LightBlog

jeudi 12 novembre 2015

JavaScript v8 Exploit Lets Chrome Force an APK Install on Android

JavaScript v8 Exploit Lets Chrome Force an APK to be Installed on Android

During the PacSec conference in Tokyo yesterday, MobilePwn2Own demoed a vulnerability in Chrome that exploits the JavaScript v8 engine and allows malicious hackers to install an application on Android without any user interaction at all. PacSec organiser Dragos Ruiu says that this exploit is rare because “it was one shot” and that most people “have to exploit several vulnerabilities” to load software without user interaction.



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InstaAgent Pulled From Play Store for Harvesting Passwords

InstaAgent App Pulled From the Google Play Store for Harvesting Passwords

InstaAgent, a 3rd-party application that lets you log into your Instagram application and see who was viewing your profile, has been pulled from the Play Store. A separate developer had started to audit the code and discovered that InstaAgent was actually storing your Instagram username and password in an unencrypted plain text file and sending this information to an unknown server.



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Lenovo’s Latest Quarterly Reports Show Net Loss While Restructuring

Lenovo's Latest Quarterly Reports Show Net Loss While Restructuring

While Lenovo is focused on turning their smartphone division into a profitable one, things didn’t look good for the Chinese OEM during the previous quarter of 2015. With $12.2 billion in reported revenue, the company ended up losing $714 million (while analysts had expected to see a loss of $803 million). The company says its restructuring plan will exceed their plans of saving $1.35 billion in annual cost.



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mercredi 11 novembre 2015

The Dark UI Side: Why People Love Dark Themes

Android-M-developer-preview-dark-theme

Designing for the user is a practice widely accepted and followed in the design community, and while it seems to be a fairly straightforward declaration, diving into it proves that that task is substantially more daunting than it seems.

Users everywhere have different tastes, different expectations, different reactions to certain stimuli, different environments et al, and when these factors come into play, the playing field gets more complex.

However, first impressions are lasting ones, and one of the first observations that the user makes, immediately after clicking the icon, is the theme of the app, i.e., whether it follows Light UI principles or Dark UI ones. Depending on a number of factors, the app’s theme may appeal to the users or furrow their brows, and in the case of power users, it’s more often the former than the latter. Why, you ask? Well, here are the major factors,

Contrast

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Dark interfaces, for the most part, sport white text and icons on dark gray or black surfaces, and the subsequent contrast ratio proves to be easy on the eyes, especially on AMOLED displays with black pixels being turned off, allowing for “infinite contrast”. As a result, the readability of interfaces becomes vastly easier, reducing the amount of strain that the retinas are subjected to, proving especially beneficial in dark environments and at night, since unnecessary dilation of the pupils can prove strenuous over longer periods of time when constantly switching between a dark room and the bright screen, and is also one of the factors behind the belief that using screens just before heading to bed may interfere with your sleep cycles.

Aesthetics

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When questioned regarding their staunch support of all things Dark UI, numerous users also cited aesthetics as one of the deciding factors behind their preference. From adjectives like “sleek” and “cool” to “serious” and “pleasing”, the general consensus was that dark interfaces are miles ahead in the aesthetics department, at least among power users. When pressed for more details pertaining to what held the aesthetic appeal, a few users also went on to associate it with fictional digital and sci-fi interfaces, pointing out the scores of homescreen themes that derived inspiration from them.

Power

Coming as no surprise in the age of battery saving, from users with devices sporting AMOLED displays, one of the major reasons why power users lean towards Dark interfaces, especially completely black ones like TRDS, is the advantages they hold in terms of battery consumption. These displays can turn off individual pixels, as opposed to whole backlight powering the pixel matrix in LCD displays, thereby significantly reducing power consumption with most of the screen being off, a technique infamously used by Active Display.


