Archivo para Diciembre, 2010

The update to iOS 4.2 that rolled out last Monday went pretty smoothly, but there were many cases of people who updated to 4.2, then seemingly lost all of their music. I didn’t have this bug on my iPad, but I wasn’t so fortunate with my second-generation iPod touch. Luckily, the fix isn’t difficult.

In reality, your music hasn’t been deleted off the device; iOS has just forgotten it’s there. Here’s how to remind it:

  1. Connect your device to your Mac or PC. (If your device is set to automatically sync when connected, you can cancel it.)
  2. In iTunes, click arrow next to your device in the source menu on the left-hand sidebar, and go to “Music”.
  3. Play any song.
  4. Sync your device with iTunes.

That should do the trick. It worked for me as well as other TAB staff affected by the bug. When you fire up your music app, you should see your music there again. If those steps didn’t work for some reason, let us know in the comments.

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While Android has come on like gangbusters, Apple’s iOS has pushed aside BlackBerry to become the top smartphone platform in the U.S. as of October, according to Nielsen Co., and the most desired smartphone for future purchases. Nielsen said Apple earned its place with a 27.9 percent share of the smartphone market, displacing former No. 1 BlackBerry, which has 27.4 percent while Android has 22.7 percent. Among all likely smartphone shoppers, 30 percent desire an iPhone, followed by Android (28 percent), RIM (13 percent) and Windows Mobile (6 percent). Nielsen said three out of 10 mobile phone owners (29.7 percent) now own a smartphone, up from 25 percent in the second quarter and 28 percent in the third quarter.

The figures indicate that even with the growth of Android, Apple’s iPhone is still the most coveted among smartphone shoppers. That Android has been eclipsing iOS in recent sales speaks more to the availability of Android devices and less to waning appeal of the iPhone. This is good news for Apple, which is expected to launch an iPhone on Verizon early next year, opening up distribution on the largest wireless network in the U.S.

Still, Android is poised for major growth, especially among new smartphone customers. Nielsen said among current feature phone owners interested in buying a smartphone, Android is their top choice at 28 percent followed by the iPhone at 25 percent and BlackBerry at 11 percent. The iPhone enjoys more support among current smartphone owners, with 35 percent interested in buying an iPhone, compared to 28 percent for Android.

While the iPhone remains the most desired smartphone among 18 – 34 year olds and 55-and-over users, Android is tops among 35 – 55 year olds. That suggests Android could be headed for solid growth, as first-time smartphone owners and older mobile subscribers turn to it as their first smartphone.

Interestingly, the iPhone is clearly more popular with women, with 30.9 percent saying they desire an Apple phone compared to 22.8 percent of women interested in an Android device. For men, the competition is closer, but tilted in favor of Android 32.6 percent over iOS 28.6 percent. RIM, meanwhile, has its work cut out for it. BlackBerry, which was the top smartphone in the third quarter, now trails iOS, and isn’t heavily desired by current feature phone owners. That spells trouble in a market that’s growing fast.

It may be confusing to hear the back and forth statistics on which is ahead: iOS or Android. But with 7 out of 10 cell phone owners yet to buy a smartphone, there’s a lot of runway ahead. That should be encouraging for Microsoft and HP, as they try to get back into the smartphone race and a warning to Apple and Google to stay on their game.

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Which bank is WikiLeaks’ target?

(CNN) – As the media fallout from WikiLeaks’ revelations of U.S. diplomatic cables continues to spiral, founder Julian Assange claims the next ‘megaleak’ will target a big U.S. bank.

In an interview with Forbes, Assange said he will release “either tens or hundreds of thousands of documents” early next year and he claims the revelations will be on par with Enron, the energy trader that collapsed in 2001. The resultant scandal also took out venerable accounting firm Arthur Anderson.

He wouldn’t reveal the name of the bank or the nature of potential allegations.

Speculation has run rampant on who the target may be. For the record, the top five U.S. banks are: Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Wachovia and Wells Fargo.

But Assange may have already leaked his own leak in an interview with Computerworld last year when he said WikiLeaks was sitting on five gigabytes from a Bank of America executive’s computer.

