Thursday, November 6, 2014

Forbes names Apple as most valuable brand

by Luke Jones


Forbes has released its annual list of the world's most valuable companies and (un)surprisingly the table is topped by Apple. The magazine/website values the iPhone maker at a whopping $124.2 billion, a number that is more than double any other company on the list and much more than Cupertino?s rivals.


Forbes said Apple increased by 19% thanks to increased product sales and continued demand for the iPhone. Microsoft was the nearest of Apple's rivals in second place, but trailed far behind Cupertino at $63 billion, itself a 13% increase. Other tech companies include Google in third place ($56.6 billion), IBM in fifth ($47.9 billion), and Samsung in 8th ($35 billion).


Microsoft band review: The fitness watchband built for running needs to walk first

By WILSON ROTHMAN

The Microsof Band consolidates health and fitness data from various fitness gadgets and m
The Microsof Band consolidates health and fitness data from various fitness gadgets and mobile apps.Source: AP
THE giants of technology have made one thing abundantly clear this year: You’re out of shape and need their help to get fit!
Microsoft, the newest would-be coach, just rolled out a wristband-and-app pairing that was built to work with iOS, Android and Windows Phone.
Microsoft execs say the company is getting into the wearable business as a first foray into a big problem: how to identify useful intelligence in heaps of personal data.
Microsoft says it can take sensor information from wearables and interpret it in the cloud with an accuracy that less experienced firms couldn’t possibly pull off.
The evidence presented — the Microsoft Health app and the Band smartwatch, with 10 sensors — sounded promising, at least compared with the current offerings of Samsung, Google and Apple.
Shortly after I paired the $US199 wearable to my iPhone, though, things went downhill.
Like every other fitness band, this one has an accelerometer-based step counter. During a controlled test, it reported roughly the same number of steps as my phone and a cheaper wearable.
But there are a lot more sensors packed into the bracelet and it’s clear that they aren’t all equally reliable.
There’s an optical heart-rate sensor that, in the middle of a rigorous session with an elliptical machine, reported my heart pounding at 105 beats per minute (super chill) and at 208 bpm (close to collapse).
Meanwhile, my trusty elliptical confirmed I was likely somewhere between 150 and 160 bpm the whole time.
There’s GPS, which currently only draws routes of the jogs you take. It would be nice for the Band to use GPS when I’m on a bike ride.
Among the many sensors, there’s a UV sensor (tap it to find out if you’re in need of sunscreen) and a galvanic skin response sensor (whose purpose is still to be determined).
There are two problems with all this data collection. First, it creates a lot of noise that needs to be sorted out with software.
Microsoft’s goal may be to improve that kind of data interpretation, but I’m not seeing the results yet. And all those sensors also drain the battery pretty fast.
Microsoft said the Band’s battery would last up to two days, but it should have simply said “at least one day.” It died the first time in the middle of a workout, about 24 hours after I first powered it up.
With 100 per cent charge, it died after about 36 hours. Trouble is, it never warned me as it approached battery death.
Only when I tapped into the watch to do something did I get the warning that I’d better find the Band’s unique charger in a hurry. Microsoft said that the unit it lent me wasn’t performing up to expectations.
Ergonomically, the wearable is pretty terrible. It’s awkward, wide at the top while a competing product, Samsung’s Gear Fit, is smartly curved.
The Band has a clever metal clasp that slides to make a better fit, but it rubbed my wrist the wrong way. And it’s so easily scratched, it looked battle damaged by Day Two. I scraped the bezel against a wall by just shoving a box into a closet. (Microsoft says it is offering screen protectors at its stores.)
The app, however, demonstrates how far Microsoft has come on the user-interface front. Full of active tiles and slide-out menus, Microsoft Health is lively, especially when compared with Apple’s incredibly boring Health app and its clinically sterile line graphs and menus.
The Homepage gives a quick look at how I’m pacing today: Have I reached my step counting and calorie burning goals? How long ago was my last workout? How did I sleep last night?
The next page starts to get a little less helpful, recapping my specific sleep and workout activities. I can see how, if I were to be in a serious training regimen, it could be of value, but only if the sensor data was any good.
The third page is “Find a Workout,” where I can choose workout modules that sync right to the Band. Having videos explain how each exercise is done, then having the Band tell you what exercises to do and for how long, can be a nice benefit. But people who want a virtual personal trainer have a wealth of options, including the more sophisticated FitStar.
On a page labelled Connected Apps, we see the direction Microsoft would like to go. Here, you can sync your Microsoft Health data to RunKeeper and MyFitnessPal, and pull their information into your Microsoft profile. Microsoft says there is more high-quality data coming from such respected outside sources as Jawbone, which is a Microsoft Health launch partner.
In the next six months, the Microsoft Health website will launch, offering an easily searchable view of your fitness data that can answer such questions as, “Do I run better after having breakfast?”

