Feb
14
2009
nitro writes “A fairly in-depth technical report by the security researchers at TippingPoint was released on how to reverse engineer the proprietary protocol for controlling a USB missile-launching toy system. They develop an iPhone application to control the device. ‘The hardware is coupled with a simple GUI controller written in Delphi (MissileLauncher.exe) and a USB Human Interface Device (HID) interface written in C++ (USBHID.dll). The toys lost their allure within minutes of harassing my team with a barrage of soft missile shots. That same night I thought I would be able to extend the fun factor by coding up a programmatic interface to the launchers in Python. … One interesting thing is that we have a lot more granular control of the turret movement now than we did with the original GUI. I wrote two simple loops to count the number of possible horizontal and vertical ticks and the results were 947 horizontal and 91 vertical versus 54 and 10 from the original GUI respectively. Granular control allows you to slowly and quietly reposition the turret for stealthy attacks.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Reverse Engineering a Missile Launcher Toy’s Interface | tags: google, iphone, Phone, program, security, stealth | posted in technical news
Feb
14
2009
Comments Off on Shortcovers 'Kindle killer' e-reader under way for smartphones – BetaNews | tags: 3G, google, iphone, kindle, Mac, mobile, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
14
2009
Comments Off on Shortcovers 'Kindle killer' e-reader under way for smartphones – BetaNews | tags: google, iphone, kindle, Mac, mobile, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
13
2009
Comments Off on Shortcovers 'Kindle killer' e-reader under way for smartphones – BetaNews | tags: 3G, google, iphone, kindle, Mac, mobile, news, Phone, tv | posted in technical news
Feb
13
2009
Apple recently told the U.S. Copyright Office that it believes iPhone jailbreaking is a violation of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act and infringes on its copyright, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Comments Off on Apple: iPhone jailbreaking violates our copyright | tags: Apple, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
13
2009
Comments Off on Shortcovers 'Kindle killer' e-reader under way for smartphones – BetaNews | tags: google, iphone, kindle, Mac, mobile, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
13
2009
Apple is making a number of changes to Apple Stores across the country, starting with the iPhone and iPod touch tables to focus on several categories of applications. The company is also supposedly planning a whole new layout for Apple Stores that will focus more on “digital lifestyle.”
Comments Off on Apple Stores being revamped with new layout, table displays | tags: Apple, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
13
2009
The most innovative iPhone app for distributing music I’ve seen this week is a ten-track iPhone app from the Grammy-nominated electronic artist Deadmau5, developed by an Irish company called Future Audio Workshop, which lets anyone with an iPhone, regardless of their level of experience, mix and remix every song in the album…
Comments Off on Remixable iPhone Album Points to Future | tags: iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
13
2009
Comments Off on Shortcovers 'Kindle killer' e-reader under way for smartphones – BetaNews | tags: google, iphone, kindle, Mac, mobile, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Feb
13
2009
rmav writes “Apple has finally made a statement about jail-breaking. They try to sell the idea that it is a copyright infringement and DMCA violation. This, despite the fact (as the linked article states) that courts have ruled that copying software while reverse engineering is a fair use when done for purposes of fostering interoperability with independently created software. I cannot help but think that the recent flood of iPhone cracked applications is responsible for this. Before that, Apple was quietly ignoring the jailbreak scene. Now, I suppose that in the future we may only install extra applications on our iPhones as ad hoc installs using the SDK, and if we want turn-by-turn directions, tethering, and the like, we have to compile these apps by ourselves? Maybe we should go and download the cydia source code and see what we can do with it.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Apple Claims That Jail-Breaking Is Illegal | tags: Apple, google, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news