Jailbroken iPhones exposed to second worm, this time malicious
Nov 23rd
An innocuous iPhone worm has been transformed into a malicious bank details-stealing virus. The second recorded iPhone infection operates on exactly the same principles as the first, as it targets jailbroken handsets with SSH installed, but this time adds the ability for the hacker to remotely control and access the phone. By throwing up a purported ING Direct login page, he (or she, or they) can collect your online banking credentials and, presumably, all the cash they are supposed to protect. Presently isolated within the Netherlands, this outbreak may spread further still, as it is capable of infecting other jailbroken iPhones on the same WiFi network.Black Friday Roundup I
Nov 22nd
Nintendo DSi XL set loose in Japan
Nov 21st

Nintendo said it’d have the newly bulked up DSi LL out in Japan for November 21, and shockingly enough that’s exactly what’s happened. Eager Japanese upgraders have today gotten their mitts on the 4.2-inch (both screens, of course) device, while similarly inclined European and American Nintendo lovers are once again left to envy from afar. Their helping of jumbo DSi, to be known as the XL, will be showing up some time in the first quarter of 2010, long after bragging rights and gift-giving holiday occasions have passed.
Entelligence: Chrome OS, babies, and bathwater
Nov 21st
Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

In an age where products that have never been announced get coverage and even critiqued over rumored shipping delays, it’s no surprise that Google received a lot of coverage this week with an update on its Chrome OS strategy. While not quite rumorware, it’s a lot like the cloud it depends on: more vapor than substance.
I don’t think Chrome would be a bad idea if it were something that was targeted to complement existing PC architectures. Why isn’t it? If it’s web-based, Chrome OS could and should co-exist with Mac OS, Linux and Windows. It’s the idea that Google is promoting Chrome as a PC OS replacement for mobile devices and riding the netbook hype all at the same time that gets me, as does the fact that I need to get a new device to run Chrome OS. That’s ridiculous, as are reference design requirements like SSDs instead of hard drives. Worse, trying to merge the PC and phone into some weird new intersection of devices is not what the market wants or has ever looked for. This type of specialized hardware sounds like it’s going right into the ‘tweener category and we know what happens to those devices. You just have to look how successful netbooks running Linux and Firefox have been to get a sense as to how well this concept is likely to go over with consumers.
It’s not even a new idea. What was most amusing about the Chrome OS news today was that over a decade ago Marc Andreeson was frequently quoted saying Netscape would soon make Windows nothing more than a “poorly-debugged set of device drivers.” Does that sound like a familiar concept? Yep, to me as well.
Perhaps some users do spend 99 percent of their time using the internet through a
browser, as Google claims, and perhaps some users can do all their work that way. However, I know for sure I can’t: although connectivity is important to many applications I use, browsers leave a lot to be desired, and desktop apps can far surpass them. For example, I think Twitter works better through a rich client applications like Tweetie than it does in the browser, and a lot of user data suggests that many people agree with me. Sure, you can argue that I’m not the target for Chrome OS, but that’s a weak argument — in fact, it’s a cop out. To paraphrase Jean-Louis Gaseé, great ideas and products should be designed for both passengers and sailors, expert users and novices. I spend ten hours or more on a computer every day, so if Chrome OS isn’t for me, then who is it for?
Now, I think PCs architectures have gotten too complex at the expense of functionality. I’d like to see things made simpler — or, as Einstein said, as simple as possible and not simpler. But Chrome opts for simplicity at the expense of functionality, and even practicality: there’s no way a platform that depends on a fast reliable, always-on network connection is going to be viable in 2010. Although Google’s done some good stuff with Chrome OS, it’s taking on Apple, Microsoft and the entire Linux community and trying to create a paradigm shift toward devices few users will want. It’s good to throw out the bathwater and start over from time to time, but it’s not such a good idea to let some babies go down the drain as well.
Source: Engadget

Windows “8″ confirmed for 2012.
Nov 21st

It’s somewhat hard to believe that we’re already talking about Windows 8 given that Windows 7 just hit the shelves two months ago, but you know the engineers at Microsoft are already planning ahead. According to a roadmap constructed over at Microsoft Kitchen, the next iteration of Windows is tentatively stated for release in the year 2012. Of course, a three-year window between Windows 7 and the next version is totally believable, but we wouldn’t go planning your end of the world party with the assumption that a new OS will be the main attraction.

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