Ubuntu Touch OS gets an October 17th release date, Nexus first in line

While the Ubuntu Edge smartphone plan and kickstarter didn’t last, their plan to merge our smartphones and desktops onto one OS did, and Ubuntu Touch is set to launch in exactly one month. Canonical has confirmed the launch date for their new Touch OS is in exactly one month, and will be free starting October 17th.

Ubuntu

A recent blog post by their community leader has additional details, as well as a full list of supported devices. Which for those who don’t know, are basically a bunch of Nexus devices. While we all enjoy Android 4.3 Jelly Bean, Canonical hopes we’ll toss Ubuntu Touch on our phones and Nexus 10 tablet instead.

A part of the release on the 17th will be an OS image completely ready to be installed for their entire supported device list, and you’ll be able to flash away and start enjoying their touch and gesture-based OS within minutes. So long as you have the know-how to flash said image. A custom recovery is nearly all you need, so we’re excited for the 17th to roll around.

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As a reminder, the video above was very early in the alpha stages from January. The BETA has severely changed since being released in February, and earlier this summer they talked about having all the main “daily driver” features ready within 30 days. And now it looks like all those have been completed, and they feel comfortable with an initial Touch OS release next month.

They’re calling it Phone 1.0, but surely updates and improvements will arrive at a very quick pace, so that name won’t last too long. Canonical also state we can expect to see actual devices (not Nexus smartphones and tablets) actually ship with the OS later this year or in early 2014.

VIA: SlashGear

Jolla phone hardware specs published, to ship end of 2013

Jolla, the company behind the peculiar new smartphone and Sailfish operating system, has just revealed details of the hardware that will ship in their upcoming device. A cursory glance at the list shows nothing extraordinary, but, as they say, the devil is in the details.

Jolla phone

As you may or may not have read before, Jolla is a Finnish company formed by former Nokia employees who were dissatisfied with the direction the company took towards using Windows Phone. With the recent proposed acquisition of Nokia’s mobile business by Microsoft, it seems that their sentiments may have been justified.

The company and its smartphone recently came into the spotlight again when it announced official and full compatibility with Android apps for the device. Now the company is releasing the phone’s specs as it prepares for release. The hardware looks mediocre, at best, with a dual-core 1.4 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 1 GB of RAM, 16 GB of storage, a 4.5-inch 960×540 display, a 2 megapixel front-facing camera, and an 8 megapixel auto-focus rear camera with LED flash. Jolla, however, will be trying to differentiate itself from an already crowded smartphone market with its “Other Half” changeable smart covers and Android app compatibility.

your jolla

A smartphone platforme is as strong as the apps available for it and the developers willing to write those apps, so it remains to be seen if Jolla’s Sailfish-based smartphone will generate enough pull to make that happen. We’ll find out soon enough as the device is scheduled to ship out before this year ends.

SOURCE: Jolla
VIA: GSMArena

iOS 7 lock screen bypass flaw discovered, and how to fix it [Video]

It happened with iOS 6 (twice!), and it looks like it’s happening on iOS 7 again.

youtube

YouTube user Jose Rodriguez shows off how to bypass your iPhone’s lock screen on iOS 7 to peek into your photos and other places.

The trick takes a little finesse, but works on any iPhone or iPad running iOS 7:

  1. Swipe up on the lock screen to get to the Control Panel.
  2. Open the stopwatch and head to the alarm.
  3. Hold down the power button until the “Slide to Power Off” button comes up.
  4. Hit the cancel button, then hit the home button twice, holding it down on the second press.

It takes a little bit to get it right, but it’s doable once you know what you’re doing. The good news? All you need to do to disable this is turn off Control Center on the lock screen. Head into Settings > Control Center and turn off “Access on Lock Screen.”

Source: Life Hacker

Rumored iPhone 5S Fingerprint Scanner Gets An Unofficial Confirmation

finger print scanner

Lately, theres been a lot of rumors surrounding a possible fingerprint scanner in the upcoming iPhone 5S. Any other day Id ignore this repetitive rumor, but today, MacTrast has received an unofficial confirmation regarding the iPhone 5S and its home button’s functionality.

High resolution images of the leaked home button assembly were first published via Sonny Dickson last night, but MacTrast did some additional digging and has learned a little more about this rumored part. According to iFixits CEO Kyle Wiens (via MacTrast), the leaked part shown above, could actually be the biometric fingerprint scanner weve been hearing so much about:

It looks like the home button will still have a physical clicking action to it still like the 4, 4S and 5. The additional square section next the the button is something new and probably suggests a fingerprint sensor given all the rumor wire chatter on how Apple is expected to add that feature. It looks like that part of the cable flips over the button and sits between the clicking action and the plastic button cover.

So Id say yes, these photos, if legitimate, corroborate the fingerprint rumors.

In my opinion, iFixit is one of the most reliable sites in the industry when it comes to parts. Theres no way for Wiens to give a solid confirmation based on photos alone, but Im sure with iFixits teardown history, he probably knows a thing or two about this kind of stuff.