The other side of the fence

While Dark UI has its own set of doggedly loyal supporters, especially among power users, the droves on the other side are increasing day by day, their numbers seeing a sharp upturn since the launch of Material Design, and not without reason. Supporters of light interfaces opine that light text on dark backgrounds often causes afterimages and banding (and the infamous “purple ghosting” of AMOLED screens), often hampering readability and interfering with the user’s sight, and a good number even state that light interfaces seem more natural and in sync with the paper paradigm.

Do you agree with the above arguments? Or are you a firm believer in the Dark Side? Sound off in the comments section below!



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A Lack of Outside Awareness: Is the Industry Letting Itself Down?

Material

I was recently made aware of a disturbing but inevitable fact, key areas of the industry are all but invisible to many of those who could potentially come to perform admirably in related careers. I took some time out at Droidcon UK to interview two students who had been sent to the event as part of work experience, which in the UK happens to the majority of students in year 10 (9th grade). Unlike many students, Imogen and Jessica had no choice in their placement, while they enjoyed their time at the event and showed a great interest in learning a about the industry they also revealed some startling truths.

The students announced that prior to the event they had been completely unaware of the variety of careers available CSC-Fall_Career_Fair-2013-037within the mobile industry and had not seen a presence from anyone in the industry or heard about available roles at school career days. It is here where the industry lets itself down, while many teens have an understanding of the industry and its products they are not necessarily aware of the potential careers available for them or the qualifications or experience needed in order to pursue them. Many of the apparently minor roles taken by people entering the industry do have a profound effect on people’s lives. An article by Michael Mace former Director of Worldwide Customer & Competitive Analysis recall’s how he was approached by a man at a trade show who stated:

“I like your fonts” … “Especially that one.” He pointed to a font that imitated calligraphy, lots of curves and soft angles. “When my niece died, we used it to make the engraving for the tombstone.”

In another significant article our own Editor in chief Mario, discusses how for better of for worse the content the media produces has a significant impact on future generations of phones, devices which themselves play a monumental role in many of our lives. I myself am proud to say I believe I have made an impact on people’s view of the world, not a massive change, but enough to know that out there somewhere are people who will always remember the day they opened one of my articles. I was recently able due to my choice of career in mobile journalism to send two of our readers to China for an all expenses paid trip, an experience they may never have had otherwise.

Without a larger presence at the stage in people’s lives where they are making the decisions that may well determine their future, we are letting some of the most valuable people slip past unnoticed. Engineering, journalism, marketing, media, photographers, R&D, legal, finances and graphic designers are just a few of the departments that are greatly aided by having a prior knowledge of the particular industry involved. By aiding people down the path to relavent education at a younger age we can in turn help bring some of the next generation of staff better prepared and determined. Of course many of the best experts currently working in the industry are self-taught due to the rapid changes made within the industry in the last few decades, however that does not have to be the case for future generations. It is a difficult area to target, of course, after all how many of the older developers here at XDA decided they wanted to go into mobile software development while still in school in a time when qualifications in mobile development were non-existent or few and far between. However it is something OEM’s, security companies and media companies should consider, refocusing outreach programmes in order to help these students.

Of course the point stands that those who are truly interested will do their own research and discover relevant careers as a result but in taking that attitude we are likely to miss exceptional talent somewhere down the line.

What do you think? Would you have benefitted from mobile companies visiting during your education? Leave a comment below!

 



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Leaked Press Render Allegedly Shows BlackBerry’s Next Android Smartphone

Leaked Press Render Allegedly Shows BlackBerry's Next Android Smartphone

There’s been some talk about the next Android smartphone from BlackBerry with the codename Vienna, and we might be looking at it right now. A tip was sent into CrackBerry and they are confident enough in the source to publish it. From the looks of it, BlackBerry will not be giving up their traditional QWERTY keyboard anytime soon.



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HTC Starts Releasing Kernel Source Code for the One A9

HTC Releases Kernel Source Code for the One A9

It may have taken HTC a little too long to release the kernel source code for the Desire 626s, but they are on the ball with the One A9. The Taiwanese handset maker has just release the code on their HTCdev website for a handful of variants including Germany, Spain, Turkey and a couple of others (no US models yet though).



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