. Earlier on in this whole Flash debate broke loose someone mentioned it and I've installed it on all OS X systems I use. Some of those are quite old and slow but disabling Flash using ClickToFlash makes web browsing a whole lot quicker on those machines.
ClickToFlash presents the user with a grey square with the word Flash whenever Flash is encountered on a website. The user has the choice to load the Flash content when clicking on the square. Sites can be whitelisted. And as an extra the source url of the Flash content are shown when hovering over it so it's quite easy to distinguish adds.
From TFA: "When clocks struck midnight on January 1st and the dreaded Y2K bug turned out to be nothing but a mild irritant, it proved once again that the experts often don't know what the heck they're talking about."
Well, that kinda hurts.
I was responsible for a newspaper ordering system that definitely would have stopped processing orders in 2000. Cost quite a number of man hours. The majority of the Y2K my team had to solve weren't for the year 2000 but for passing into the year 1999 because many ordering systems had stupid (year+1) counters internally. It was a very stressful period and I very happy it went the way it did without major disasters.
The experts that didn't (and don't) know what they are talking about are the ones thinking you can upper-limit a year counter at 1999 (or 2039).
Gilmoure's article almost feels like it was posted just for the heck of it. Or he has very particular designer friends.
How could a switch to some open source alternatives be in anyway better than running a "not officially supported but otherwise proven" version? Every existing file would have to be converted, there would be many conversion issues. If the design friends are working for a design studio it would be MUCH cheaper to just upgrade to CS4. Or to stay with Mac OS X 10.5 for the time being.
Anybody that's making a living on production work using computers should stay away from version.0 upgrades anyhow.
Next time in a forum: "I've voluntarily upgraded to Mac OS X 10.6 and now my Photoshop documents are corrupted. All my customers are angry and I'm loosing a lot of money and all my customers go somewhere else. Sue Apple!"...
If you install a lot of non-Apple stuff you have to know how to use ssh/scp/rsync if you want to keep all your non-Apple-application data over upgrades. I usually make a rsync backup of my phone before I upgrade so that I can rsync stuff back afterwards. Keeping your packages is reatively easy, just list the ones you installed before upgrading (dbkg -l) and use apt-get to re-install them after upgrading. With the latest Cydia incarnation you have to use Cydia's GUI app to install apt-get after you upgrade. The average user would probably just use Cydia's GUI to install the three or so Cydia apps that got lost during the upgrade. And please change your ssh password (default = well known = alpine) if you leave ssh on. For both users (mobile, root).
That's not quite right. Firstly jailbreaking has almost nohing to do with the ability to make phone calls. Secondly the cat-and-mouse thing is not your call, you simply need to wait a bit longer before you upgrade your phone to the lastest and greatest. And thirdly when you acidentally do upgrade "the official Apple way" the jailbreak is gone and you are left with a perfectly working non jailbroken phone.
There is a side-effect to jailbreaking that's worrying Apple. Jailbreaking disables application signing. A jailbroken iPhone will run any software you compile yourself but it also runs any official AppStore packages you care to install on it. In other words apart from opening up the phone it also enables software piracy. And that's not a good thing for (commercial) developers IMO.
Maybe Google should distribute Latitude using Cydia (APT for iPhone, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cydia_(application)). This would provide everything it needs including background tasks and maybe, just maybe, it would be a wakeup call for Apple...
OR they buy a legitimate $1 gift certificate and use its number to create a $200 gift certificate. I can not imagine that they would make the mistake of not linking the part coding for the amount to the part making up the unique identifier. But who knows...
The administrator password prompt needs to change but for another reason in my view.
It's just too easy to fake one. And by reflex anyone will type in their administrator password without thinking. Malware writers could easily make use of that (and I'm still surprised why they don't). For instance simply hibernate in the background without root privileges and wait until it sees an Installer running and then prompt for an administrator password.
What I would like to see is a password prompt that can be verified as being genuine. I have no idea however how that could be accomplished.
No I don't sync the Music library, I sync iTunes' settings (iTunes Library; Album Artwork/; iTunes Library Genius.itdb; iTunes Music Library.xml;iTunes Music; iTunes Library Extras.itdb), as I said the Music library itself is on a common share.
