Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Is Nokia Dead? Far from It… (Infographic)


We are all very quick to write off Nokia with recent developments in the smartphone wars. Sure, its Symbian operating system is getting very old (yet Nokia still keeps rolling them out), and we are still to see the first Windows Phone 7 Nokia phone, despite the deal being announced quite a while back now.
But take a look at this infographic which puts things in context. Despite Apple now being the worlds most profitable phone manufacturer, there is still some growth going on for Nokia – look at click through rate for ads from the devices. It might persuade a few developers to build decent freemium apps…
Now Nokia, if only you can get a move on with that Mango handset. Your hardware sure is good enough.

Microsoft shows off Windows 8′s new Ribbon Explorer Interface


If you think about it, Windows’s file explorer view has not changed much in the last decade – sure, the File, Edit, View menu has been done away with in Windows 7, but the user is still overly reliant on the right click mouse command. But with all the focus on touch based interfaces, the right click command needs to start taking a backseat in future Windows releases. Microsoft is focussing a lot on making Windows 8 a lot more touch friendly, and it is not all about their Metro based interface.
Going forward, all Windows Explorer windows will carry a Ribbon bar with the most popular file handling commands placed in the tabs we have gotten used to in Microsoft Office. Microsoft quite obviously states that drop down menus do not work well in touch environments, yet there is still quite a few commands in the Ribbon bar that relies on drop-downs. What gives Microsoft? But if you are not going to use Windows 8 on a touch device (we first have to wait to see a Beta which shows off the touch aspects more), you can hide the Ribbon bar.
Microsoft also shows off a few new ways in which traditionally difficult tasks are made a lot easier on Windows 8. One example I really like is the Share Tab which makes it very easy to quickly create Zip archives to send away, but most significantly, has a much better interface to quickly share files on your Homegroup or Domain. Often used people you share to are shown as well:
The Search tools are also a bit smarter – users are not forced to use text searches, and can quickly do context based searches like “Documents created in the last week” using simple buttons, and recent searches can be easily found as well:
Now you might be thinking that the Ribbon bar does not give a lot of added features to power users who anyway use keyboard commands to get work done – and that might be true. But one feature I especially like is that you can of course add your own favourite commands to the title bar, including a new “run as admininstrator in command prompt” button. So then it is as easy as clicking a file (say some batch job), then clicking your newly created button. Then watch the actual process in the command prompt box. Great.
All in all these changes look very good, but some might argue that it needlessly complicates the interface, especially if you compare it with other operating systems out right now. My opinion is that old hands at Windows will be very comfortable with these changes, but my interest is still in the touch based Metro interface for slates / tablets. That is where the innovation lies right now, and that is where Microsoft needs to impress us…
Here is hoping we will see more of this at Tech Ed Africa. Bandwidth Blog will be there…

Friday, August 12, 2011

Suzuki stirs with Kizashi sedan


Kizashi... Rolls off the tongue quite easily, doesn’t it?

This ease is something Suzuki hopes to put to good use as its huge (by Suzuki standards) sedan prepares to make inroads into the heavily contested family sedan market.

The cute little Swift has undoubtedly done much to bolster Suzuki SA’s fortunes (the latest generation of the hatchback was launched in South Africa in March, 2011), but the company hopes its Kizashi will now steer it upmarket into segments unknown.

The all-new Kizashi has just arrived in South Africa and is their “fastest production car launched here”, Suzuki Auto SA’s national marketing manager Francois van Eeden gushed at the introductory press event.

This tidbit is not surprising, given little cars and SUV's such as the Alto, Swift and Jimny have over the years cemented Suzuki’s global status. But why step away from the familiar to try something new? Well, as it turns out, Suzuki wanted to offer something families and young executives could view as an alternative to the standard family sedan fare; as a first attempt at a sedan the Japanese brand is not doing badly at all.

Pleasing to look at, there is a definite family resemblance in the frontal treatment with the rounded bonnet edge and the stylised 'S' sitting prettily on the mesh grille. The profile follows conventional three-box sedan form, although the “integrated boot spoiler” that rises from the boot lid and houses the additional brake light is a neat touch.

CABIN FEVER: The cabin finishes mix soft and harder textures.
CHOICES

There’s not much in the way of variety, though, with the SA Kizashi range getting one model using a tweaked version of the 2.4-litre, four-cylinder seen in the Grand Vitara with a choice of either six-speed manual or continuously variable transmission (CVT). Four metallic colours – silver, grey, white and red – are available.

But driving the car (yes, even with a CVT) proved a rather pleasant experience.

Perhaps it was the result of constant chatter in the car between my driving partner and I but the characteristic CVT drone went mostly unnoticed and was only really discernible when pulling away from stops. Also worth noting is the apparent lack of breathless revving into the stratosphere when performing an overtaking manouvre.

However, those accustomed to a CVT or those not too concerned by its idiosyncrasies should be fine. There are five modes for varying conditions, including Normal, which is the most fuel-efficient, and a Downhill mode that employs engine braking. Handily, the modes are automatically selected so all you, as the driver, need do is steer, apply the throttle, and brake. Should you see fit, you could probably slap the gearshift towards you, or flick the steering-mounted paddles, for some manual-like moves.