“More than a year ago WikiLeaks claimed to have the computer hard drive of a Bank of America executive,” bank spokesman Scott Silvestri told the McClatchy Tribune news service. “Aside from the claims themselves we have no evidence that supports this assertion. We are unaware of any new claims by WikiLeaks that pertain specifically to Bank of America.”

Regardless, the board rooms of major banks are no doubt filled with strategy meetings on what to do if and when this next ‘megaleak’ hits their business.

“If this is an Enron situation, and (the company) has been doing criminal activity, they’re not going to be able to spin their way out of wrong doing,” said Damian Coory, Hong Kong managing director of Edelman, the international public relations firm.

“First mistake managers make in this situation is to think short term, which is linked to a denial phase … when you’re at fault, you have to accept the extent to which you are at fault,” Coory said. “That’s what happened with Enron –- they held on to this belief that this thing is going to go away. The reality is it can come crumbling down in a day.”

We live in the age of asymmetric attacks. A small group of terrorists operating from a backwater nation in central Asia defined the first decade of the 21st century with the September 11 attacks. Now a thumb drive from a low-level military intelligence soldier, handed to a website operating with a few people, has put U.S. foreign policy on the global defensive.

Can the reputation of a multinational corporation be felled by a similar attack? We may soon see.

 

View full post on Business 360

The new iPad-only publication Project from Virgin and Richard Branson has arrived, and is currently available for download from the app store. Users who download the app get a very limited preview of the international culture, business and travel magazine free, and can then buy the first issue for $2.99.

Project is unique in that it has no print version upon which it’s based. In addition to being digital-only, it’s also specifically designed with the iPad’s unique capabilities in mind. You won’t find the typical scanned pages or static content of most early digital publications here. Instead, subscribers to project get access to “updating content” throughout the month.

Kudos to Project if it does indeed manage to bring worthwhile updates to subscribers during the term of their purchase. One of the main problems with the magazine format in the digital age is that waiting an entire month to see new things is just too slow for many users. Of course, we’ve yet to see what Virgin has in mind in terms of updates. If we see only modest additions made throughout the month, it won’t really prove that much of a differentiator.

Potential rival The Daily , Rupert Murdoch’s iPad-only newspaper publication, is set to launch early in December. While the content of the two publications probably won’t be all that similar, the fact that both will be using the iPad as their sole distribution platform will have the print news and periodical industries watching their progress very closely.

If publishers can get the formula right, the iPad is a market of tremendous potential profit. iPad owners are willing to spend more on apps than their iPhone and iPod touch-owning counterparts, and they also appear to be much more receptive to advertising than most.

In addition to better and more interactive content from publishers, a dedicated means of subscribing to content through iTunes would also go a long way toward attracting and keeping readers.

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Animated look from Taiwan on Irish crisis

(CNN) – Jimmy Lai’s Next Media is at it again.

The billionaire entrepreneur and media tycoon is no stranger to ruffling feathers, earning the ire of politicians in Hong Kong, China and Taiwan with his provocative and often racy publications.

His most recent gambit is animated news, which mixes real news footage with dramatization of often unverified version of events. The venture garnered international attention earlier this year with its version of the Tiger Woods car crash and golf club incident.

The latest video – an explainer of the Irish financial crisis and EU bailout, complete with a character representing the EU forcing Ireland to take cash at gunpoint.

Stereotype warning! Does the video include:

A leprechaun and a pot of gold? Check.

Potato characterization of the Irish diet? Check.

Line dancing a la “Riverdance”? Check.

Image of Prime Minister Brian Cowen drinking Guinness beer at his desk? Check.

Jimmy Lai and Next Media will never be accused of subtlety, but the video does gives a fairly involved explainer of why foreign multinationals were drawn to do business in Ireland.

View full post on Business 360

Denuclearising Pakistan

A woman walks past a Pakistan national flag on display at a sidewalk in Lahore August 13, 2010. REUTERS/Mohsin Raza/Files

At about the time WikiLeaks released tens of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables, including one related to a secret attempt to remove enriched uranium from a Pakistani research reactor, a top Pakistani military official held a briefing for journalists that focused on U.S.-Pakistan ties.

Dawn’s Cyril Almeida has written a piece based on the officer’s comments made on the condition of anonymity, and they offer the closest glimpse you can possibly get of the troubled ties between the allies.

