Archive for the ‘apple’ Category
IBM demonstrates they understand iPhone security with iNotes Ultralite

Just another sign that IBM really “gets it” when it comes to iPhone security. I happen to work at a Lotus Notes shop and we have been taking a strong look at the iNotes Ultralite application for some time now. You may have seen some of my previous posts about the lack of enterprise level encryption for email on the iPhone. This is a show stopper for our company where we manage complex PHI (Personal Health Information) for our customers. We can’t afford to loose even one device (laptop, smart phone) which is not encrypted.
IBM is always concerned about data security for its customers, and as such they decided to make iNotes Ultralite a web app rather than a native iPhone application. IBM felt it was important to customers to insure that all communications between the iPhone and Lotus Domino server be encrypted, and that no data remain on the device in case it was lost or stolen.
[From iPhone in the Enterprise: Lotus iNotes Ultralite - The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)]
I suspect we will see a native Notes application for the iPhone or a plugin for the native Mail application in the future when encryption is available. Until then, IBM is delivering what we need right now.
Facebook iPhone 2.0 Review
Finally! Version 2.0 of Facebook for the iPhone launched today. Ever since I saw the totally amazing photo tagging demo on YouTube about a month ago I have been following the release date of this new version closely. Today the wait is over.
Highlights:
1. Photo Tagging — Click, tag and go. It is fast, and amazingly easy to tag a photo and get it posted. This is simply the best photo sharing experience for the iPhone now.
2. Inline Commenting — This is a game changer for the level of interactivity within the Facebook newsfeed. Now you can click on the small link beside pretty much any wall post, newsfeed item or photo and leave a quick inline comment. Works very well. Look out Friendfeed!
3. Chat — Works better then ever. Looks just like iChat. Nice job.
4. User Interface — Lots of subtle effects like fly-ins when posting make the UI really fun to use.
Improvements!
1. Quick scroll to the top of the page. Steal this from Twitterific and Mobile Safari guys. When you are way down a page it takes a bunch of finger swipes to get back to the top.
2. View Friends of Friends. This is a nice feature which helps you pick the right person out of the crowd when searching.
Otherwise, again this is a GREAT upgrade. Good job Facebook team.
Facebook 2.0 for the iPhone is out!
Start your appstore checks! Facebook 2.0 is released! Review coming shortly.
Appstore shows signs of Facebook 2.0
This morning the screenshot for the Facebook iPhone application changed to a version 2.0 shot. The application is still 1.1 however. Keep refreshing. We should see the new version soon.
Tonchidot: Visual Tagging for the iPhone is Astounding!
Tonchidot: Visual Tagging for the iPhone | The iPhone Blog.
Like something from the future, you have to see this video. If Tonchidot can bring this to market it will revolutionize the way we use our mobile computers to interact with our surroundings. Truly astounding.
The Countdown to Facebook 2.0 for the iPhone Starts Now!
Start counting down the days and refreshing your App Store icons starting tomorrow. The long awaited refresh of the Facebook iPhone app is upon us.
Thanks everyone for being patient waiting for me to finish Facebook for iPhone 2.0. The good news is, I plan to submit the update to the iPhone App Store a week from today. That doesn’t necessarily mean you will be able to download it a week from today - Apple reviews every application before making it available, and they can sometimes take up to a week. So, you may get the update as soon as next Wednesday, or as late as October 1st.
The new photo tagging looks absolutely wild. It looks like it leverages touch services so you can tap the photo after you have taken it on the device and tag it with your contacts on the phone using touch gestures. Brilliant!
Thought you deleted that iPhone email forever? Think again…
Just when you thought you got rid of that incriminating email on your iphone, or removed that suspect web site from your cache you might be surprised to hear that the iPhone captures an image of the application when the “home” button is pressed.
As widely reported, the iPhone takes a screenshot every time the home button is pressed so that the 3D “zoom” effect can be processed when the application zooms in and out, when suspending and resuming applications. These shots are stored, at least temporarily, on the device, presenting potential privacy issues.
[From Keeping Your iPhone From Spying on You - iPhone Atlas]
A forensic analyst can retrieve the images from the phone by mounting the disk and using data recovery tools to reconstruct the images as they are not actually removed from the disk, just the pointers to the files are removed. This continues to demonstrate that the iPhone cannot be treated as a secure device. The iPhone atlas site demonstrates a way to disable the image storage on a jail broken phone. For the average user, be aware that your iPhone is keeping a log of your activity.
I continue to make the argument for encryption. To make that a reality, with good performance, Apple may need to embed a dedicated encryption processor to the device.
SquirrelFish Extreme for Mobile Safari?

So the biggest question in my mind now is:
When will we see SquirrelFish Extreme for the Mobile Safari browser on the iPhone?
Apple is already winning the mobile browser wars, and the latest WebKit advancements will only solidify that lead.
SquirrelFish Extreme, changes the performance game
SquirrelFish Extreme: 943.3 ms
V8: 1280.6 ms
TraceMonkey: 1464.6 ms
Summer of JavaScriptCore: SquirrelFish Extreme has landed!.
With today’s announcement from virtually out of nowhere about the SquirrelFish Extreme Javascript landing on the WebKit nightly tree we suddenly see another game changer. We now see the SquirrelFish Extreme engine trouncing both TraceMonkey and V8. Amazing work from the open source WebKit team.
Apple Remote v1.1 is a Genius
The 1.1 release of the iPhone and touch remote was released by Apple today. It now adds support for Genuis playlist creation and playlist editing. Awesome.