...from:
http://www.itproportal.com/2014/02/25/a-closer-look-at-the-blackphone-and-w…
...or:
http://bit.ly/N9FcnH
A closer look at the Blackphone and why it's more anti-Google than anti-government
MWC 2014<http://www.itproportal.com/mwc-2014/>
25 Feb 2014 by Ryan Whitwam
[A closer look at the Blackphone and why it's more anti-Google than anti-government]
Tweet<http://twitter.com/share>
Silent Circle and Geeksphone announced the Blackphone earlier this year<http://www.itproportal.com/2014/01/16/blackphone-creates-nsa-proof-smartpho…> as everyone was still wringing their hands over NSA spying. The stated goal was to make communications private, just like they ought to be. Of course, that was conflated with an NSA-proof phone, which it’s not.
Now, after having been officially unveiled at MWC<http://www.itproportal.com/2014/02/25/mwc-2014-meet-blackphone-the-official…>, the Blackphone is up for pre-order and Silent Circle has explained more about how the handset will work. Spoiler: It’s not doing anything new, but it does come with a full suite of privacy-minded apps and services. With the Blackphone, what it lacks may be just as important as what it includes.
The Blackphone clocks in at $629 (£375) over in the US, which is right up there with the unlocked cost of most flagship smartphones. The device will run on a 2GHz (or higher) quad-core ARM chip, with 2GB of RAM and 16GB of internal storage. Wondering about a microSD card for more storage? What, and let someone walk away with your data? Surely you jest. Buyers will also be treated to a 4.7in 720p LCD and 802.11n Wi-Fi. Despite the privacy focus, the Blackphone does still have the usual HSPA+, LTE, and GPS.
The hardware is fine, though likely generic. The real selling point of the Blackphone is the software it runs. The company calls it PrivatOS, and it’s based on the open source version of Android. Most other Android devices you buy have Google’s services woven into the foundation of the OS, but not Blackphone. This device comes bundled with only Silent Circle apps and a few select third-party services for secure file sharing and VPNs. That means you don’t have access to Google’s app ecosystem, cloud platform, or location services. Although, that’s kind of why you’d buy the Blackphone.
The Blackphone includes a two-year subscription to the Silent Circle application suite, which is what actually makes your communication secure. There’s no magic way to make regular cellular calls completely untraceable – the Blackphone is using the same network infrastructure and baseband as every other Android device on the market. Blackphone’s page uses a lot of inflammatory language to describe how Google’s services work, making it seem like this is more an anti-Google than anti-government surveillance phone.
[cid:CB9C188F-5C84-42E5-A3F6-7C3BCECE72C1]<http://cdn.itproportal.com/photos/blackphone-features-chart_original.png>
Access to Silent Phone, Text, and Contacts costs $10 (£6) per month after the included subscription, but you can only communicate with other people who also use the company’s VoIP service, which can be installed on any Android phone<https://play.google.com/store/apps/developer?id=Silent+Circle>. To make things a bit easier, the Blackphone includes three one-year “friends and family” Silent Circle passes. Adding up all the Silent Circle, encrypted file sharing, and VPN subscriptions leaves you with a value of about $1500 (£900). That assumes you use all these services to their fullest, of course.
Silent Circle has also built out an enhanced version of Android’s app permission system in PrivatOS, like the now-defunct App Ops or CyanogenMod’s permission manager. It’s not unheard of functionality, but the more advanced permission management will allow users to revoke permissions from apps individually. For example, location or contact access can be blocked for some or all apps. The apps themselves will probably be side-load only, seeing as there’s no app store. Remote device management and security updates have also been modified by Silent Circle.
Now that Silent Circle’s plans are laid out for us<https://www.blackphone.ch/phone/#privatosvsandroid>, the project seems less fanciful, but also less revolutionary. This is basically a moderately powerful smartphone running a privacy-focused custom ROM and some extra privacy tools that you can install on any phone. In fact, most of what the Blackphone does can be replicated with a much cheaper Nexus 5<http://www.itproportal.com/reviews/mobile-phones/google-nexus-5-review/> – install CyanogenMod, don’t flash the Google apps package, relock the bootloader, and install the Silent Circle suite.
