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An iPhone bug is making phones crash when a certain text is sent

Imessage

A newly discovered iOS bug is crashing iPhones and leaving users without access to the Messages app.
Users who receive a mysterious string of characters in a text are noticing their Messages app will consequently crash, and in some cases, the phone will automatically reboot, according to 9to5Mac. The issue was first posted to Reddit.

 

                                                    

The text is partially in Arabic and includes unicode. It's not so much about what the text says, but rather how Apple's iOS handles the unicode sequence.

iOS Bug

People who are sending the sequence are likely doing so either as a joke or with nefarious intent to lock the recipient's Messages app and block incoming texts. It’s not limited to communications between iPhones; a normal SMS text can trigger the bug, as well.

If one more person sends me that stupid turn off your iPhone text I'm gonna be so mad
The good news: If you received the text sequence, you can undo the damage by replying with a message. In addition, if you have a Mac with iMessage enabled, you can open the message and reply to the sender this way, too.
This is the latest scary iOS bug to make the rounds. In September, Apple pulled an iOS update that disabled the cellular connection and Touch ID fingerprint reader. A glitch affiliated with Touch ID surfaced again just last month.
UPDATE, May 27, 12:45 p.m. ET: Apple said in a statement that it was aware of the issue and would make a fix for the bug available in a software update.
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For more information read this blog: http://mashable.com/2015/05/27/iphone-texts-crash-bug/


Report: Next version of Android will let you log into apps with a fingerprint

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Say goodbye to remembering long passwords.
The next version of Android — tentatively called Android M — will reportedly include "native fingerprint authentication," according to a report from BuzzFeed.
With fingerprint authentication baked right into the mobile operating system, users will be to "log in to all of the supported applications on their Android devices without entering a password," the report states.
Google is expected to announce the feature at its annual Google I/O developer conference that will be held from May 28 to 29 in San Francisco.
iOS users with TouchID-equipped devices know all about the convenience of using a fingerprint instead of entering a password. Not only is it faster, but it's also more secure.
Fingerprint authentication will require a device with a fingerprint sensor, though. There aren't many Android devices that have fingerprint sensors right now — the Samsung Galaxy Note 4,S6/S6 Edge and HTC One Max are a few that come to mind — but that will likely change soon.
A fingerprint sensor was originally planned for the Nexus 6, but Google scrapped the feature at the last minute when it couldn't get a first-class supplier. Apple reportedly gobbled up all of the sensors Google wanted.
In addition to replacing annoying passwords, fingerprints can be used for mobile payments.Apple Pay has already proven to be a hit and Samsung Pay hopes to replicate the same success.
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Obama broke Twitter world record in just 5 hours

Obama-twitter

When you're the President of the United States, almost anything seems possible, including breaking world records.
That's exactly what President Obama did on Monday, according to Guinness World Records. Obama, who signed up for his own Twitter account (@POTUS) two days ago, racked up 1 million followers in under 5 hours — a milestone that handily trumps previous record holder Robert Downey Jr., who accomplished the same feat just shy of 24 hours.
This isn't the first time Obama has used Twitter, however. When he's tweeted in the past, the president did so under The White House's handle (@WhiteHouse).
Hello, Twitter! It's Barack. Really! Six years in, they're finally giving me my own account.
But The White House account, as well as the @BarackObama account, are managed by staffers. Tweets from @POTUS, meanwhile, will come exclusively from the president, the White House promised.
Obama has taken to Twitter another three times since his introductory "Hello, Twitter!" tweet, including two photos snapped of his visit to Camden, NJ and his commencement speech for the Coast Guard class of 2015.
View image on Twitter

 
Welcome to @Twitter, @POTUS! One question: Does that username stay with the office?
Good question, @billclinton. The handle comes with the house. Know anyone interested in @FLOTUS?