To play the same music from outside your local subnet there are all sort of possibilities. For instance there's MyTunesRSS which let you play your music from any web browser supporting Flash (with a little bit of Apache configuration all you need is port 80 so it works almost everywhere); then there's a simple hack where you locally copy all traffic over TCP port to another TCP port and inject the proper mDNS stuff in a computer outside of your network and play your music anywhere using iTunes itself; or simply use Simplify Media and play your enitire music collection anywhere even using an iPhone over 3G in your car. And that's just three examples.
If you think even a little bit out of the box a lot of cool stuff is possible. I can't understand why all these Slashdot unix geeks are suddenly so limited and "locked up" as soon as they hear the word Apple. Behind that "pretty ui" there's another environment where a lot of nice stuff is possible.
Okay, I know this is not a Mac-like answer, but I simply rsync my iTunes library between computers and it works perfectly. The music is on a (read-only) share that can be reached on all computers. To sync the computers I launch a simple AppleScript application containing the rsync command.
1) There's an USB dongle available to add an ethernet port
2) I always carry an ethernet-to-wireless bridge with me (in my case an Airport Express, the size of a net adapter). Just connect it to the wire and create your own wireless network.
Apple didn't tell anyone to open a case with a screwdriver. In fact the "Apple experience" is to not have to open the case to replace any battery at all...
I found another one (well actually one of my customers did, by accident). It has been around for some time now.
Imagine the following scenario:
1) Mount a CD (or network volume, firewire disk, etc...) and copy the files you want to work on to your Mac. You can also duplicate an existing file to work on a duplicate.
2) Go to the program you want to work in and open the files (don't doubleclick them in the Finder, open them _from_ that application!).
3) Do half a day worth of work in that program (not essential to reproduce this bug, but that's what my client did). Save your work.
4) Then go to the Finder and accidentally press Apple-Z (undo). Then watch in horror as you see all your modified files disappear into nothingness...
(I would expect the Finder would be able to see the file has been modified but it doesn't take that into account.)
Verified in 10.4.10. Haven't got 10.5 yet, maybe you can try it there?
I've sent this to Apple (although not "officially" as a bug but as feedback) but so far the problem is still there.
Same here. We listen to lots of classical music (about half of our music is classical music). We (my wife and I) did lots of listening tests and in the end settled on 224 kb/s AAC. At that bitrate neither of us could differentiate between the coded versions and the original AIFF's of the CD's. Haven't yet tested the variable bit rate version though.
Beware that many jailbreakers also install SSH on their devices. SSH comes with a default password "alpine" for the two users present on an iOS device (root and mobile). Both of them obviously need to be changed.
If a jailbreaker forgets to change both default passwords SSH access is wide open and malware can easily be installed from outside.
Same here.
Actually I have always found the GUI part of Mac OS X Server troublesome, for the most part because the GUI actually modifies many of my regular .conf files and you can never be quite sure what they do.
I manage a few Mac OS X 10.6 Servers providing mail and web services. All configuration except (at the moment) for the addition/deletion of user accounts is done using SSH and home made configuration scripts. Much faster too.
Ernst Mulder
I do not see what the title "Australia Considering IPhone App Censorship" has to do with the story. It's not about Apple nor about the iPhone or iPhone Apps and the title seems to refer to Apple's much discussed censorship on iApps which is not what this is about at all. Please change the title into "Game developers may drop Australian market" or something more appropriate.
That's a great summary of the situation. And in my view that's exactly what makes the difference between the iPad/iPhone and any more regular computing system like a PC, Linux or Mac box.
And cars can be chipped. And iPhones can be jailbroken. Jailbreaking an iPhone is so simple today that anyone could do it*, instead we complain that the system is too closed. By the way, some developers that were refused by Apple's store turn to Cydia instead. Cydia is an alternative appstore for jailbroken phones were you can get both free and commercial apps too.
