Monday, 26 November 2007

IPhone Nova Review – Free Downloads For iPhone



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IPhone Nova Review – Free Downloads For iPhone


iPhone Nova is an iPhone download site that offers free downloads for iPhone. You can download everything from iphone games to movies to video and music on your iPhone.


I’ve recently signed up with iPhoneNova and here is my iPhone Nova Review. It cost a one time fee of $49.95 to sign up and you are granted lifetime access to iPhone Nova. You can download unlimited iphone games and movies. There are no limits to how much you can download.


The connection of the service seems quite stable and depending on what speed connection you are on you should not run into any problems, you can also use the service if you have a connection that is only 56K although I would recommend having Broadband for the best results.


Concerning what is available for the IPhone Nova network, I was able to find anything that I wanted and must say there is a huge collection of media files on the service including TV shows, movies and games.


Another concern most people have using a service like IPhone Nova is how secure and safe the files are on the servers and the good news is that IPhone Nova records and screens all the downloads so it keeps the files safe at all times.


I didn’t have difficulty in downloading the files I want since everything is so intuitive. However, if you have problems, you can contact their technical support and you’ll get an answer within the same day. Unlike other services I’ve used, technical support is almost non-existent.


So if you want free downloads for iphone, I highly recommend you join iPhoneNova. Give it a try and you can always ask for a refund if you don’t like it.





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Tuesday, 20 November 2007

Is Apple Spying On iPhone Users?



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ust when you thought the security risks of the iPhone couldn't get any worse, we discover this. According to one member of the Hackint0sh forum, Apple is using the iPhone to spy on its users.

Here is a look at the unconfirmed claim from Gizmodo

The evidence in the code shows that the Stocks and Weather applications send your IMEI number—the unique number which identifies your iPhone and is tied to your personal information—to Apple, along with the nature of the information you are looking at.

While there's no evidence that Apple actually uses this information for any purpose, good or evil, the code shows that every time you try to access a detailed information on whatever stock, your IMEI will be sent embedded in the URL. This could be cross-referenced with IP location and the information in Apple or its partner's databases to gather extremely valuable data for marketing purposes.

Is this something we should we concerned about? No doubt the privacy advocates will be up in arms. But for those of us who've been online for over 14 years, the notion of online "privacy" is tenuous at best. Web portals like Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) have been tracking users with cookies since the late 1990s. Everyone knows that Google (NSDQ: GOOG) tracks its users through search and its hosted applications, like Gmail, and uses this data to serve contextual ads (as well as a way to track its applications and improve them). Not that many users seem to care.

Mobile, however, may be different. People place far more personal attachment to their mobile phones than they do to their PCs or laptops. Now that more people are using devices like the iPhone to surf the Web and run Web apps, will they feel violated once they know their mobile online information is as transparent as their online behavior on the desktop?

Also, the technique that Apple is using here, connecting IMEI and browsing information, is a little different than the techniques described above:

Tying IMEI and browsing information is also different to cookies: when you access a web site anonymously and they store a cookie in your browser, this is not tied to any personal information. Moreover, you can delete the cookie in your computer or avoid them using your browser privacy options. The IMEI, however, is a solid unique personal identifier, which makes the whole thing a little bit disturbing. More importantly, there's no op-out and Apple covers its back with the iPhone's license, as readers have pointed already in the comments.

What do you think? Is Apple's tracking mechanism here over the line? Does this go too far? Or is this no different than other online behavioral targeting system?





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Friday, 16 November 2007

Free iPhone users make more texting errors



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Free iPhone users make more texting errors

Handsett's tuch keybored 'overlly sensetivvvve'

Users of Apple's free iPhone are experiencing higher text entry error rates than owners of traditional hard-key Qwerty handsets, a usability expert claimed today.

Chicago-based consultancy User Centric compared the texting experiences of free iPhone owners and non-owners across devices.

The results suggest that the free iPhone's touch keyboard is "overly sensitive" despite the free iPhone's overall high usability.

User Centric collected data from 60 participants who entered specific text messages and completed mobile device tasks.

The experiment involved 20 free iPhone users who had owned the handsets for at least a month, 20 hard-key Qwerty phone owners and 20 numeric phone owners (multi-tap texters) entering six fixed-length text messages.

Non-free iPhone owners also entered six messages on a test free iPhone and a phone of another type.

The free iPhone owners entered text as rapidly as Qwerty owners on their own phones, but made "significantly more" errors on their own phone (5.6 errors per message) than Qwerty owners (2.1 errors per message) and numeric phone owners (2.4 errors per message) on their own phones.

Comparing texting performance between free iPhone owners and novices (non-owners) on the free iPhone found no significant difference in error rates.

"While the free iPhone's corrective text feature helps, this data suggests that free iPhone users who have owned the device for a month still make about the same number of errors as the day they got it," said Gavin Lew, managing director at User Centric.

The consultancy also compared users' performance on unfamiliar phones. Numeric phone owners performed faster text entry on a hard-key Qwerty phone than on the free iPhone, and made significantly fewer errors on the hard-key Qwerty devices.

"The free iPhone is a great switch from a numeric phone. But if you are switching from a hard-key Qwerty phone, try the free iPhone in the store first," said Lew.



UK free iPhone Road Test

Apple has given us an free iPhone for an extended review period and we figured that, having reported on so much of the hype surrounding the gadget, this would be the perfect opportunity to put it through its paces.

We decided that, rather than take the more usual review approach of dissecting the device, we would take readers through a day-by-day use of the phone to offer a review that more closely resembles what most users are going to go through.

Since the reviews will be written by me, I think it's important to offer some context, as different people are going to have different experiences of the free iPhone based on the devices they've used before and what they typically use their phone to do.

I've used smartphones for many years now, currently a Sony Ericsson P990i with a 4GB memory card, and generally make use of most of the features they provide.

As well as the obvious phone and text features, I use the contacts, calendar, tasks and notes features of my phone.

I do surf the internet from my phone, primarily when I need access to email, maps or other information while out and about. This usually involves heading out to a press briefing and then forgetting where it is and the name of my contact.

I also store some music on my phone and have a few e-books, documents, games and music on it to help pass the time on long journeys.

Lastly I should add that I don't own an iPod and I don't have iTunes installed on my PC, although I have used both before.

With the exception of not owning an iPod, I would consider this a fairly normal profile for a new free iPhone customer, so my experience should hopefully represent what most people will go through when they get started.

The first thing I noticed was that the box it comes in is remarkably small, not very important I know, but in an age where packaging is coming under the watchful gaze of environmentalists it's encouraging to know that Apple is doing its bit.

In the box you'll find the free iPhone, a USB connector cable, docking station, power adaptor, headphones, cleaning cloth and a small quick-start guide. It's a little jarring that the free iPhone is a sleek black and the rest of it's snow white, but this is very minor.

If, like me, you don't have iTunes installed you'll need to do this first. Attaching the free iPhone to a computer without iTunes detects it as a digital camera and treats it as a removable storage device.

iTunes can be downloaded from the Apple website and the install file is just over 50MB so in the unlikely event that you're on dial-up this may take a little while.

Installing iTunes is pretty straight forward as is setting it up with your existing media collection.



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