Sunday, April 29, 2007

Cult of Mac (4 сообщения)

  RSS  Cult of Mac
Read Leander Kahney's latest commentary about Apple and Mac News in Wired.com's Cult of Mac Blog, including Mac, Mac Pro, MacBook, iMac, iBook, Mac mini, iPod video, iPod nano, iPod shuffle, iTunes, iPhoto, iPhone, Apple TV, OSX, Steve Jobs, and Macworld.
http://blog.wired.com/cultofmac/
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  • Beautiful Alternative Browser Shiira 2.0 Ships
    If you're not too busy detailing ways to make Firefox better, you might want to contemplate a more radical shift. Shiira, the Webkit-based alt-browser put together by a team in Japan, has just made it to version 2.0, and it's...

    Shiira2Betaoverview

    If you're not too busy detailing ways to make Firefox better, you might want to contemplate a more radical shift. Shiira, the Webkit-based alt-browser put together by a team in Japan, has just made it to version 2.0, and it's beautiful. I haven't gotten to use it yet, so I can't report on its performance, but the interface might just be the best on OS X. Yes, even nicer than OmniWeb. It's free and open-source. Remember: Together, Everyone Achieves More. Go Joe!

    Shiira Project

    Technorati Tags: ,



    Pete Mortensen


  • Why Some Want Apple to Stay Away From Their Favorite Software
    Sometimes, users of high-end, professional software despair when Apple buys the company that makes it. Stu Maschwitz, one of the founders of a href="http://www.theorphanage.com/"The Orphanage/a, a San Francisco FX studio responsible for Sin City, The Host, and a bunch of...

    Colorui

    Sometimes, users of high-end, professional software despair when Apple buys the company that makes it. Stu Maschwitz, one of the founders of <a href="http://www.theorphanage.com/">The Orphanage</a>, a San Francisco FX studio responsible for Sin City, The Host, and a bunch of others, explains:

    When you buy expensive software from small companies, you effectively become best friends with the development team. You know them by first names and you send them holiday cards. You have a folder full of emails from and to them. Apple, however, mistakenly applies the same strategy of black-box secrecy that works so well for iPods and iPhones to its Pro Apps division as well, cutting off developers from users and vise versa. I have struggled with this enough that my company, The Orphanage, no longer has any special relationship with Apple. It's just too much of a one-way street. I can't buy my bread-and-butter tools from someone who can't conduct an open conversation with me (under NDA of course) about the future of the product.

    Maschwitz's post is about the new Color tool in Final Cut Pro, and though he has misgivings about what used to be a separate app from a small, friendly company going behind the Apple firewall, all in all he's delighted with the outcome.



    lkahney


  • Safari Zero-Day Exploit -- Links Worth Checking
    Hacking stories bore me to tears, but the cleverly named "pwn-2-own" hacking competition (Hack a honeypot MacBook, get it as the prize) is getting such attention, it's worth pointing to some of the better reporting on the subject: Dan Goodin...

     Cnwk.1D I Bto 20070419 Macbookscansecwest 270X151
    Hacking stories bore me to tears, but the cleverly named "pwn-2-own" hacking competition (Hack a honeypot MacBook, get it as the prize) is getting such attention, it's worth pointing to some of the better reporting on the subject:

    Dan Goodin at The Register:

    A New York-based security researcher spent less than 12 hours to identify and exploit a zero-day vulnerability in Apple's Safari browser that allowed him to remotely gain full user rights to the hacked machine. The feat came during the second and final day of the CanSecWest "pwn-2-own" contest in which participants are able to walk away with a fully-patched MacBook Pro if they are first able to hack it.
    ...

    Dai Zovi, who is not attending the conference, was recruited on Thursday night by Shane Macaulay, a friend and conference attendee. The ease Dai Zovi found in pwning the machine was all the more remarkable, given an update Apple pushed out yesterday patching 25 Mac security holes. Macaulay described Dai Zovi's vulnerability as a client-side javascript error that executed arbitrary code when Safari visited a booby-trapped website.

    Thomas Ptacek at Matasano:

    Turn off Java; to be safe, until Dino lets us say more, turn off everything else too. Or live dangerously like me.

    Charles Jade at Ars Technica:

    ... huge numbers of pundits and anonymous nerds on the Internet will decry Apple's lack of security and how unfair it is that Microsoft, which expands so much effort on security, is perceived as having a less secure OS. Meanwhile, Mac users will rationalize the situation, including me.



    lkahney


  • An iBone! on Flickr
    An iBone from Flickr user laughtonb....

    An iBone from Flickr user laughtonb.

     191 459585522 B8723B341A



    lkahney





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