My iPhone is indeed jailbroken. Not to install pirated software or to make it simlock free, instead I did it to overcome some major annoyances such as the lack of an easy switch to turn that annoying auto-rotation off. I can now internet laying on my side in bed. :-) SBSettings is a blessing. Maybe Apple should "invent" that too ;-)
*but if you are so "adventurous" to install ssh please change both passwords (root & mobile)!
ClickToFlash http://clicktoflash.com/ is a godsend. Earlier on in this whole Flash debate broke loose someone mentioned it and I've installed it on all OS X systems I use. Some of those are quite old and slow but disabling Flash using ClickToFlash makes web browsing a whole lot quicker on those machines.
ClickToFlash presents the user with a grey square with the word Flash whenever Flash is encountered on a website. The user has the choice to load the Flash content when clicking on the square. Sites can be whitelisted. And as an extra the source url of the Flash content are shown when hovering over it so it's quite easy to distinguish adds.
So, we're not allowed to cross compile. While software compiled by Apple's developer tools are OK.
Isn't the workaround then to cross-compile to XCode source code instead?
I must have mistyped slashdot and accidentally entered thesun.co.uk... More coffee...
The differences in product design (packaging in this case) are nicely spelled out in this little parody :-)
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=36099539665548298#
From TFA: "When clocks struck midnight on January 1st and the dreaded Y2K bug turned out to be nothing but a mild irritant, it proved once again that the experts often don't know what the heck they're talking about."
Well, that kinda hurts.
I was responsible for a newspaper ordering system that definitely would have stopped processing orders in 2000. Cost quite a number of man hours. The majority of the Y2K my team had to solve weren't for the year 2000 but for passing into the year 1999 because many ordering systems had stupid (year+1) counters internally. It was a very stressful period and I very happy it went the way it did without major disasters.
The experts that didn't (and don't) know what they are talking about are the ones thinking you can upper-limit a year counter at 1999 (or 2039).
Gilmoure's article almost feels like it was posted just for the heck of it. Or he has very particular designer friends.
How could a switch to some open source alternatives be in anyway better than running a "not officially supported but otherwise proven" version? Every existing file would have to be converted, there would be many conversion issues. If the design friends are working for a design studio it would be MUCH cheaper to just upgrade to CS4. Or to stay with Mac OS X 10.5 for the time being.
Anybody that's making a living on production work using computers should stay away from version .0 upgrades anyhow.
Next time in a forum: "I've voluntarily upgraded to Mac OS X 10.6 and now my Photoshop documents are corrupted. All my customers are angry and I'm loosing a lot of money and all my customers go somewhere else. Sue Apple!"...
If you install a lot of non-Apple stuff you have to know how to use ssh/scp/rsync if you want to keep all your non-Apple-application data over upgrades. I usually make a rsync backup of my phone before I upgrade so that I can rsync stuff back afterwards. Keeping your packages is reatively easy, just list the ones you installed before upgrading (dbkg -l) and use apt-get to re-install them after upgrading. With the latest Cydia incarnation you have to use Cydia's GUI app to install apt-get after you upgrade. The average user would probably just use Cydia's GUI to install the three or so Cydia apps that got lost during the upgrade. And please change your ssh password (default = well known = alpine) if you leave ssh on. For both users (mobile, root).
That's not quite right. Firstly jailbreaking has almost nohing to do with the ability to make phone calls. Secondly the cat-and-mouse thing is not your call, you simply need to wait a bit longer before you upgrade your phone to the lastest and greatest. And thirdly when you acidentally do upgrade "the official Apple way" the jailbreak is gone and you are left with a perfectly working non jailbroken phone.
Unlocking however is something else entirely.
Oh apparently they already did. As of 30-7 "GV Mobile" version 1.2.2 is available in the ModMyi repository in Cydia for free. See http://www.iphonefootprint.com/2009/07/gv-mobile-and-other-google-voice-apps-goes-underground-for-jailbroken-iphone-users/. Official word from Sean Kovacs can be read here: http://www.seankovacs.com/index.php/2009/07/wow/.
There is a side-effect to jailbreaking that's worrying Apple. Jailbreaking disables application signing. A jailbroken iPhone will run any software you compile yourself but it also runs any official AppStore packages you care to install on it. In other words apart from opening up the phone it also enables software piracy. And that's not a good thing for (commercial) developers IMO.