Silent Circle has been careful not to claim that this phone will thwart the NSA, but some people will still expect that. This device really just takes the guesswork out of making a mobile device somewhat more secure. Is that worth $629 (£375)? Silent Circle sure hopes so. The Blackphone is expected to ship in June.
For all the latest news, photos and analysis from MWC 2014, check out our live coverage of the event<http://www.itproportal.com/2014/02/22/mwc-2014-live-updates-news-and-analys…>.
[The GSMA Mobile World Congress (MWC - http://www.mobileworldcongress.com) is held each February in the Mobile World Capital of Barcelona, Spain. It includes a world-class conference, an exhibition with more than 1,500 companies, App Planet, mPowered Brands, and the Global Mobile Awards, which recognise the most innovative solutions and initiatives from around the world.
In 2012, Mobile World Congress hosted more than 67,000 mobile professionals from 205 countries. Of these, more than 56% of these were C-Level executives, and 10,000 were mobile developers as part of App Planet.]
....from:
http://9to5mac.com/2014/02/25/apple-wins-best-mobile-tablet-award-at-mobile…
Apple wins ‘best mobile tablet’ award at Mobile World Congress in absentia<http://9to5mac.com/2014/02/25/apple-wins-best-mobile-tablet-award-at-mobile…>
[ipad-air-best-buy-deal]<http://9to5mac.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/ipad-air-best-buy-deal.jpeg>
The Global Mobile Awards today revealed their verdicts on their annual mobile device awards. As usual, like all industry conferences, Apple did not attend MWC. Regardless, in their absence, they were still given the ‘Best Mobile Tablet’ award<http://www.globalmobileawards.com/winners-2014/#cat_id25> for the iPad Air.
The judge said:
The iPad Air packs class-leading performance in an attractive and svelte frame, while its ecosystem has an undisputed advantage in the number of format-optimized apps
Although Apple won the award for best tablet, the award for the best phone was given to the HTC One. Meanwhile, LG won the prize for ‘most innovative device manufacturer of the year’.
Best Mobile Tablet
Apple iPad Air
Precision-engineered to weigh just one pound, iPad Air is 20 percent thinner and 28 percent lighter than the fourth generation iPad, and with a 43 percent narrower bezel the borders of iPad Air are dramatically thinner. iPad Air’s Retina display makes web pages, text, images and video look incredibly sharp and realistic, and the new power-efficient A7 chip allows the battery to be even smaller, helping reduce the overall volume by 24 percent from the previous generation while doubling its performance and maintaining its up to 10-hour battery life.
In September, 2013, to much fanfare* Microsoft and NOKIA announced that Microsoft Corporation and Nokia Corporation Boards of Directors for both companies have decided to enter into a transaction whereby Microsoft will purchase substantially all of Nokia’s Devices & Services business, license Nokia’s patents, and license and use Nokia’s mapping services.
Nobody (outside of Microsoft and NOKIA, presumably) thought this meant that Microsoft would start selling ANDROID cellphones to capture Windows phone customers.......
...from:
http://www.engadget.com/2014/02/24/nokia-x-elop/
Elop: Nokia X will bring more consumers to Windows Phone<http://www.engadget.com/2014/02/24/nokia-x-elop/>
BY BRAD MOLEN<http://www.engadget.com/about/editors/brad-molen> @PHONEWISDOM<http://twitter.com/phonewisdom> 5 HOURS AGO
[cid:9D17B5FE-DAA0-434B-BF83-F11AB5F43E5A]<http://www.engadget.com/2014/02/24/nokia-x-elop/>
After Nokia's big announcement of the brand-new X series<http://www.engadget.com/2014/02/24/nokia-announces-the-x-its-first-android-…> [of Android cellphones], we had a chance to sit down with Stephen Elop, the executive VP of Devices for the company. Naturally, the company's decision to crank out an Android device was a matter of great curiosity for us. Most importantly: Did Microsoft agree to this from the beginning, or did Nokia's acquirer go into this idea begrudgingly? According to Elop, it's the former. "Microsoft bought the Mobile Devices division," Elop told us, "so they knew what they were doing." Given the company's focus on a tile-based experience and its emphasis on the Microsoft Cloud, it's beginning to make a lot of sense. Elop went on to state that the X is primarily a stepping stone (a "gateway phone," if you will) for a largely untouched market segment -- emerging markets and developing countries -- to get acclimatized to Microsoft's suite of services and familiar Live Tiles interface. It's an interesting strategy, no doubt, and we're excited to see if it pays off in the long run -- people won't be rushing to a Windows Phone weeks after buying an XL, but it sounds like the idea is to plant a seed within consumers, as well as a reliance on services like Skype, Outlook and OneDrive.