First off, as the officer says, Pakistan has gone from being the “most sanctioned ally” to the “most bullied ally” of the United States. Presumably the sanctions that the officer is referring to relate to those imposed  on Pakistan following its nuclear tests in 1998. And as for the most bullied ally the other comments offer a clue: 

These include and I quote from Almeida’s piece:

“The U.S. still has a transactional relationship with Pakistan; the U.S. is interested in perpetuating a state of controlled chaos; and perhaps most explosively given the WikiLeaks revelations, the “real aim of U.S. strategy is to de-nuclearise Pakistan.”

U.S. and Pakistani security interests aren’t the same including over Afghanistan and India, the military officer says. And while Islamabad understood America’s growing focus on North Waziristan, it had to first settle South Waziristan and also factor in the blowback any operation in the area would stoke. The officer intriguingly also talks about indications that parties in the conflict in Afghanistan can renounce al Qaeda and even ask it to leave Afghanistan. In other words he is suggesting  that the Taliban are  ready to break ties with al Qaeda  and if so that removes a big obstacle to peace talks.

But clearly the most significant revelation from the briefing which reflects  frank exchanges between the upper echelons of the Pakistan military and the Obama administration is the one about the the nuclear disarmament of Pakistan. There isn’t any further elaboration in Almeida’s article but taken together with the WikiLeaks disclosures  it seems to confirm the Pakistani people’s worst fears. America is on its borders and its overriding objective is to eliminate Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, its national asset and deterrent against much larger and nuclear-armed India. Indeed the whole idea that the United States has Pakistan’s nuclear programme in its sights just as it has virtually recognised India as a legitimate nuclear weapon state must rankle deep across Pakistan.

“The people of Pakistan measure the strength of U.S.-Pak relations on the scale of the U.S.-India partnership,” the military officer is quoted as saying.

According to WikiLeaks,  the United States has been secretly trying to convince Pakistan to allow it to remove uranium from a research reactor on fears it may be stolen or diverted for use in a nuclear device. But Pakistan has refused visits from American experts, according to a May 2009 report by former U.S. Ambassador Anne W.Patterson because “If the local media got word of the fuel removal, they would certainly portray it as the United States taking Pakistan’s nuclear weapons,” a Pakistani official told her.

The question is which reactor the Americans are talking about? Top Pakistani nuclear scientist Pervez Hoodbhoy thinks the report probably refers to the enriched uranium that Pakistan received under the Atoms for Peace programme that America  ran for several countries including India back in the 1960s. He told the Christian Science Monitor that the only reactor running on highly enriched uranium was a small 5mw facility at PINSTECH closed to Islamabad. Pakistan whose weapons programme is based on the uranium enrichment route rather than plutonium has since built its own capability. Any attempt to remove the uranium from that particular reactor is not going to impair its nuclear  programme.

View full post on Global News Journal

Will Roger Federer rule in 2011?

Roger Federer won the season-ending ATP Tour World Finals at London's O2 Arena on Sunday.
Roger Federer won the season-ending ATP Tour World Finals at London's O2 Arena on Sunday.

After Wimbledon, several well-known commentators speculated that Roger Federer would never regain the number one ranking. At the time I thought it was way too early for such speculation and found such talk quite irritating. What must have Federer thought?

Arguably the classiest man in tennis – he’s given so much back to the game – treated like an also-ran after a relatively poor summer season (relative because most players would die for the results he had!)
How quick we are to write athletes off.

From his performance at the ATP World Tour Finals in London, I believe Federer could well take the 2011 season by storm. In a tournament which included the top 8 players in the world, the Swiss lost just one set throughout. That was in the final against Nadal, which in the end he won convincingly.

Agreed, the indoor surface suited Federer much more than the Mallorcan, but still, we know all about Nadal’s ability to win anywhere, anytime, don’t we?

The Spaniard was easily the man of 2010. He was superb in winning the final three majors, and I think he is also a fabulous ambassador for tennis. His rivalry with Federer is, in my mind, the best of all time and off the court, the two have enormous respect for each other and are quite friendly, unusual for two top athletes in the same sport (think Borg and McEnroe, Tiger and Phil).

It will be interesting to see if Nadal can keep up his stellar play next year. For me, he will have to in order to prevent Federer domination.