Myo armband makes hands-free motion control real

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Gesture-controlled computing is well on its way to transitioning from fantasy to reality.
It's most often accomplished via vision sensors that watch you or your hands and track your movement (think Microsoft Kinect for Xbox). Myo, however, is a gesture controlled armband that reads forearm muscle movement to interpret a wide range of intentions.
With its matte-black rubber covering, zigzag bands and block-like contact and sensor modules, Myo, which was designed by Thalmic labs, looks less like an interface-control device than one of Batman’s nifty “toys.” (You can get it in white, too, but why would you?)
Myo Gesture Control
With it wrapped firmly around your forearm, you can use it to control a presentation, play music in iTunes, control Netflix and even steer a Bluetooth-based toy. At least that's the promise. In practice, Myo fulfills the first task with ease, but — not always through fault of its own — proved more challenging on others.

Easy setup 

Myo doesn't come with a lot of instruction, but it really doesn't need it. You start by downloading the device software and then connecting the device via a USB cable to your computer. There's also a small USB Bluetooth dongle that you'll have to leave plugged into your computer. Even though Myo is a Bluetooth 4.0 device, it can't talk directly to your computer's built in Bluetooth radio.
Once Myo is fully charged and setup, you won't have to plug in again until you need another charge. One charge lasts a couple of days. There’s no physical on-off switch on the device, but you can turn it off through the utility app.
Myo works by sensing changes in the muscles in your forearm.This means you have to learn some specific moves to use it to control applications and devices.
The most critical one is the synch gesture. You put your arm and hand against your body — like it's in a sling — turn your hand out away from your body and then move your forearm away from your body.
I know, it sounds complex, but it's not. I put the band on a co-worker and he learned the move within seconds.
As I mentioned, the Myo band fits snugly over the thickest part of your forearm and you cannot wear it over a shirt. After a half hour or so, it can get a little uncomfortable. But you're not supposed to wear it all day — just when you want motion control. I had someone with a larger forearm than me try it out and he said it felt fine, though he would not wear it if he didn't have to. Another co-worker remarked that it felt like it cut off his circulation and his fingers were tingling a bit after wearing it for a while. Without a snug fit on the arm, though, Myo’s sensors would not work. To fit smaller forearms, Myo comes with tiny clamps that pull the rubberized rectangles closer together.
The device software installs a little utility manager that offers constant Myo status updates just above the Windows Task Tray. It can show you what gesture it thinks you're making (waving, fist clenching, tapping, spreading your fingers wide), when you've successfully synced and if Myo is warmed up.
Myo Gesture Control Band
Myo does take a little time to warm up. Actually, not the technology inside Myo, but its metal contacts that encircle your skin; they work best when they're warmed up. That takes a minute or two, and can get annoying when you're ready and Myo is not.
Myo itself also lets you know that it's recognizing your gestures by gently vibrating.

A gesture away


Myo Gesture ControlThe nice thing about Myo is that you don't have to do much to make it work. Its best use, by far, is for controlling presentations.
Imagine setting up your laptop, stepping away from the computer and the big screen and controlling your presentation with little hand gestures. Myo will fit under a jacket so no one will know how you're doing it. Tapping your thumb and middle finger together will advance the slides and bending your wrist and pointing your fingers toward your belly will make the slides go back.
You can also turn your hand into a "laser pointer" by squeezing your fist tight. A little red dot will show up on top of the slide. You keep your hand squeezed to moved it around on the screen.
All of this worked almost perfectly on my PowerPoint presentation. I did have to learn to tap my fingers together with some force, but I got used to it.

Do more

Myo is not just for presentations. Ultimately, anything you control through a mouse, could be controlled via Myo with the right software. Developers write little downloadable add-ons that you can then be turned on and off via Myo Application management interface.
Some are silly, like the one that lets you control a virtual sock puppet. Others, like the Netflix control, are more practical. Unfortunately, I could not always get these apps to work.
myoscreens
On Netflix, for example, I could never get it to control anything on screen (it only works for the web version of Netflix and not for the Windows app) — an issue likely caused by early software and one that an update could easily fix. Similarly, I could not get the Skype for Windows connector to work.
$199 seems like a lot to pay for gesture-based control of your next presentation, especially when you compare it to the $80 Leap Motion, which doesn't require you to wear anything, but really only detects hands and fingers.
Myo will eventually do so more, though. It already had over 90 downloadable applications and application plug-ins including ones for Reddit, Adobe Lightroom, imgur and games like Need for Speed Most Wanted.
There's a custom shooting game, which is designed a bit like Galaxion, too. The game gives you a virtual gun that you aim by moving around your arm. You shoot by clenching your fist. It was pretty entertaining. It also proves that there’s more to Myo than presentations.
 For more information read this blog: http://mashable.com/2015/05/24/myo-review/


