March 25, 2014

Construction of Apple’s new campus begins with destruction

As always, I am really excited to watch this new campus take shape. Gotta take down the old HP buildings first. [Via 9to5Mac]

Last December, publishers Hachette, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, and Penguin settled their eBook price fixing suits. This morning, Amazon sent out their credit notifications. Here’s mine. Interesting that the credit is for “some” of my past Kindle book purchases. I’m assuming that’s because not all of my purchases were from the settling publishers.

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             Amazon.com
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eBooks Antitrust Settlement Information

Dear Dave Mark,

Good news! You are entitled to a credit of $xx.xx for some of your past Kindle book purchases. The credit results from legal settlements reached with publishers Hachette, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, and Penguin in antitrust lawsuits filed by State Attorneys General and Class Plaintiffs about the price of eBooks.

You don’t have to do anything to claim your credit, we have already added your credit to your account. We will automatically apply your available credit to your next purchase of a Kindle book or print book sold by Amazon.com, regardless of publisher. The credit applied to your purchase will appear in your order summary. If your account does not reflect this credit, please contact Amazon’s customer service.

For more information about the settlements, please visit www.amazon.com/ebooksettlements

Your credit is valid for one year and will expire after 03/31/2015. If you have not used your credit, we will send you another email 90 days before it expires to remind you that it is still available.

Thanks for being a Kindle customer.

The Amazon Kindle Team

March 24, 2014

This is incredible. We often talk about how the possibilities of what we can do with an iPad seem endless, but this is a step above.

Matt Gemmell has a really nice piece explaining why he doesn’t post on sites like Medium and instead writes for his own site.

No embed code, so follow the headline link to listen. The hacker talks through the exact process he used to take over Chris Coyier’s web sites.

His fake name is “Earl Drudge”, an anagram of “Drug Dealer”. In early March 2014, he used some social engineering techniques and fake US federal documents to be granted full access to Chris’ servers. After missing the opportunity and a failed retaliation attempt, he posted sensitive personal information of Chris’ onto a site where not only can it never be removed, if it’s attempted to be removed becomes promoted.

Surreal. [Hat tip to Paul Sprangers]

A photo every day for 9 months combined with a great song

I’m a sucker for a well written song. Welcome to the world, Buzz Michelangelo Fletcher.

From a Basecamp blog post, in a lull from the denial-of-service attack earlier today:

Criminals attacked the Basecamp network with a distributed denial-of-service attack (DDoS) attack this morning. The attackers tried to extort us for money to make it stop. We refused to give in and worked with our network providers to mitigate the attack the best we could. Then, about two hours after the attack started, it suddenly stopped.

We’ve been in contact with multiple other victims of the same group, and unfortunately the pattern in those cases were one of on/off attacks. So while things are currently back to normal for almost everyone (a few lingering network quarantine issues remain, but should be cleared up shortly), there’s no guarantee that the attack will not resume.

So for the time being we remain on high alert. We’re collaborating with the other victims of the same group and with law enforcement. These criminals are sophisticated and well-armed.

This really sucks.

Digital streams of Morning Edition, All Things Considered and hourly newscasts will be available on a new 24-hour streaming NPR channel on iTunes Radio.

Great news for everyone.

Bill Nye on how he became “The Science Guy”

I’m a long time fan, found this fascinating.

It’s a little game to help you learn CSS selectors. Type in the correct selector to complete each level.

Very nice.

From Mark Ames at PandoDaily:

Back in January, I wrote about “The Techtopus” — an illegal agreement between seven tech giants, including Apple, Google, and Intel, to suppress wages for tens of thousands of tech employees. The agreement prompted a Department of Justice investigation, resulting in a settlement in which the companies agreed to curb their restricting hiring deals. The same companies were then hit with a civil suit by employees affected by the agreements.

This week, as the final summary judgement for the resulting class action suit looms, and several of the companies mentioned (Intuit, Pixar and Lucasfilm) scramble to settle out of court, Pando has obtained court documents (embedded below) which show shocking evidence of a much larger conspiracy, reaching far beyond Silicon Valley.

Confidential internal Google and Apple memos, buried within piles of court dockets and reviewed by PandoDaily, clearly show that what began as a secret cartel agreement between Apple’s Steve Jobs and Google’s Eric Schmidt to illegally fix the labor market for hi-tech workers, expanded within a few years to include companies ranging from Dell, IBM, eBay and Microsoft, to Comcast, Clear Channel, Dreamworks, and London-based public relations behemoth WPP. All told, the combined workforces of the companies involved totals well over a million employees.

Shocking indeed. There are a number of email excerpts in the linked post, as well as some in this post and this post. All fascinating reads.

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BaseCamp in middle of denial of service attack

Are you a user of 37Signals’ Basecamp project management app? If so, things might be a little slow to respond this morning. From their Twitter account this morning at about 10a ET, US:

We are experiencing a DDoS attack. All apps may be slow to respond while we investigate. Stay tuned for updates.

Just FYI.