That being said, we wont have to wait too much longer to find out the truth. Apples big iPhone event is scheduled to happen on Sept. 10, 2013 in Cupertino, Calif. For more updates on Apples upcoming devices, be sure to follow AppAdvice on Twitter.

Via App Advice

Google Is Waging War on Apps That Attack and Steal From Your Phone

Google war on app that steals

Google made sweeping changes late last month to its policies for developers on Play, the official store for apps that run on Android, Google’s smartphone operating system.

The changes, which among other things affect how ads are displayed and permissions sought, are meant to make Android safer so users can download and use apps with confidence. Developers have until later this month to make the changes. Those that run afoul of the new rules after the deadline will find their apps deleted.

If the past few months are any indication, the Play store will experience a major purge. Google does not disclose or publicly comment on how many apps it removes from its store every month. But Priori Data, an app-market research firm based in Berlin, estimates that in the month through Aug. 9, more than 36,000 apps were removed from Google Play.

That may not sound significant compared with the roughly 950,000 apps in the store, but in the same period, the number of apps available on Play only increased by 35,000. That means one app was removed for every two new apps that came to the Play store. According to Zscaler, a security firm, one in every five apps available on Google Play has some sort of problem with it.

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The numbers have been fairly consistent. As per Priori’s data, it is not uncommon for between 25,000 and 35,000 apps to be removed in any given month.

The Perils of “Open”

Google makes a big deal about being an open marketplace. Unlike Apple, it does not vet apps before they become available in its store. The idea is to make Android a more welcoming platform, one that is not subject to the whims of the store owner. The problem is that it also makes Android much more vulnerable to attacks.

Early in 2012, Google unveiled Bouncer, an automatic scanner that checks for malware, spyware and trojans when apps are submitted to Google Play. That catches some of the more obviously undesirable apps — the ones with bad code.

But it misses apps that infringe on copyright, contain what Google considers undesirable content (hate speech, sexually explicit material, gambling and so on), and ones that more skillfully hide their malicious nature. Even so, as the number of apps seeking approval goes up, the speed at which Google allows them onto its marketplace is going down. Until last year, apps went live on Play within five minutes of submission. It now takes several hours, according to one developer.

Google also encourages users to be vocal about negative experiences so it can find and remove bad apps. But some malicious apps are very clever indeed. Joji Hamada of Symantec, a large computer security company based in California, recently found a spate of Japanese scam apps that require users to willingly and very consciously take a series of steps that eventually result in the phone owner being slapped with an “annual fee” of 315,000 yen ($3,100) just to look at some dirty videos.

google play

Three developers known to upload malicious apps. Symantec

Even apps that are less clever can cause damage to phones, Android’s reputation, and the bank balance of both users and Google. The stories, once you start looking for them, are endless. Some 2 million people downloaded one of 32 apps that installed malware masquerading as free apps before the apps were pulled earlier this year. Others fall for anti-malware apps that turn out to be phony.

Not all removed apps are malicious. Some are taken down by the developers. Others run afoul of Google’s policies. Many are just frustrating and pointless: “Ad-related apps probably make up the majority of those removed from stores,” Hamada told Quartz. “Developers can make healthy profits from display advertising such as pop-ups, displaying notification ads at the top of the screen.” In addition, adblockers are also banned from Play, though people can still download such apps elsewhere.

Closing In

Still, being a “closed” system like Apple’s App Store is not easy either. Despite an extensive review process that can take as long as two weeks before an app is approved, undesirable apps manage to sneak into the App Store as well. One of the most common problems is copycat apps.

When a new app becomes popular, developers simply copy the icon and name and reap the benefits of easily fooled users. Worse, some developers complain that Apple is slow to respond to their requests to remove the imitators. Malware also manages to sneak in. Yet Apple’s store retains the trust of both consumer and business users. Google has managed to catch up to Apple in the number of apps it offers and far exceed iPhones in market share. But trust is something it is still fighting to establish.

Little surprise then that Google does all it can to remove offending apps as swiftly as possible. Hence Google’s new policy that explicitly bars certain things, like allowing users to pay through a non-Google mechanism. If apps are forced to accept payment only through Google, it should in theory make it easier for Google to ensure such payments are legitimate, safeguarding its and Android’s reputation.

But that will take time. For now, Google Play remains a tempting target for scammers and attackers. ”A relatively typical fraudulent app can be spotted, reported and removed in about half a day as we know what we’re looking out for,” Hamada said. “However, scammers can also just as easily post up a new one the next day. Half a day is all they need to make a quick profit.”

Image: Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for Samsung

Source: Mashable

This is the first trailer for the new ‘RoboCop’

robocop

RoboCop has returned to Detroit. The first trailer for the remade RoboCop has just debuted, and while it shows a similar outfit, it looks much more like a high-concept, big-budget action film than what was seen in the original 1980s picture. Even so, director José Padilha says that he’s still out to capture the political tones that were ubiquitous in the original — this time with an eye toward drones. RoboCop is set to hit theaters on February 7th of next year, and you can catch your first glimpse of its dystopian world below.

Watch Trailer