Facebook Messenger now gives context about the people contacting you


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Getting messages from someone you don't know can be a pretty intimidating experience. How did they find you? Why did they reach out?
To make new connections less jarring, Facebook Messenger is introducing a new feature on Thursday that gives you bits of information about someone messaging you for the first time, whether the person is one of your Facebook friends or not. The Messenger team is rolling it out to iOS and Android users in the U.S., UK, France and India over the next few weeks.
Think of it almost like an icebreaker, or "a way to give you more context about new conversations in Messenger," a Facebook spokesperson told Mashable.
When someone messages you for the first time, Messenger plucks bits of information from their Facebook profile, like what their job is, which town or city they live in, and who your mutual friends are (if you have any), then displays that info above their first message, alongside their profile name and photo, like so:


FB-2

 The new feature is similar to one offered in Hello, the app Facebook quietly rolled out in April, which gives Android smartphone owners tidbits of information about the person on the other end of the line.

Screen Shot 2015-05-21 at 7.58.45 AM 

But the feature people will see in Messenger is a tad more savvy. It shows information Facebook thinks will prove most useful, while respecting both users' privacy settings. That's key, especially if you and the other person aren't actually friends on Facebook — in which case, only publicly available information on your profiles is used.
It's a small feature in the big scheme of things for Messenger but one that makes sense. Facebook already sits on data from 1.44 billion active monthly users, so why not use some of their publicly available information to give a little context about new folks who message you? And of course, if the feature helps boost Messenger's user engagement — the more friends you message, the more time you spend on the service — it's a win-win.
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Samsung launches Iron Man-flavored Galaxy S6 Edge

Samsung may have just released the ultimate gadget for fans of Mr. Tony Stark and his superpowered armor suits — the Galaxy S6 Edge Iron Man Limited Edition.
It's not a small makeover, either. Besides the red and gold color scheme, matching the Iron Man suit, the phone also has the Iron Man's mask etched on the back. It comes in a special box — unmistakably Iron Manish, as you can see in the unboxing video below, and it even has a customized charging pad that looks like one of Iron Man's Arc Reactors — mark IV, to be exact.




The software has received the Avengers treatment as well, complete with a set of new icons, fonts and color scheme.
Other specifications are the same as those of regular Galaxy S6 Edge; this particular variant comes with 64GB of memory.
Unfortunately for Marvel lovers in the U.S. and Europe, the Galaxy S6 Edge Iron Man Limited Edition will initially only be available in Korea, where it's coming on May 27, 2015, and in China and Hong Kong in June.
Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
 For more information read this blog: http://mashable.com/2015/05/26/samsung-galaxy-s6-edge-iron-man-edition/