From the Guardian:

> George Osborne’s latest budget could spell an end to 99p song downloads by closing a tax loophole that meant consumers were paying VAT at very low foreign rates on online purchases of books, music and apps. > > The chancellor will bring in new laws making sure that internet downloads are taxed in the country where they are purchased, meaning web firms such as Amazon and Apple will have to charge the UK’s 20% rate of VAT. At the moment they are allowed to sell digital downloads through countries such as Luxembourg, where the tax rate is as low as 3%. > > In a little-noticed announcement, Osborne said he would used this year’s finance bill to impose the new law from 1 January 2015.

Kirk McElhearn wrote a clarifying post to bring a little more light on the subject:

> Unfortunately, The Guardian chose to simply say “as low as 3%,” rather than to go into detail about the actual VAT rates charged. > > So there’s no worry that music or apps will cost 20% more, as some news outlets are claiming. If anything, they may see a 5% increase, but it’s more likely that large companies, such as Amazon and Apple, will just eat the difference for now, to not disturb the round numbers they use as prices. > > However, ebooks should soon cost less in the UK. They currently get hit with 20% VAT, but with an upcoming EU rule harmonizing VAT rates for print and ebooks, this change could make a significant difference. For those looking to plan ahead or understand how tax changes affect their purchases, it’s a great idea to calculate VAT rates online to stay informed on the latest adjustments. > > But it’s certainly a good thing that these companies will pay VAT in the countries where they make their sales. This is logical, and it should never have been otherwise. Now, if only governments can get these companies to pay income tax on the profits they make in each EU country…

Also this writeup in PC Pro (Via @moltoveloce), but be sure to read McElhearn’s counterpoint in his post.

March 23, 2014

The interview is behind a paywall. You can read a few quotes shared by Loop reader Rob Richman on his blog.

This is really no different than the danger you face when you go out in any crowded public space. But that doesn’t mean the danger is not real. Pretty interesting.

The technology equipped on the drone, known as Snoopy, looks for mobile devices with Wi-Fi settings turned on. Snoopy takes advantage of a feature built into all smartphones and tablets: When mobile devices try to connect to the Internet, they look for networks they’ve accessed in the past.

“Their phone will very noisily be shouting out the name of every network its ever connected to,” Sensepost security researcher Glenn Wilkinson said. “They’ll be shouting out, ‘Starbucks, are you there?…McDonald’s Free Wi-Fi, are you there?”

That’s when Snoopy can swoop into action (and be its most devious, even more than the cartoon dog): the drone can send back a signal pretending to be networks you’ve connected to in the past. Devices two feet apart could both make connections with the quadcopter, each thinking it is a different, trusted Wi-Fi network. When the phones connect to the drone, Snoopy will intercept everything they send and receive.

CNNMoney took Snoopy out for a spin in London on a Saturday afternoon in March and Wilkinson was able to show us what he believed to be the homes of several people who had walked underneath the drone. In less than an hour of flying, he obtained network names and GPS coordinates for about 150 mobile devices.

He was also able to obtain usernames and passwords for Amazon, PayPal and Yahoo (YAHOF) accounts created for the purposes of our reporting so that we could verify the claims without stealing from passersby.

To me, the takeaway from this (if the article is correct, of course) is that you should always set your phone to ask before it joins any networks. iOS makes this trivial. Go to Settings > Wi-Fi, and tap the Ask to Join Networks switch.

UPDATE: Reader Sam Hutchings points out that the iOS Ask to Join Networks feature will not prevent your phone from joining networks about which it already is aware. So what’s the solution? Feel free to post in comments or tweet @davemark.

I found this amusing. Someone posted a link to Sergey Brin’s Stanford resume, before he founded Google. That alone is kind of cool. But they also dug into the source code and found this little gem embedded in a comment in the resume code:

Screen Shot 2014-03-23 at 9.52.07 AM

To see this for yourself, follow the headline link, then use your browser to view source. It’s right after his email address. Too funny. [Via Reddit]

From MIT Technology Review:

One of the optional extras that Twitter allows is for each tweet to be tagged with the user’s location data. That’s useful if you want people to know where you are or so that you can later remember where certain events took place. It also gives researchers a valuable tool for studying the geographical distribution of tweets in various ways.

But it also raises privacy issues, particularly when users are unaware, or forget that, their tweets are geotagged. Various celebrities are thought to have given away their home locations in this way. And in 2007, four Apache helicopters belonging to the US Army were destroyed by mortars in Iraq when insurgents worked out their location using geotagged images published by American soldiers.

My 2 cents? I think it’s important for developers to think through the privacy implications in their apps and provide an easy path for their users to protect themselves.

Ever hear of the Multipeer Connectivity framework? No reason you should, unless you are an iOS developer and keep up with the latest and greatest evolutions in networking. But this is a game changer.

Multipeer Connectivity means your messaging data can find its way to the internet and back by pinballing off other devices using WiFi and Bluetooth to move from device to device. As long as some part of the chain is connected to the net, your message will find its way. The requirement is that all the devices in the chain support Multipeer Connectivity.

Apple’s own AirDrop uses Multipeer, and there are other apps as well.