* - http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2014-02-16/news/47359495_1_sat…
Does the Nokia deal still make sense for Microsoft?
New York Times Feb 16, 2014, 02.55AM IST
By James B Stewart
When Microsoft announced in September that it was buying Nokia's struggling handset business and
would meld its Windows operating system with the devices, it offered two major reasons for the $7.2 billion deal:
- Apple and Google were combining their software and hardware.
- The deal would ensure the survival of Microsoft's Windows operating system in a mobile universe.
...from:
http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1222
Apple TV 6.0.2<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT6148>
Apple TV 2nd generation and later
21 Feb 2014
iOS 7.0.6<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT6147>
iPhone 4 and later, iPod touch (5th generation), iPad 2 and later
21 Feb 2014
iOS 6.1.6<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT6146>
iPhone 3GS, iPod touch (4th generation)
21 Feb 2014
Impact: An attacker with a privileged network position may capture or modify data in sessions protected by SSL/TLS
Description: Secure Transport failed to validate the authenticity of the connection. This issue was addressed by restoring missing validation steps.
....from:
http://www.macrumors.com/2014/02/10/arizona-apple-sapphire-tax-breaks/
Arizona Won Apple's Sapphire Plant with Tax Breaks, Energy Infrastructure, and Responsiveness
Monday February 10, 2014 8:05 am PST by Eric Slivka
A new report from Bloomberg<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-02-10/apple-wooed-by-arizona-as-obama-se…> takes a look at how Mesa, Arizona was able to secure its deal with Apple to bring the company's new sapphire manufacturing plant<http://www.macrumors.com/2013/11/04/apple-to-build-new-700-employee-sapphir…> to the city. That facility is set to begin operation<http://www.macrumors.com/2014/01/30/arizona-plant-february-critical-compone…> this month with production at a scale massive enough<http://www.macrumors.com/2014/02/06/sapphire-production-future-iphones/> to support a shift to sapphire display covers for the next-generation iPhone.
[cid:6CDC0EBD-BAA7-4E00-9607-736C2F628A0B]
Former First Solar manufacturing facility purchased by Apple for new sapphire plant (Source: Business Wire<http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20121204005534/en/Blue-Oak-Energy-Com…>)
The report notes that Mesa and the State of Arizona moved aggressively to reach a deal with Apple and its partner, GT Advanced Technologies, learning from previous negotiations that saw Arizona lose out<http://www.macrumors.com/2012/04/27/apple-expressing-frustration-as-tax-inc…> to Austin, Texas for an expansion of Apple's operations facilities. As a result, Mesa and Arizona officials made every effort to offer specific incentives, expedite permitting approvals, and even build out power infrastructure to meet Apple's demands.
Time was of the essence since Arizona had lost out on the previous Apple facility to Texas less than two years earlier and was nervous others might trump its bid. Officials typically had just a few days to respond to Apple’s questions, [Mesa mayor Scott] Smith said.
One sticking point: power. Apple wanted the facility to use 100 percent renewable energy and negotiated with the state and local power company, Salt River Project, about how to make that happen. New solar and geothermal projects are being built because of the project. Apple also got officials to agree to construct a new power substation for the plant.
Other benefits for Apple include a $10 million grant from the state to support building improvements and hiring efforts, as well as a special designation for the property that will cut Apple's property taxes by over 70 percent.
Mesa and Arizona are already seeking to leverage Apple's arrival to create a new technology corridor in the area where Apple's facility is located, with a number of companies having already contacted officials to express interest in locating near Apple