Apple has a long list of design patents for the iPhone. These specificly only cover cosmetic elements. The US is the only country in the world that uses the word patent for this. In other countries they are called registered designs.
Versions before 4.1 are extra vulnerable because stagefright has more privileges in those versions; I think the difference is that stage fright is sandboxed in 4.1+, but not in previous versions. So, 4.1+ is limited, an understatement, to unfettered access to the camera, microphone and storage barring the use of an additional exploit. 4.0- is totally screwed.
I think iOS updates have to jump through the same carrier hoops as Android. The difference is that Apple only has a small number of devices that need to be tested so it's faster and easier for them to roll out updates.
In my experience most of the terribleness comes from users deeming themselves the keeper of the article and revert every change that isn't made by them even simple typo fixes, mistyped links or formatting errors. It's even possible to automate this using functionality built in to Wikipedia. Higher level users gain access to a feature called Rollback that undos all the changes made by the last editor. I've read that some people set up scripts that automatically rollback every change except those made by them.
The irresponsible part is that OpenSSL does not even compile if you decide your system malloc is fine to use. It is impossible to avoid using OpenSSL's buggy allocator.
There's also the small difference of LTE being hundreds of times faster than EDGE in practice. We've gone from EDGE speeds in the tens of kilobytes per second to LTE speeds in single megabytes or even tens of megabytes per second. The telecom companies in the US overcharge like crazy, but I doubt AT&T can provide unlimited LTE at any cost let alone a reasonable one.
According to the article, DHS overstated the severity of the problem and corrected themselves later. Of course, everyone remembers the false report and never the correction. God knows what EDA was told by DHS at first.
The interesting thing is the word solely. Hypothetically, if this app had covered several modern conflicts around the globe rather than specifically Syria it would not have been banned. I get the feeling Apple is trying curb apps that are overtly or covertly racist and there's always going to be legitimate apps that are afoul. On the other hand, the guidelines did originally suggest writing a book if you had some political viewpoint to express.
Pixel was completely misused in the article. He's working an image scaling algorithm for photos. That isn't saying that it's not noteworthy, interesting or important; it looks like it works great and I'm not aware of anything that produces results that good on photos. There is the Hqx family of filters, but those were designed for emulators and aren't meant to be used with more than 256 colors.
MNG is the "official" animated version. APNG was rejected as an official extension. However, APNG is backwards compatible with PNG, a static image is displayed instead of an animated one in browsers that don't support it, and it also supported by more browsers. Firefox 3+ and Opera 9.5+ support APNG, but only Konqueror currently supports MNG out of the box.
Plus, it runs on the most platforms; Windows, OS X, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, Symbian* and Windows Mobile*; and it's just vanilla HTML, JS and SVG zipped up.
*Once Opera Mobile 9.5 ships.
PC Gamer had "PC Gamer Radio" when Shoutcast was first released. It was basically the same thing, but it was a stream at a specific time each week rather than a download. The only difference is that now "podcasting" is the lastest craze rather than streaming audio. Ziff-Davis Publishing even had an entire website of ad-free streaming talk shows called Give Me Talk which is unsurprisingly gone.
The situation with Star Control is really weird. Accolade, now part of Infogrames, owned the name Star Control but nothing else. Toys for Bob, the developer and just recently bought by Activision, owned everything else.
There are two possible things that could happen. The first is that a Star Control 4 from Infogrames is made but won't feature anything from the other games except the new stuff from SC3. Odds are that it'll be terrible. The second possibility is that Activision publishes a sequel to SC2, but with a completely different name and never mentioning the others by name. The non-SC fan will be completely confused causing the game to sell terribly.
There was a Star Control 4 in developement under the name StarCon. It was supposed to be released on the PC and PSX, but not much was shown before it was canceled. Link
They'll probably just bring the NES games to SNES quality graphics then run everything through a filter. That wouldn't neccessarily be a bad thing since Yoshi's Island looks amazing using hq3x.
Apple has a long list of design patents for the iPhone. These specificly only cover cosmetic elements. The US is the only country in the world that uses the word patent for this. In other countries they are called registered designs.
Versions before 4.1 are extra vulnerable because stagefright has more privileges in those versions; I think the difference is that stage fright is sandboxed in 4.1+, but not in previous versions. So, 4.1+ is limited, an understatement, to unfettered access to the camera, microphone and storage barring the use of an additional exploit. 4.0- is totally screwed.