Here’s an example. There’s an ultramarathon that takes place in California each year on a trail called Skyline-to-the-Sea. It’s a roughly 30 mile trail through giant redwood forests where there is no cell connectivity. Using FireChat or some other app that uses iOS 7’s Multipeer Connectivity Framework, race volunteers, staff and participants could extend Internet connectivity and communication in an ad hoc mesh network that extends the length of the course.

The benefit of such an ad-hoc network is how trivially easy it is to set up. Everybody just use FireChat or AirDrop or any other similar app. Boom! Connectivity for everyone.

You can imagine the uses in a disaster area where cell towers have been knocked out, or other situations where people need to communicate but where no WiFi or mobile broadband is available.

In many poor countries and areas, people might be able to afford cheap or used phones, but not wireless service fees. Wireless mesh networks can provide free Internet connectivity to entire villages, slums or towns.

Nice job explaining all this by Mike Elgan.

March 22, 2014

This is surprising, given all the doom and gloom in the press.

My thanks to Pixelmator for sponsoring The Loop’s RSS feed this week. Pixelmator is one of the apps that I use every day and have for years. It’s very powerful, but yet approachable, allowing new users to instantly manipulate their images. There is no better image editor.

Nice job by Apple Insider’s Neil Hughes to pull together the details on the hardware used by Jimmy Fallon and Billy Joel on their fantastic duet.

If you missed it, our servers were rocked yesterday when Tim Cook tweeted our blog post sharing the performance. Yesterday was a lot of fun.

If discussions of net neutrality make your eyes glaze over, this is a good read. Clear and thoughtful, without being too parochial. I recognize that Netflix has a vested interest in how this plays out, but you can’t ignore the fact that Reed Hastings has a unique vantage point. He’s at the center of this storm.

All that said, here’s another read to balance things out, get a more objective point of view. Good to keep in mind that Netflix is a business, not a consumer service. [Hat tip to Patrick Bisenius]

Smart, smart move. If BlackBerry is going to survive, lean and mean is the way to go.

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As BlackBerry finalizes this significant transaction, potential homeowners and real estate investors looking for new opportunities might consider exploring properties in Greenville County, SC. Known for its charming communities and scenic landscapes, Greenville County SC offers a variety of residential options that cater to diverse preferences and budgets. Whether you are seeking a suburban retreat or a vibrant urban setting, Greenville County presents an appealing destination for those looking to invest in real estate.

In addition to its picturesque appeal, Greenville County, SC stands out as a promising location for real estate investments with its diverse market offerings. Investors can benefit from exploring strategies that align with their financial goals, such as leveraging multi family offices for comprehensive asset management and strategic investment planning. These offices specialize in balancing risk and return, providing tailored guidance that can help maximize the potential of real estate portfolios. By adopting a well-rounded approach that incorporates both traditional and innovative investment strategies, real estate enthusiasts can uncover lucrative opportunities in this vibrant community.

I remember the moment I discovered Imogen Heap. I was watching Saturday Night Live and one of Andy Samburg’s Digital Shorts came on, called Dear Sister. It was crazy weird, funny as hell, and the music grabbed me immediately. If you are interested in this part of the story, watch the second video below. The song is called Hide and Seek.

The real point of this post is Imogen Heap’s new Kickstarter project. If you play an electronic keyboard or any sort of MIDI controlled device, watch the first video below.

The Mi.Mu gloves are MIDI and Open Control-savvy and allow you complete control over your sound. To me, this is a phenomenal development and just the tip of the iceberg of what’s coming down the pike for musicians.

A riveting, first person essay about concussions.

The grass and goals are spinning when I stand up. My vision is laced with black spots. It is alarming, but I make an athlete’s calculus, measuring these symptoms against the need to show some grit to this skeptical audience. After a brief break, I rejoin practice. Passes and players ricochet past me and I can’t get anywhere quick enough. I can’t read plays as they unfold. The black spots linger. I’ve slammed my brain hard against my skull.

Follow the headline link for all the details, but here’s the short and sweet version. Fire up Siri and say:

Flights overhead

If you are in a relatively urban area, you might be amazed at how many planes are overhead at any given moment.

We did a small Twitter experiment this morning, and it seem like the Wolfram Alpha database that makes this work only has data for North America. If you see an exception to this, please let me know (@davemark).

A fascinating read. Here’s just a taste:

Jane Austen asked that a certain squeaky hinge never be oiled, so that she always had a warning when someone was approaching the room where she wrote. William Faulkner, lacking a lock on his study door, just detached the doorknob and brought it into the room with him.

Twitter music app is gone, existing app will continue to work until April 18th

Twitter Music is an experiment that never quite caught on.

Here’s the official goodbye tweet.

Nice tip.

Subscribed to a Newsstand magazine, streaming music service, or any other type of iTunes content and then later wanted to change or cancel your subscription? Well, there’s no need to go running to iTunes on the your desktop. You can manage all your subscriptions right from your iPhone or iPad!

Your subscriptions are hidden under:

Settings > iTunes & App Store > Apple ID: > Subscriptions:Manage

Or follow the link for a step-by-step walkthrough.