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Submission + - Apple Watch Coming in April (trendingthings.in)

An anonymous reader writes: That was the message from Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook Tuesday, as he clarified the timing of the company’s first all-new product since it introduced the iPad in 2010.

Previously, Apple had said only that the Watch would be available in “early 2015.”

“Development for Apple Watch is right on schedule,” Cook said on a conference call with analysts. “We’re going to be thrilled to start shipping it because we have a lot of customers wanting to get one.”

As it did with the iPhone and the iPad, Apple is coming a little late to an emerging product category with an offering it hopes can define the segment. Apple’s competitors have rolled out smartwatches in recent months, but the category has struggled to take off among consumers who question why they need yet another mobile device.

Apple took the wraps off the watch in September, demonstrating its fitness- and health-monitoring capabilities. Apple has said the device will come in three basic models with a wide selection of straps. It needs to be paired with an iPhone to send and receive data.

Apple has said that Apple Watch will start at $349. But many questions remain, including how much higher end models – some of which will include gold – will cost, and whether Apple or independent developers will identify a “killer app” that will entice users to buy it

The Apple CEO said he is using Apple Watch every day and can’t live without it. Cook said an “impressive” number of developers are working on applications for the new product, aimed particularly at tapping its “glances” feature that sends notifications to the watch.

Comment Re:Can they do it with corporate code? (Score 1) 220

Indeed. During a Google Code Jam contest, one has to be fast and the prog has to be fast also! During the contest, a lot of devs 1. don't use the language they would normally use for other programs 2. use tons of Defines to accelerate typing 3. don't care at all about readability, maintenance, code-style and the like. That makes the whole program unique in a way, a kind of signature, but hard to read. That identification algo would have a much harder time to identify devs based on corporate programs.
User Journal

Journal Journal: SystemD: The Beginning 7

DISCLAIMER: THIS CODE REVIEW IS A LONG WORK IN PROGRESS, I COULD BE COMPLETELY WRONG IN ANYTHING I SAY.

To do a proper code review, you need to understand the purpose of the code, what all the stakeholders want. From my own perspective, init scripts work fine, but since Unix companies keep trying to create new init systems, they must have different needs than I do.

Comment Re:And all this without Jobs (Score 1) 534

It just goes to prove no one is irreplaceable; not even Jobs.

On one hand Tim Cook was able to pursue Jobs' job. That's refinement of initially very well designed and innovative products. Under the hood, I see annoying bugs that remain unfixed for years - is Cook able to motivate and manage his teams efficiently? Strategically, where is Apple going? An aggressive campaign to get rid of Chrome on the Mac that smells like the early days of Windows. The exceptionally good results of Apple are due to one thing: a bigger iPhone. Users have been wanting that for a long time, looking enviously at the giant Samsung phones for years. Now that everybody has a bigger iPhone, will they buy a new phone in Sept 2015? Unlikely.

Comment Re:18B on 75B (Score 1) 534

That means your device could be 20% cheaper.

Since when companies charge for making cost + x% margin? That's not the way prices are set. A product is sold at the price it can be sold - the higher the better. Many entrepreneurs are still making huge profit selling stuff 10~100x what it costs in China. Apple could sell 20% cheaper - but why would they do that? They can barely answer the huge demand of iPhones worldwide.

Submission + - Hijacking Drones With Malware

An anonymous reader writes: A recent incident at the White House showed that small aerial vehicles (drones) present a specific security problem. Rahul Sasi, a security engineer at Citrix R&D, created MalDrone, the first backdoor malware for the AR drone ARM Linux system, to target Parrot AR Drones, but says it can be modified to target others as well. The malware can be silently installed on a drone, and be used to control the drone remotely and to conduct remote surveillance.

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