Microsoft certainly has plans to analyse and correlate the information in ways that the individual contributors don’t have the power to do. But for now, the Microsoft Health club is feeling empty and the Band is weak.


From WhatsApp to Snapchat: Find out how safe your favourite messaging app is


From WhatsApp to Snapchat: Find out how safe your favourite messaging app is


Messaging is arguably the most popular category of smartphone apps. Even the simplestmessaging apps are capable of sending text messages and keeping your social life alive. In the smartphone age, messaging no longer restricted to just sharing text messages. You now have apps in all shapes and sizes including ones for sending photo messages, disappearing messages, voice and video messages, and the list goes on.
With the growing popularity of messaging apps comes the pressing need to keep them safe. Recent reports of the Snapchat photo leak showed just how vulnerable your messages are on the web.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has tested several messaging apps across different platforms to find out which ones protect your messages at different stages after being sent from your device. Based on the test, it has produced a Secure Messaging  Scorecard that shows the level of security provided by each messaging app. The website explains “The Snowden revelations have confirmed our worst fears: governments are spying on our digital lives, grabbing up communications transmitted in the clear.”
The Secure Messaging Scorecard (Credit: The Electronic Frontier Foundation)
The Secure Messaging Scorecard (Credit: The Electronic Frontier Foundation)
The scorecard indicates whether your messages are encrypted in transit, if the service provider can read it, whether you can verify the receiver’s identity and other important security aspects. It shows that some of the most popular apps, such as WhatsApp, Skype, Google Hangouts and Viber have feeble security practices in place. For example, even though WhatsApp messages are encrypted in transit, WhatsApp themselves can read your messages. Same is the case with Skype, Snapchat, Secret and Facebook Chat.
Some of the most secure messaging apps include Silent Text, Text Secure, Subrosa and Retroshare that check nearly all the boxes on the Secure Messaging Scorecard. While these provide solid protection, EFF points out that most of them are not the easiest to use and consequently not very popular among mainstream smartphone users.

What's killing your battery? Android's top 10 performance-sapping apps

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Is your phone or tablet battery constantly reduced to a sliver of red on the screen? New research has found the worst performance-draining apps on Android devices, and Facebook is the biggest culprit.

It may seem to consume every spare moment of our lives, but the world's most famous social networking app is chewing up our mobiles too, with Facebook topping a global list of the most performance-draining Android apps, which considered battery drain, storage consumption and data use.
But it's not just Facebook draining our mobile power -- a raft of other social apps, games and even bloatware are consuming more processing power, battery life and data than many of us realise.
Candy Crush Saga.
The findings come from new research conducted by AVG which took anonymous data from more than 1 million AVG Android app users in order to collate a list of the worst offenders in the Android app world (measured over Q3 2014, based on apps with more than 1 million Google Play downloads).
Culprits included pre-installed apps pushed out by device manufacturers, with 3 of the 10 biggest battery draining apps that run on start-up coming from Samsung. News apps also warrant a mention, particularly those that update in real-time, with the New York Times' Breaking News app topping the list of the most storage-hungry apps we use.
But with 62 percent of the time we spend on Android tablets or smartphones dedicated to playing games, gaming apps warranted their own top ten. In these stakes, King, the developer behind Candy Crush Saga and other titles in the Saga series, took out the dubious honour of holding 4 of the top 10 spots for performance-draining game apps.
So what should you do if your battery life is dropping faster than all those sugar balls in Candy Crush? AVG recommends turning off app notifications, limiting refresh intervals, deleting your cache of temporary files and limiting the amount of data an app is allowed to download while you're not watching.

