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Android

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FOI Topics and Links of the Week

December 23rd, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Android, Book, cybersecurity, Future of the Internet, iphone  |  2 Comments

As Phones Do More, They Become Targets of Hacking. The NY Times observes that as computing — and especially commerce — moves onto mobile devices, security threats are growing. “It feels a lot like it did in 1999 in desktop security … People are using the mobile Web and downloading applications more than ever before, […]

FOI Topics and Links of the Week

December 10th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Android, cloud, Future of the Internet, iphone  |  Comments Off on FOI Topics and Links of the Week

Apple’s Game-Changer, Downloading Now. Long NY Times article on Apple’s App Store and how it’s changed the model of what a smartphone should be. The good parts of the article: interesting data (100K apps for the iPhone, 14K for Android, 500 (!) for PalmOS; $1B a year in iPhone app sales), some valuable musings on […]

FOI Topics and Links of the Week

November 30th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Android, cloud, Future of the Internet, iphone  |  1 Comment

Here’s a roundup of some interesting stories published recently on generativity, tethered devices, and as always, the iPhone. Generative Irrelevancy. Tim Sturgill considers Google’s video touting Chrome OS. He worries that it may be the “final nail…in the generative coffin,” but he also sees the virtue of moving beyond traditional OSes. See also JZ’s take […]

Inside baseball on smartphone application approval processes

September 30th, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Android, cybersecurity, iphone  |  1 Comment

As promised, here’s some of what we learned about the app approval process from Google and Apple’s letters to the FCC. There’s nothing ground-shaking, but a few details of interest to smartphone obsessives. Apple: Apple says a staff member tests every submission for technical issues like bugs and unauthorized protocols. More holistically, they look for […]

Google, looking like Apple, pulls tethering apps

April 2nd, 2009  |  by Elisabeth Oppenheimer  |  published in Android, iphone  |  2 Comments

I’m starting to get a better sense of what Google’s open mobile OS, Android, will look like in practice. Google has just pulled tethering apps from the Market, the on-phone equivalent of Apple’s App Store. Tethering apps allow users to use their mobile phone as a sort of modem/internet connection for their laptop, and carriers […]

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@simonw @BioTurboNick True in both directions! twitter.com/ChrisBettles1/…

Yesterday from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone

@PeterContiBrown You have always been, as Yiddish would have it, a mensch. <3

About 2 days ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone

@davidfrum The answer to which branch the VP is in (which is probably “yes”) shouldn’t affect former VP Pence’s stance on the subpoena. Any immunities are privileges, not duties. Given what happened (and his affirmation of same), and the importance to country, he should voluntarily testify.

About 5 days ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone

@paulg Imagine this phenomenon applied to legal reasoning: AI might predict what a judge would say and even write the appellate opinion. But then does the law stop developing in 2023? Do we have a pool of human judges to apply contemporary standards and create new training data?

About 6 days ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter Web App

@AlexanderAbdo Seems like we should do a LOCKSS for OLC opinions!

About 6 days ago from Jonathan Zittrain's Twitter via Twitter for iPhone



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