I asked a close acquaintance of Federer’s at the US Open shortly after his semi-final defeat to Djokovic, why the Swiss was staying back so much. He told me that Roger wanted to show he could beat the best from the baseline.

It strikes me that no-one can beat Nadal from the back – at least not very often – and under new coach Paul Annacone, Federer seems to have realized that he may well as use all the talents he’s been given. It’s for this reason that I think the 16-time major winner will retake the number one ranking from Nadal next year.

His career goal is 20 majors. I wouldn’t be too surprised if, by this time next year, he’s nearing the mark, if not there!

View full post on CNN World Sport

8 iPad Apps for the 8 Nights of Hanukkah

Hanukkah comes early this year — it starts the evening of Dec. 1 — so gift givers better get on the ball! What better last-minute gift than these Jewish-themed iPad apps, hand-picked for a variety of backgrounds and ages? (To gift an app, click the triangle next to the price on the app’s iTunes Store page and choose “Gift This App.”)

1. Siddur HD ($19.99)

If you had to pick only one prayer book app, Siddur HD is the most comprehensive. The main focus of the app is a complete Jewish daily (but not Shabbat) prayer book. It contains a variety of styles for different backgrounds such as Ashkenaz and Sephardi. The app includes only the Hebrew text, but an in-app upgrade ($8.99) includes the English for most prayers but not transliterations.

Siddur HD uses the iPhone’s GPS to find out your local prayer times (Zmanim) and the compass function to show the proper direction to pray. The app even helps you find a local minyan and a Luach (Jewish calendar) tells you the Hebrew date and upcoming holidays (with push functions as well). The iPad version is an outstanding example of putting the iPad’s real estate to good use, as you can see in the Zmainm and Luach integrated right into the prayer screen.

2. Dreidel HD ($0.99)

Unfortunately, not many developers have made an all-around great dreidel app. In fact, I could find only one, Aint Bubbie’s, that actually allows you to spin your iPhone to spin the dreidel. After testing with the kids, the most popular game was Dreidel. This app allows you to “spin” a virtual dreidel with a tap. The dreidel lands with one of four symbols face up, which decides how much (if any) of the pot the player gets, or whether he or she has to add to it. The animation, including half-eaten gelt (chocolate coins), kept them occupied for quite a while. Maybe it’s best they can’t spin the iPad to spin the drediel.

3. Jewish Radio ($0.99)
Whether you want an alternative to all the Christmas music playing on the radio, or some great tunes to fry latkes by, the Jewish Radio app has an extensive collection of Jewish and Israeli online radio stations. The scan function allows you to quickly scan like a car radio so you can find which station is playing “Rock of Ages.” For those running iOS 4.0, the music can play in the background.

4. Torah for iPad ($7.99)

Instead of showing you the Torah in a book-like format, the Torah for iPad app acts just like a scroll and the text is presented in a right to left format without pages (and without vowels). Unlike the real Torah scroll, the app allows you to bookmark certain key passages for later reference. The developer has marked each weekly Torah portion, as well as key passages such as the Shema and The Ten Commandments. Even a yad (pointer) is included.

5. 123 Color (Hanukkah Edition, $1.99)

If the kids are getting antsy for sundown, 123 Color can help them get into the spirit. The generic coloring book app has a specific Hanukkah module that allows kids to paint by number or letter on nine different Hanukkah cartoons as well as winter, autumn and general shapes. After the kids (or really bored adults) finish a drawing, they are rewarded with a non-Hanukkah related song and can either email the art or save it to iPhoto.

6. Synagogues ($0.99)

If you are traveling and aren’t sure where you can worship, or if you’re just lazy like me and want to quickly look up your local synagogue’s info, Synagogues is a great app. It uses your current GPS location to find the nearest local synagogue and provides contact details, the name of the rabbi, the congregation size and affiliations.

7. iTalmud – iPad Edition ($29.99)

For those who don’t know, the actual Talmud has old-school “hyperlinks” — well, footnotes — to other volumes and passages, so it ends up making an ideal iPad app. You can use the links to move easily between passages and see all the commentary on one page. This version includes both the Hebrew and English as well as audio commentary from various rabbis that can be turned off and on. Those participating in a Daf Yomi program can keep track of their daily Talmud study in the app.  Note that due to the large download size of the text and audio, it’s best to start initial study with a Wi-Fi connection, because you’re liable to transfer a whole lot of content onto your device early on.