Top 10 Performance-Draining Apps

  1. Facebook
  2. Path
  3. 9GAG Funny Pics & Videos
  4. Instagram
  5. Spotify Music
  6. BBM (BlackBerry)
  7. QQ (Tencent Technology)
  8. textPlus Free Text & Calls
  9. Wattpad Free Books & Stories
  10. iFunny : )

Top 10 Battery Drainers -- Run at Start Up

  1. AllShareCast Dongle S/W Update (Samsung)
  2. ChatON Voice & Video Chat (Samsung)
  3. Beaming Service for Beep'n'Go (Moheam)
  4. magicApp: Free Calls (magiclack VocalTec)
  5. Samsung WatchON Tablets
  6. Facebook
  7. Path
  8. PPS for Mobile
  9. Vault-Hide SMS Pics & Videos
  10. Al-Moazin Lite Prayer Times

Top 10 Storage Eaters

  1. NY Times -- Breaking News
  2. Tango Messenger Video & Calls
  3. Spotify Music
  4. Facebook
  5. Chrome Browser
  6. 9GAG Funny pics & videos
  7. Instagram
  8. LINE camera -- Selfie & Collage
  9. Vine
  10. Talking Angela

Top 10 Battery-Draining Game Apps

  1. Puzzle & Dragons (GungHo Online Entertainment)
  2. Hay Day (Supercell)
  3. Candy Crush Saga (King)
  4. Minecraft -- Pocket Edition (Mojang)
  5. Cookie Jam (SGN)
  6. Pet Rescue Saga (King)
  7. Clash of Clans (Supercell)
  8. Bubble Witch 2 Saga (King)
  9. Farm Heroes Saga (King)
  10. Angry Birds (Rovio Mobile)

Want an invite to Google's Inbox? Now's the time to act

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Google opens up an invitation-request window, but it's brief.
If you've been itching to give Google Inbox a spin but have been held back by the lack of an invitation to try the free email app, now's the time to act.
The Web giant opened up an invitation-request window Wednesday in which prospective users will have one hour to request an invite to the app, which Google unveiled last month. Gmail users who submit a request for an invitation toinbox@google.com by 4 p.m. PT will receive an emailed invitation within an hour, Google announced in a tweet Wednesday. The company had previously limited the number of invitations it was sending out.
Formerly available only by limited invitation, Google Inbox can be in your hand if you act fast.
Developed by the Gmail team, Inbox is intended to coexist with Google's flagship email product, not replace it. For example, it groups similar types of messages, and automatically highlights key information such as flight itineraries and event information. It comes as competitors, including Apple and file-sharing company Dropbox, have released or updated products aimed at making it easier to find online needles in a haystack.
A key Inbox feature called Assists integrates real-time updates from the Web directly into email, while the Bundles option automatically groups similar messages, such as receipts, and allow you to swipe them all away at once. Inbox also integrates Google Now reminders and lets you create your own reminders.
The app is available on smartphones running Google's Android operating system or Apple's iOS, and on the Web -- but only in Google's Chrome browser for now.

