mld53a

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mld53a
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  • Apple Acoustics VP hints that Bluetooth could be holding back AirPods

    Give me a ‘U’. 
    Give me a ‘W’. 
    Give me a ‘B’. 
    What does it spell?
    UWB. 
    Ultra-Wide Beam. 
    Ultra-Wide Beam. 
    Ultra-Wide Beam. 
    Ultra-Wide Beam. 
    Ultra-Wide Beam. 
    Ultra wide BAND. Not Beam. 
    leavingthebiggMplsPwatto_cobrasphericroundaboutnowfastasleep
  • Apple's 'For All Mankind' tops USA Today's best TV of 2021

    "For All Mankind" -- Haven't watched it and don't plan to.

    Landing a man on the moon, despite enormous cost in energy, money and human lives, was an enormous triumph not only for the U.S. but for all of mankind:  "One tiny step for man...."  And, at the same time, the world agreed to keep space open for all without military rivalries or interventions.

    No, rewrite of that history can improve on what was accomplished there.
    The reality is far superior to any fiction.  I prefer to cherish the reality.  The hope and opportunity that it promised has shaped my life and that of others -- such as Steve Jobs who also grew up in that era where even the sky was no longer the limit.
    The reality was truly better than fiction... until it wasn't. The will to be great died in the early 70s, and it took some unbalanced and maniacally egotistical billionaire entrepreneurs 45 years to bring it back.

    But whatever you think about the past and present, FAM is an interesting and well-told story and I'm enjoying it greatly so far, even though I have terrible distrust for the creator ("Battlestar Galactica" was one of the worst f*ckups and cheats in the history of SF).
    (and it was all done with paper, pencil and slide rules (even the emergency rescue of Apollo 13) -- computers (even calculators) barely existed back then.  [...]
    Are you ignorant, or exaggerating for effect? That's false, though the computers they used certainly were primitive, and they did do a lot by hand. (In fact, computer technology was driven forward tremendously by the moon shot.)

    I am glad you are enjoying the rewrite and I trust that you are correct that it is an improvement over historical fact.  But for me, it is not a competition.  The Apollo program represents one of man's best hours and I want to cherish it and hand it down to succeeding generations just as it was without "improvement".  It wasn't just about the amazing accomplishment but also about the hope, courage, confidence and optimism for mankind that it illustrated. 

    Was I exaggerating about what they accomplished with so little (by today's standards)?  Nope!  Not a bit.  It was primarily accomplished with paper, pencil and slide rules:  computers were in their infancy back in the 60's.  A room sized computer was fed by punched cards and could not do what an iPhone does today.   But yes, the program very much advanced a number of technologies that they developed in order to do what they did.
    “The Apollo program represents one of man's best hours …”

    Let’s not forget the women who contributed as well. 



    Japhey
  • LinkedIn sued over clipboard snooping iOS app activity

    MplsP said:
    Ok, so someone is suing LinkedIn because their app reads the clipboard. Have they demonstrated harm? It’s kind of hard to win a civil suit if you can’t demonstrate harm.
    That’s the purpose of the lawsuit. The Discovery process should reveal what they are doing with that data. 

    Here is some text from the actual complaint. Pretty egregious to me. 


    The system clipboard often contains some of the most sensitive data users routinely and temporarily store on their devices. Indeed, users store information, such as photos, text messages, e-mails, cryptographic keys, or even medical records, in their device clipboards to name a few examples. And LinkedIn was surreptitiously reading it—again and again and again—without any user-triggered paste commands, and without even notifying the user. LinkedIn’s conduct, which continued for potentially years before Apple’s iOS 14 beta laid bare its existence, was particularly egregious for users with more than one Apple device.

     

    A feature on Apple iOS and MacOS devices called the Universal Clipboard allows nearby devices to share clipboard information. Thus, a photo “copied” on a Mac computer is instantly transferred to a nearby iPhone’s clipboard—but it only remains available to a user on that device for 120 seconds for security reasons.

     

    Yet the LinkedIn App doesn’t just cut the user out of the clipboard equation—it circumvents the 120 second timeout on Apple’s Universal Clipboard. Specifically, the LinkedIn App repeatedly reads the Universal Clipboard with every user keystroke, and these 'reads' are interpreted by Apple’s Universal Clipboard as a 'paste' command, which takes the temporary information in the Universal Clipboard and removes the 120 second timeout. Simply put, LinkedIn has not only been spying on its users, it has been spying on their nearby computers and other devices, and it has been circumventing Apple’s Universal Clipboard timeout policy in doing so.

    cy_starkmanstevenozcaladanianwilliamlondonronnFileMakerFellerwatto_cobra
  • Apple sued over iMessage support for SMS embedded links



    By LAW you cannot patent something that is “obvious”.  WTF is more “obvious” than clicking on a hyperlink, that is literally baked into the name hyperLINK!

    The patent office is FATALLY corrupt and/or (probably and) incompetent.
    Was it obvious back in 2001 when the patent was filed? Obviousness needs to be judged based on a patents priority date, not today. 

    That IS the law. 
    lordjohnwhorfin
  • How to make more use of Notification Center in macOS

    I use four monitors and it would be great to be able to say which monitor notifications appear on. It’s always the right no matter which way I arrange my monitors. 
    watto_cobra