AMITIAE - Monday 17 September 2012
Cassandra - Monday Review: It will soon be Friday |
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By Graham K. Rogers
Opening Gambit:Shock and awe with the iPhone 5: I have this elsewhere. Apple and iPhone related news. Another Apple v Samsung patent result. OS X update imminent. iPhone accessories and availability: iPhone blueprints online. Apple's 100 acre, 20 MW solar panel array: another one the same size coming soon. Huawei and Western authorities: the doors are still shut. What's App - security problems.
Apple StuffThere is still much feedback from the Apple event last week and the iPhone 5 announcements. I have so much information that it again makes sense for me to create a Cassandra supplement on the iPhone this Monday and collect many of the ideas in there. Rather than the incremental upgrade that some have been moaning about, there are (as often is the case with Apple) some real advances under the hood.
The specific patents covered "related to 3G wireless technology, the format of data packets for high-speed transmission, and integrating functions like web surfing with mobile phone functions" we read on Reuters.
I checked a number of times over the weekend but nothing is available as yet. And I checked again early Monday morning just to be sure.
I do have a couple of accessories for the iPhone that I consider important: the olloclip lens kit and the Glif tripod support. I saw that olloclip -- who have some spiffy new web pages now -- will produce a new version of the lens kit. A shame really, but in a Tweet, they write that the "new iPhone 5 is thinner and camera is in a different spot so we are working on a new olloclip." The "thinner" aspect may be a small problem, but camera location cannot be easily dealt with. I have written to Glif about the tripod support but it was only at the weekend and do not expect a reply just yet. I would expect them also to produce a new version of the device, but in the email noted that the difference is only some 1.7mm (iPhone 5, 7.6mm; iPhone 4S, 9.3mm) and wonder if an insert may suffice.
So far I have
Other MattersI mentioned not so long ago how the UK, US and Australian authorities are a little worried about Huawei and the allegation that there are back-doors in its server hardware, allowing not millions of Chinese to sneak in, but millions of Bytes of date to be sneaked out. Huawei has cried Foul in the Antipodes and says it was banned without knowing why, we read in an article by Don Reisinger. Odd that I would know why they have been locked out. . . . The article has a number of interesting points concerning the US questions concerning this and the representatives, "fretted about the company's ties with the government in Beijing." And this is the approach Australia is sticking to.
The Tories of course are dead against hacking, so it is a little surprising (or not, depending on how cynical one is) to find that the Member for Welwyn Hatfield, Grant Shapps, who is also Conservative Party Co-Chair, has another name, Michael Green, John Biggs reports on Tech Crunch. And it is with this other name that he runs a link farm service: it "scrapes the web for related content, runs it through a thesaurus, and posts thousands of copies everywhere." More on this in the TechCrunch article.
There was more on this as Google's Andy Rubin tried to calm the waters by telling the press that Aliyun was "a forked version of Android . . . modified to the extent that it's incompatible with other Android devices". He added, "As a member of the Open Handset Alliance, Acer is forbidden from using such an operating system" Roger Cheng reports. Back came the response that Aliyun is not Android so does not have to be compatible. Amazon are not members of the club, so they can do what they like. Samsung is and for now is restricted. We shall see how that one plays out. The article was again updated on Saturday to include information from Alibaba that explains more about the intentions. More comment on this comes from Liz Gannes on All Things Digital.
Local ItemsNo technology, just rain this weekend. Up to my knees on Friday reminding me of the good old days last November, except that the Minister of Science tells us that this is not a flood, but excess rainwater. There is precious little difference when your smart work pants are rolled up to the knees, expensive shoes are carried in a bag and you have to walk barefoot through lots of water dodging the waves from inconsiderate motorists.
Graham K. Rogers teaches at the Faculty of Engineering, Mahidol University in Thailand. He wrote in the Bangkok Post, Database supplement on IT subjects. For the last seven years of Database he wrote a column on Apple and Macs. |
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