8. Talking Hebrew ($5.99)

Whether you’re traveling to Israel or just want to practice conversational modern Hebrew, this iPad-only app has you covered. You’ll be presented a choice of either words or common phrases such as “Do you speak English?” in a flash-card format that presents a picture of the word, the word in Hebrew and then the audio. You can even record yourself speaking the word for practice. When you are confident enough, you can take a quiz, matching the Hebrew with either the English or the picture. Sadly, no phrase for “Where is the bathroom?” was included, nor was “Do you have applesauce for these latkes?”

Whether you want to give a new app each night or give them all at once is up to you. Happy Hanukkah!

Disclosure: All apps were provided directly from the publisher at no charge for review purposes.

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Mac 101: Creating Secure Disk Image Files

If you have files on your Mac that you don’t want others to have access to, the simplest way to secure them is to create an encrypted Apple disk image. An Apple disk image is a single file that can be mounted by OS X as a drive. You can create new blank disk images, which bear the familiar .dmg file extension, on a Mac using Disk Utility.

  1. Open Disk Utility (located in Applications>Utilities) and select File>New>Blank Disk Image from the menu bar.
  2. Under “Save As,” enter the desired filename for your .dmg. Enter a name for the disk image (this is what will appear in your source menu when it’s mounted) and choose the size of the disk you want to create.
  3. Keep the format set to the default: Mac OS Extended (Journaled)
  4. Go ahead and set the encryption to 256-bit AES
  5. Set Partitions to Single partition – Apple Partition Map
  6. For Image Format, choose read/write disk image

When you click “Create,” you will be prompted to set a password for the file you have created. If you click on the key image next to the password field, a Password Assistant will pop up to help you create a strong password. Choose Memorable and a long length (the max length of 31 characters is most secure), and the Password Assistant’s autogenerated password will be very hard to guess using a software program (the level of security is similar to that of a Captchas, the word-generating fields used to determine whether a visitor is human or not).

Dragging data to your disk image when it is mounted will copy it to the .dmg. Once you eject the disk image, you’ll need to enter your password to mount the image again and access your files. If the .dmg file is unmounted (ejected), people who don’t have access to your password won’t be able to get the data within. You can securely mount the resulting .dmg file from any Mac. If you decide to remember the password in your Mac’s Keychain (the password prompt will ask you if you want to do this), keep in mind that anyone else who has access to the user account that keychain is associated with will also have access to the files within.

This technique is particularly useful when preparing taxes or hiding the electronic trail of receipts and correspondences related to a special gift you want to keep secret from tech-savvy nosy kids this holiday season.

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Soundoff: Who Will Host the 2018/2022 World Cups?

FIFA-Executive-Summary-Spain-PortugalThe clock is tumbling down on the World Cup 2018/2022 bid process, now at less than 48 hours. If you’ve been paying attention, you’ve probably heard every rumor imaginable, and that everyone outside of The Betherlands (a portmanteau seemingly too good to pass up – even Nelgium works – but they will) and South Korea (which will be placated by the 2018 Winter Olympics), has been tipped to receive the tournament.

However, a key piece of info has arisen:

England and the U.S. are the only countries bidding to host the World Cup in 2018 and 2022 that can meet FIFA’s revenue targets, a study commissioned by soccer’s governing body said.


Sure, any study can be mangled to fit any desired outcome, but how many of those studies make their way into the hands of FIFA? That’s all that really counts.

This isn’t some extraordinary news nugget, though. England and the US have been the on-paper front runners forever, providing safe, reliable, plain Jane bids in the face of allegation after allegation of FIFA misconduct.

Which makes it unlikely one or both will get the bid for the simple fact that these things never turns out as it should. FIFA’s about money, yes, but it’s about legacy building too.

Oh, and corruption, which is a major consideration.

So here are the bidders…

2018:


England
Russia
Sportugal (Spain-Portugal)
The Betherlands (Belgium-Netherlands)


2022:

Australia
Japan
Qatar
South Korea
US

I’ll happily concede England are USA are the favorites…and then pick Sportugal and Qatar. Because that’s just how FIFA works.

So who do you think will host the 2018 & 2022 World Cups?

View full post on International Football News – World Cup Blog

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