Archive for the ‘Web’ Category

Opera Lands O2 Germany Mobile Deal

Friday, August 8th, 2008

Opera have been receiving more success in placing their Web browsing software on different platforms, particularly mobile phones.
The latest win is a big one.

Original post by Simon Perry

AMD including hidden overclocking functionality in tri- / quad-core Phenoms?

Friday, June 6th, 2008

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Straight up, this one sounds just too bizarre to ever be true, but we suppose (almost) anything goes when talkin’ AMD. Now that you’re suitably skeptical, word on the street has it that AMD’s triple- and quad-core Phenom processors posses a half dozen “hidden pins” which can enable painfully easy overclocking when paired with the right chipsets. Yeah, this sounds way too much like some sort of Up / Down / Up / Down / Select / Start fantasy boost, but apparently a 2.8GHz Black Edition CPU can be taken to 3GHz with a SB700-equipped motherboard or an even more tantalizing 3.2GHz when used with a SB750. As expected, the release date for this tech is listed as unknown, but maybe that’s just some code trying to tell us we’re really stuck in the Twilight Zone.

[Thanks, kris120890]

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Original post by Darren Murph

New Attack Exploits “Safe” Oracle Inputs

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Trailrunner7 writes “Database security super-genius David Litchfield has found a way to manipulate common Oracle data types, which were not thought to be exploitable, and inject arbitrary SQL commands. The new method shows that you can no longer assume any data types are safe from attacker input, regardless of their location or function. Litchfield wrote, “In conclusion, even those functions and procedures that don’t take user input can be exploited if SYSDATE is used. The lesson here is always, always validate and prevent this type of vulnerability getting into your code. The second lesson is that no longer should DATE or NUMBER data types be considered as safe and not useful as injection vectors: as this paper[PDF] has proved, they are,” he writes.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by Soulskill

TomTom intros GO 930T and 730T with Lane Guidance and IQ Routes

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

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TomTom might be in a bit of a tussle with the EU lately, but that isn’t stopping the company from announcing two new GO models at CeBIT this morning — say hello to the GO 930 and 730. The updates to the popular 720 and 920 now feature TomTom’s new IQ Routes features, which uses a database of historical vehicle speeds along different paths rather than speed limit information to generate route guidance, and Advanced Lane Guidance (shown above), which aims to make navigating complex interchanges a little simpler. Other than that, there’s not much of a bump here: both models feature the same 4.3-inch, 480 x 272 touchscreen, 400MHz CPU and Map Share as their predecessors, and the main difference between the 930 and the 730 is the presence of a dead-reckoning accelerometer in the 930. Expect the $450 730 and $500 930 to hit in April, with a $50 surcharge if you want traffic data as well.

[Thanks, Tim]

 

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Original post by Nilay Patel

Nokia N95 blushes a bright red for us

Monday, January 7th, 2008

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It’s not quite as technologically interesting as the N95 8GB for North America, but bright, pretty colors can certainly sell as many phones as a good chunk of internal ROM can. We spotted an in-your-face red N95 at the Nokia booth of Digital Experience this evening, and guess what? It’s not custom painted, it’s not some sort of funky special edition — it’s real, it’s coming, and more importantly, it’s coming here. Word on the street we’ll see it before the first quarter’s out for $599, implying that there’s a little price drop for N95s of all colors in the cards for the near future.

 

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Original post by Chris Ziegler

Hands-on with the Nokia N95 8GB for North America!

Monday, January 7th, 2008

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All signs pointed to this sucker existing, and sure enough, here it is. The N95 8GB for North America is pretty much exactly what you’d expect it to be — an exact replica of the European version with the 2100MHz WCDMA radio surgically removed and replaced with an 850 / 1900MHz counterpart for speedy data in these lands. The screen is up to 2.8 inches versus the original N95’s 2.6, but the 8GB of internal storage comes at the cost of the microSD slot, so don’t get all cocky on us about rocking 16GB of storage in your pocket, alright? Check it in stores this quarter for $749.

 

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Original post by Chris Ziegler

Hands-on with the Motorola Z10 banana slider

Monday, January 7th, 2008

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The Z8 is so 2007, and we’re ready for something new to satisfy our insatiable banana phone needs. Technically this form factor is called a “kick slider,” yes, we understand that, but who wouldn’t rather own and use a banana phone? Anyway, the Z10 is a marvelously attractive phone, owing largely to a tastefully metallic casing that’s reminiscent of the platinum V3xx (and we mean that in a complimentary way). Our time with the phone was all too brief, but we got the impression that the Z10’s implementation of UIQ — like the Z8’s before it — is an awesome implementation of Symbian that could easily give S60 a run for its money if only Motorola would take the time and R&D dollars to proliferate these kinds of phones a little bit more than they do. Sadly, the Z10 features HSDPA only on the 2100MHz band, and we got absolutely no impression from Team Moto that there’d be any Americanized version on the way. Lucky you, Europe!

Gallery: Hands-on with the Motorola Z10 banana slider

 

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Original post by Chris Ziegler

Nokia “Dora” to replace E65

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

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We were still kinda settling in with the businesslike E65 slider, a phone that feels like it just found its way into widespread commercial availability a few months back. Ah, that’s because it did! No bother, though; time marches mercilessly on, and Nokia’s apparently getting ready for the inevitable future with this here piece coined “Dora.” We know this from the same endless barrage of Vodafone leaks that have plagued the carrier today, and we’re sensing some common themes: like several others in the mix, this one features 3.6Mbps HSDPA, GPS, and WiFi. The camera is up from 2 megapixels to 3.2, and we’re a tad skeptical on this one, but the slide claims that we can expect a 320 x 320 display which would be an improvement over the E65’s 320 x 240. This one’s expected on Voda next quarter for £280 (about $554).

 

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Original post by Chris Ziegler

Nokia “Liam” is the E61i successor

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

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Okay, next up from Boy Genius Report’s Vodafone breakdown comes the Nokia “Liam,” the phone we just saw in the wild being called the E71. No word from this slide whether the E71 name is gonna stick, but Liam is pretty obviously a codename so it’ll pick up an “E” number of one sort or another by the time it launches in the second quarter. Looks like all the features we’d heard so far are holding strong: HSDPA, 3.6 megapixel cam, WiFi, GPS, video call support, and pretty much all the S60 you can handle. No word from this slide whether US 3G’s in the mix, but we’re crossing our fingers.

 

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Original post by Chris Ziegler

Nokia E71 in the wild?

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

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Looks legit enough, doesn’t it? The supposed successor to the E61i has broken cover via this shot of the device — in prototype “EXX” form, no less — being proudly displayed in some lucky son of a gun’s hand. The “E” moniker designates a Nokia smartphone with a business slant, of course, and thanks to a lovely QWERTY board, the E71 seems to be no exception; specs on the E51-ish device are said to be pretty much in line with what we’d expect for a circa-2008 piece, including HSDPA, WiFi, GPS, and a 3.2 megapixel primary cam with a secondary up front for video calling. As for North American 3G, well… as usual, we can only hope. We’re not sure whether this thing will break officially here at CES, but if it does, you’ll be the first to know.

[Via Unwired View and IntoMobile]

 

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Original post by Chris Ziegler


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