An inconvenient truth: Enterprise mobility is all about the end user

Picture credit: Flickr/FotoBIB
The enterprise mobility market isn’t getting easier for CIOs. Actually, quite the opposite is occurring, as the IT industry proactively segments the environment so that many correct decisions are needed instead of just one. Worse still, the industry is promoting approaches that are convenient to vendors but often inadequate to the mobile environment.
The latest mobile solution detour is called mobile backend as a service, or MBaaS, which separates the mobile platform approach between the mobile app and the middleware infrastructure required. Using this approach, businesses can have a myriad of developers creating mobile apps using any method, as long as that method aligns with the services of their chosen MBaaS supplier.
The approach is an attempt to split between the corporate IT requirements of integration and security, and the creative world of a mobile app. Ideal in principle but hardly practical as programmers must, for example, understand the MBaaS approach to data transfer and in-field recovery, as well as how data flows both to and from systems of record. It is hardly a simple attachment process but rather an architectural compliance requirement.
So why promote this segmentation?
As advocated by Gartner, in rare vernacular:
“Integration is an often underestimated thorn in the backside of most business-oriented mobile app projects.”
This elevation of integration to being central in an enterprise mobile project allows a classic SI approach to come into play, one that resurrects fears regarding complexity of integration and the threat of security breaches. This is in stark contrast to the current enterprise mobility landscape where traditional IT juggernauts have not found fertile ground. Their lack of agility and creativity has made them understandably unattractive for mobile projects.
The other market conflict arising is that every back office vendor has a mobile app, or will shortly. These apps remain in the paradigm of their owners and present the information of their parent systems. Unfortunately, this creates headaches for the line-of-business worker, by example a technician, driver or inspector, who often requires or collects information from multiple back office systems.
To demonstrate, a field inspector may need asset information from an EAM like Maximo, complete safety documentation specific to the site and to submit timesheets for this activity to their corporate HR system. Each function has its own app extension from the corporate system; they are not combined to reflect the end user’s workflow.
Euphemistically they are often described as a mobile workbench, the field worker needing to decide when to use each one and what combinations are required between the apps. Not to say that this approach doesn’t work. If each activity is independent, for example a personal holiday request or an expense submission, the system works. However, it’s entirely inadequate if there is a workflow requirement and where end-user compliance adds value to the organisation. 
Finally, the oldest chestnut is coverage. Coverage is not ubiquitous, and yet the IT industry pretends that it is. Coverage is questionable in underground car parks, homes, mountainous areas, on rainy days when, in downtown Toronto and even on Highway 85 in Silicon Valley.
Questionable coverage is something we encounter every week, and yet it is an emperor has no clothes syndrome and not spoken aloud. IT simply states that coverage is grand. This myth allows decisions to be made for application construction in HTML5 or hybrid solutions, all with constrained data capacity. Reassurances are made that yes, you can work offline, and, no, this will not affect in-field productivity. The reality is starkly different, with end-user acceptance and the expected productivity gains suffering badly.
And yet these solutions are actively deployed for line of business mobile projects.
So why is IT introducing solutions into industrial mobile arenas that are simply inadequate to the task and meant for simpler administration style functions?
Well, because it’s convenient, reassuringly familiar and requires less effort.
The inconvenient truth however is that enterprise mobility is all about helping the employee in the field. The IT industry needs to step up and present them with applications that reflect their workflow at a holistic level, rather than presenting them with a plethora of unrelated apps. Solutions must be robust and not coverage dependent. Likewise, integration to systems of record must serve as part of the story, not the dominant theme.
What is important?
Line-of-business mobile apps are normally used to complete the most important activities of an organisation. That is, where the company is delivering a service or product, where customer interaction is common and/or where quality and transparency of an activity is paramount. Enterprise mobility can have an enormous and positive impact on these interactions. But unless an employee is engaged and supported in their delivery by the mobile solution, the opportunity is lost.
For this reason – the end user rules in enterprise mobility.


Codeless enterprise app platforms: A further democratisation of mobility

(c)iStock.com/Rassco
It’s the age old problem; employees want applications to improve their productivity, but IT, concerned with keeping the lights on, is unable to acquiesce to their requests. A new report from Smith’s Point Analytics argues the benefits of codeless mobile app platforms.
The report, sponsored by Globo, Altova and Umajin, assesses three ways in which organisations can benefit from codeless platforms; templates in a visual editor, componentised drag and drop editors as a plug-in, and drag and drop WYSIWYG visual editors. With the latter, while there is more flexibility in creating the user interface, more work is required, with understanding of software development potentially needed.
The other highlights of codeless mobile app platforms, according to the paper, are fairly straightforward; reducing time required to create apps, de-centralising app development, and eliminating the reliance on expensive, skilled programmers by giving non-developers the tools to create apps.
Yad Jaura is European marketing director at Globo. When asked byEnterprise AppsTech about an apparent disconnect between line of business and IT, he explains how the change has been happening, both formally and informally, to create a two-track IT organisation – a concept affirmed by both Forrester and Red Hat. Jaura explains: “IT needs to evolve into that split to really understand what the business needs, and be able to service that need.
“I think there are parallels to when PCs came on the scene 30 years ago,” he adds. “For the first time it gave departmental managers and people in offices a little bit of autonomy from the IT department, and allowed them to create their own spreadsheets and other models that didn’t mean they had to use that green screen terminal connected to the mainframe. I think we’re seeing the same thing now a little bit with mobile, and the ability to create mobile applications.”
Jaura describes it as a “democratisation of mobility” – many more people can utilise the technology, but mobile still has specific challenges. “[This] is where the application development challenge comes in, and where the codeless piece comes in,” he says. “Unlike the desktop world, where Windows is still the dominant standard, there isn’t a single dominant standard in the mobile world, and so the first question that often gets asked is ‘which platform am I going to build my apps for?’
“That’s where codeless platforms like ours and others mentioned in the report really come into their own, because what they allow you to do is build one single version of an application and roll it out to all of those platforms, instead of having to build three or four different applications, keep them in sync, maintain them all, then roll out to those platforms independently.”
The report concludes: “Codeless mobile app development platforms are a valuable tool for any organisation initiating or expanding their enterprise mobility strategy.”