Palo Alto Networks says new malware threatens 800 million Apple devices

by BARBARA KOLLMEYER

WireLurker’ first discovered in China

MADRID (MarketWatch) — A new, ugly malware threat could be lurking for millions of Apple Inc. customers.
The new family of malware, dubbed ‘WireLurker,’ has been discovered by Palo Alto Networks Inc. PANW, -3.93% which said it shows “characteristics unseen in any previously documented threats targeting Apple platforms.”
Palo Alto said this is the first known malware family that can infect installed iOS applications similar to how a traditional virus would, and it’s only the second-known malware family that can attack iOS devices through OS X — the operating system that powers every Apple AAPL, +0.24%  Mac.
WireLurker monitors any iOS device connected via USB with an infected OS X computer and then downloads third-party applications onto the device. And it doesn’t matter whether the device is jailbroken or not, hence the term “Wire Lurker,” the network security company said in a 30-page report.
“WireLurker is capable of stealing a variety of information from the mobile devices it infects and regularly requests updates from the attackers command and control server,” said Palo Alto Networks in the report. “This malware is under active development and its creator’s ultimate goal is not yet clear.”
Palo Alto said a developer at Tencent Holdings Ltd. 0700, -0.32%  first made note of the threat in June, and then threads on Apple forums started popping up, in which device users noted the installation of strange applications and the creation of enterprise provisioning profiles.
The company said WireLurker was used to trojanize -- a trojan is a type of malware designed to provide unauthorized, remote access to a users computer -- 467 OS X applications on the Maiyadi App Store, a third-party Mac application store in China. Over the past six months, those applications have been downloaded over 356,104 times, potentially impacting hundreds of thousands of users, it said.
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Palo Alto noted that only two malware/adware families have been confirmed as successfully installed onto non-jailbroken iOS devices, one in September 2010 and the other in July 2012, and both were removed by Apple from the App Store immediately. As it stands, WireLurker is the only known active, non-jailbroken malware threat, which puts over 800 million iOS devices at risk, it said.
“WireLurker is unlike anything we’ve ever seen in terms of Apple iOS and OS X malware,” said Ryan Olson, intelligence director for the company’s Unit 42 division. “The techniques in use suggest that bad actors are getting more sophisticated when it comes to exploiting some of the world’s best-known desktop and mobile platforms.”
Olson told Reuters in an interview that there was no evidence the hackers have so far made off with anything more than messaging IDs and contacts from users’ address books. But, he said, “they could just as easily take your Apple ID or do something else that’s bad news.”
He added that they notified Apple a couple of weeks ago of the threat. A spokesman for Apple could not immediately be reached for comment.
Palo Alto suggests Mac and iOS users avoid downloading Mac applications or games from any third-party app store, download site or untrusted source, or connect an iOS device to any accessories, such as chargers, or computers they aren’t sure can be trusted. And keep iOS software up to date, said the company.
Apple released the latest update to iOS last month.

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Microsoft Corporation Stops Retail Sales of Windows 7 And 8

Microsoft is expected to launch Windows 10 next year. The new operating system combines the features of Windows 7 and Windows 8
Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFTofficially ended the sale of the retail copies of its Windows 7 and Windows 8 operating systems.
Microsoft Windows 8 Logo
The software giant announced its decision to stop selling Windows 7 and Windows 8 to consumers a long time ago. Technology observers believed stopping the retail sales for both operating systems should encourage consumers to the new Windows operating system Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT)
The copies of Home Basic, Home Premium and Ultimate versions of Windows 7 were no longer available starting October 31. Today, copies of Windows 8 are no longer for sale.  The Windows 8.1 version will serve as the default operating systems on laptops and PCs for sale.
Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ”MSFT) released the Windows 8 operating systems in 2012. The original version of the operating system did not click to consumers because the company removed some of the familiar features of the desktop version such as start menu. The software giant eventually brought back the start menu to Windows 8.
On the other hand, the Windows 7 remained popular among consumers. The operating system was available since 2009. Gordon Kelly of Forbes noted that approximately 53% of Windows users are still using different editions of Windows 7. The Windows 8 only accounts 6% market share.
Last May, China banned the government use of Windows 8 as it develops its own operating system. The Chinese government made its decision after Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) decided ended to support for its Windows XP.

Microsoft to launch Windows 10 in 2015

Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) is expected to launch Windows 10 in 2015. The latest operating system combines the features of the Windows 7 and Windows.
The software giant considered Windows 10 as the most audacious release in the history of the platform because it can run universal mobile apps on the desktop side by side with other apps.
Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) said the Windows 10 offers platform unifications, pervasive security, consistent and positive upgrade experience for consumers. Businesses will be able to use Azure Active Directory (AAD) instead of Microsoft Accounts (MSAs). The software giant also integrated multi-factor authentication more deeply into the platform and other features.