Maybe Google should distribute Latitude using Cydia (APT for iPhone, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cydia_(application)). This would provide everything it needs including background tasks and maybe, just maybe, it would be a wakeup call for Apple...
OR they buy a legitimate $1 gift certificate and use its number to create a $200 gift certificate. I can not imagine that they would make the mistake of not linking the part coding for the amount to the part making up the unique identifier. But who knows...
The administrator password prompt needs to change but for another reason in my view.
It's just too easy to fake one. And by reflex anyone will type in their administrator password without thinking. Malware writers could easily make use of that (and I'm still surprised why they don't). For instance simply hibernate in the background without root privileges and wait until it sees an Installer running and then prompt for an administrator password.
What I would like to see is a password prompt that can be verified as being genuine. I have no idea however how that could be accomplished.
Ernst.
>
Only 30GB? :-)
No I don't sync the Music library, I sync iTunes' settings (iTunes Library; Album Artwork/; iTunes Library Genius.itdb; iTunes Music Library.xml ;iTunes Music; iTunes Library Extras.itdb), as I said the Music library itself is on a common share.
To play the same music from outside your local subnet there are all sort of possibilities. For instance there's MyTunesRSS which let you play your music from any web browser supporting Flash (with a little bit of Apache configuration all you need is port 80 so it works almost everywhere); then there's a simple hack where you locally copy all traffic over TCP port to another TCP port and inject the proper mDNS stuff in a computer outside of your network and play your music anywhere using iTunes itself; or simply use Simplify Media and play your enitire music collection anywhere even using an iPhone over 3G in your car. And that's just three examples.
If you think even a little bit out of the box a lot of cool stuff is possible. I can't understand why all these Slashdot unix geeks are suddenly so limited and "locked up" as soon as they hear the word Apple. Behind that "pretty ui" there's another environment where a lot of nice stuff is possible.
Okay, I know this is not a Mac-like answer, but I simply rsync my iTunes library between computers and it works perfectly. The music is on a (read-only) share that can be reached on all computers. To sync the computers I launch a simple AppleScript application containing the rsync command.
Concerning the lack of an ethernet port.
1) There's an USB dongle available to add an ethernet port
2) I always carry an ethernet-to-wireless bridge with me (in my case an Airport Express, the size of a net adapter). Just connect it to the wire and create your own wireless network.
I'd always go for #2.
Insightful?
Apple didn't tell anyone to open a case with a screwdriver. In fact the "Apple experience" is to not have to open the case to replace any battery at all...
Wow, cronoodleblitz has only one hit in Google!
I found another one (well actually one of my customers did, by accident). It has been around for some time now.
Imagine the following scenario:
1) Mount a CD (or network volume, firewire disk, etc...) and copy the files you want to work on to your Mac. You can also duplicate an existing file to work on a duplicate.
2) Go to the program you want to work in and open the files (don't doubleclick them in the Finder, open them _from_ that application!).
3) Do half a day worth of work in that program (not essential to reproduce this bug, but that's what my client did). Save your work.
4) Then go to the Finder and accidentally press Apple-Z (undo). Then watch in horror as you see all your modified files disappear into nothingness...
(I would expect the Finder would be able to see the file has been modified but it doesn't take that into account.)
Verified in 10.4.10. Haven't got 10.5 yet, maybe you can try it there?
I've sent this to Apple (although not "officially" as a bug but as feedback) but so far the problem is still there.
Same here. We listen to lots of classical music (about half of our music is classical music). We (my wife and I) did lots of listening tests and in the end settled on 224 kb/s AAC. At that bitrate neither of us could differentiate between the coded versions and the original AIFF's of the CD's. Haven't yet tested the variable bit rate version though.
> "Error 3" popping up when a program crashes usually /is not/ helpful.
A lot has changed in Mac OS ways since the dark days of Error 3 popping up. That must have been in the OS 9 days, say 1999 or so?
A lot of people seem to remember those old crashing Macs and think nothing has changed in the past 8 years.