That part of PayPal is an official bank with FDIC insurance so there's no regulation skirting.
I think iOS updates have to jump through the same carrier hoops as Android. The difference is that Apple only has a small number of devices that need to be tested so it's faster and easier for them to roll out updates.
In my experience most of the terribleness comes from users deeming themselves the keeper of the article and revert every change that isn't made by them even simple typo fixes, mistyped links or formatting errors. It's even possible to automate this using functionality built in to Wikipedia. Higher level users gain access to a feature called Rollback that undos all the changes made by the last editor. I've read that some people set up scripts that automatically rollback every change except those made by them.
The irresponsible part is that OpenSSL does not even compile if you decide your system malloc is fine to use. It is impossible to avoid using OpenSSL's buggy allocator.
There's also the small difference of LTE being hundreds of times faster than EDGE in practice. We've gone from EDGE speeds in the tens of kilobytes per second to LTE speeds in single megabytes or even tens of megabytes per second. The telecom companies in the US overcharge like crazy, but I doubt AT&T can provide unlimited LTE at any cost let alone a reasonable one.
According to the article, DHS overstated the severity of the problem and corrected themselves later. Of course, everyone remembers the false report and never the correction. God knows what EDA was told by DHS at first.
The interesting thing is the word solely. Hypothetically, if this app had covered several modern conflicts around the globe rather than specifically Syria it would not have been banned. I get the feeling Apple is trying curb apps that are overtly or covertly racist and there's always going to be legitimate apps that are afoul. On the other hand, the guidelines did originally suggest writing a book if you had some political viewpoint to express.
Pixel was completely misused in the article. He's working an image scaling algorithm for photos. That isn't saying that it's not noteworthy, interesting or important; it looks like it works great and I'm not aware of anything that produces results that good on photos. There is the Hqx family of filters, but those were designed for emulators and aren't meant to be used with more than 256 colors.
It is backwards compatible with DS and DSiWare games. That was said during the keynote but articles don't seem to mention it for some reason.
Do they mean it this time?
MNG is the "official" animated version. APNG was rejected as an official extension. However, APNG is backwards compatible with PNG, a static image is displayed instead of an animated one in browsers that don't support it, and it also supported by more browsers. Firefox 3+ and Opera 9.5+ support APNG, but only Konqueror currently supports MNG out of the box.
Plus, it runs on the most platforms; Windows, OS X, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, Symbian* and Windows Mobile*; and it's just vanilla HTML, JS and SVG zipped up.
*Once Opera Mobile 9.5 ships.
"Attempted murder! They don't give out a Nobel Prize in Attempted Chemistry!"
The problem is that the demo was released 9 months after the game.
Considering people having been doing this for at least eight years without issue, never.
Xfce in the repos is listed as being 4.3.90. It's technically a development release, but it's been very stable in my experience.
when it was called The Mushroom.
w ww.themushroom.com/index.html
Archive.org link:
http://web.archive.org/web/20010605231349/http://
In Deus Ex, the original plan was to have a male and female protaganist. The problem was that they couldn't do both and have it fit on one disc.
Actually, the novelization of Return to Krondor is Krondor: Tear of the Gods. Assassins takes place between the two.
PC Gamer had "PC Gamer Radio" when Shoutcast was first released. It was basically the same thing, but it was a stream at a specific time each week rather than a download. The only difference is that now "podcasting" is the lastest craze rather than streaming audio. Ziff-Davis Publishing even had an entire website of ad-free streaming talk shows called Give Me Talk which is unsurprisingly gone.
The situation with Star Control is really weird. Accolade, now part of Infogrames, owned the name Star Control but nothing else. Toys for Bob, the developer and just recently bought by Activision, owned everything else.
There are two possible things that could happen. The first is that a Star Control 4 from Infogrames is made but won't feature anything from the other games except the new stuff from SC3. Odds are that it'll be terrible. The second possibility is that Activision publishes a sequel to SC2, but with a completely different name and never mentioning the others by name. The non-SC fan will be completely confused causing the game to sell terribly.
There was a Star Control 4 in developement under the name StarCon. It was supposed to be released on the PC and PSX, but not much was shown before it was canceled. Link
It's nice to see Ralph Baer get the respect that he deserves even if it's from G4.
They'll probably just bring the NES games to SNES quality graphics then run everything through a filter. That wouldn't neccessarily be a bad thing since Yoshi's Island looks amazing using hq3x.