Innovapptive Announces 77 New Mobile Apps Built on SAP HANA® Cloud Platform Mobile Services

By leveraging the power of the cloud, the SAP HANA® platform, SAP HANA Cloud mobile services, these 77 new apps will allow customers to benefit from quicker ROI, shorter implementation timelines, higher performance, agility and scalability

Innovapptive Inc., a leading provider of mobile solutions, today unveiled 77 new mobile apps leveraging SAP HANA® Cloud Platform mobile services. The announcement was made at SAPPHIRE® NOW and the ASUG Annual Conference being held May 5-7 in Orlando, where Innovapptive is exhibiting at booth 431.
The 77 new mobile apps from Innovapptive – included in the SAP HANA App Center – will be available to customers across various lines of business, including sales, supply chain, human resources, finance and field services. These ready-to–deploy, pre-packaged mobile apps can be used in the cloud, with the SAP HANA Cloud Platform mobile services, and a user-based subscription model. Customers using them via these deployment models are expected to significantly reduce their total cost of ownership (TCO), resulting in accelerated return on investments (ROI). These 77 mobile apps will also be supported by Innovapptive’s http://www.innovapptive.com/products [complementary add-on technology __title__ Innovapptive Products] for SAP HANA Cloud Platform mobile services, allowing customers to benefit from a multitude of enhancements with simple configurations.
“Our company’s vision is to help our customers achieve instant mobilization,” said Sundeep V. Ravande, president and co-founder, Innovapptive Inc. “Delivering our new mobile apps via SAP HANA Cloud Platform mobile services will allow us to take advantage of consolidated mobile technology that is available as a service. When deploying our apps in traditional, on-premises environments, we have completed implementations in as little as four to six weeks, accelerating ROI for customers. By leveraging SAP HANA Cloud Platform mobile services, we now have an opportunity to further extend our instant mobilization value proposition by shortening our implementation timelines by approximately 50 percent.”
SAP HANA Cloud Platform mobile services are designed to drive mobile business innovation with simplicity by connecting people, devices and business networks using SAP’s unique end-to-end capabilities covering the development, staging and secure deployment of mobile apps.
To see a demo of Innovapptive’s 77 SAP Mobile Apps on SAP HANA Cloud Platform mobile services or to learn how it can be leveraged to drive an enterprise mobile growth strategy, please visit Innovapptive in booth 431 at SAPPHIRE NOW. For more information on all 77 mobile apps, visit the SAP HANA App Center, which provides an easy-to-use website for customers to find and access powerful applications available on the SAP HANA Cloud Platform.
About Innovapptive
Innovapptive is a 2015 SAP Pinnacle Award winner, a 2014 SAP Pinnacle Award finalist and a 2014 SAP Mobile Apps Challenge winner. Innovapptive is focused on enabling instant mobilization for Global 2,000 customers, by accelerating their time to market and value. Innovapptive helps customers achieve instant mobilization through its portfolio of mobile apps (77) leveraging SAP HANA Cloud Platform mobile services, which are capable of running on native operating systems and SAP Fiori® apps. Innovapptive’s portfolio of mobile apps is complemented by technology that allows a multitude of customizations through simple configurations. By using these mobile solutions, together with a cloud-based enterprise-branded app store and a configurable app wrapper security tool set, several of the world’s largest customers have instantly mobilized their enterprises in as few as four to six weeks.
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