The six-speed manual is likely to be the one to get with its reassuringly soft gear action.

FROM SCRATCH: Styling the automaker's first "luxury" sedan must have been rather liberating for Suzuki's designers.
NOT TOO SPORTY

And that’s not the only thing that’s soft on the Kizashi.

The ride, although its makers say has a sportier attitude, felt decidedly family-orientated to me. There’s a touch of sport (with enough grip and solidity to not make you wonder as you zip through a bend a bit too quickly whether a pile of understeer will signal your undoing) and a lot of comfort (even on some treacherous North-West province roads with scary-looking potholes). Urban warriors need not worry about the comfort levels, especially in those leather-clad seats.

The Kizashi rides on Macpherson struts with a cradle-like frame up front; the rear it is suspended by a multi-link arrangement.

The evenness of the steering and the feedback provided through it, particularly on faster sections, was reassuring. As a bonus, the brakes on the cars I drove on the launch (Kizashi is fitted with ventilated discs on the front axle and solid discs at the rear) were comfortingly sharp; ABS with EBD and ESP are standard, as are Kizashi’s six airbags.

However, since Suzuki punts the Kizashi as a luxury sedan, it would probably also be keen to boast the car’s comfort features. Starting on the outside, projector head and fog lights are standard. There are front and rear parking sensors; keyless entry and go are standard, too.

There's a leather-covered steering wheel with controls for audio and cruise control and the audio system takes CD's and MP3's. The driver and front passenger seats has power adjustment.
 
Beefy 18” alloys complete the external look and a full-size spare is housed in the boot.

'GREAT THINGS'


The Kizashi, at first acquaintance, seems compelling, but whether its fellow C-segment competitors (think Toyota Corolla or Volkswagen Jetta, or, at the higher end Honda Accord and Mazda6) should be concerned, remains to be seen.

Of course, Suzuki is hardly a novice to the vehicle manufacturing game and the Kizashi’s build quality feels solid to match its secure ride and handling. The added padding in the (very quiet) cabin along with the leather swathed across the facia signals the intention to move Kizashi up a notch from its smaller and more utilitarian brethren, although those buying down from larger or more executive offerings (indeed, Suzuki Auto SA is targeting those buyers, too) may be accustomed to finishes that a touch more refined.

But this sedan’s nomenclature in Japanese apparently means "a sign of great things to come" and this may well be a symbolic statement for Suzuki Auto SA which will, by the end of 2011, have extended its dealer network from 25 to 31.

Prices for the Kizashi include a three-year or 100 000km warranty, a six-year or 90 000km service plan and a three-year roadside assistance programme. They are:

Kizashi 2.4 manual  -  R295 900
Kizashi 2.4 CVT  -  R310 900

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Blackberry Unveil New Set Of Smartphones


Blackberry at last have a phone to take on the iPhone and the runaway success of Android smartphones.

The global launch of five new handsets includes the BlackBerry® Torch™ 9850 and 9860 models which feature an all-new, all-touch design - including the largest display ever on a Blackberry smartphone.
"This is the largest global launch of BlackBerry smartphones in our history," said Mike Lazaridis, President and Co-CEO of Research In Motion.
"We are excited to be introducing such a broad range of handsets with more than 225 carriers around the world and we think customers will be thrilled by the improved performance and enriched mobile experiences delivered by these powerful new smartphones."
The new BlackBerry Torch 9860
The new Blackberry Torch 9860 Photo Matt Crossick/PA
Blackberry have packed the phones with new electronics, a new processor and new software - its OS 7 which they claim to be up to 100% faster than earlier phones.
Near field communication is built in to the new models, too - raising the prospect of cashless transactions or entry to buildings merely by swiping your phone at the door.
RIM is under real pressure in the smartphone market - with job losses around the world and the seemingly unstoppable march of Android devices.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

India, S Africa, Brazil envoys to Syria


New York - Envoys from India, Brazil and South Africa are heading to Syria to appeal for an end to the violent crackdown against civilians and to promote democratic reforms.
India's UN Ambassador Hardeep Singh Puri said his country's representative is scheduled to arrive in Damascus on Tuesday and will join representatives from Brazil and South Africa for a meeting with Syria's foreign minister to deliver the appeal.
Puri told reporters on Monday the three countries will be "calling for restraint, abjuring violence, [and] promoting reform, taking into account the democratic aspirations of the people."
Separately, Turkey, which borders Syria and until recently was a close ally and major trade partner, said it is sending its foreign minister to Damascus on Tuesday to deliver a strong message against the crackdown. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country's patience was running thin and that Turkey could not remain a bystander to the violence.
After months of diplomatic inaction, Syria's ongoing military assault, using tanks and artillery, spurred condemnation in the past week from the UN Security Council and the Arab world.
The Arab League, which had been silent since the uprising began, on Sunday called for the immediate halt of all violence. And Saudi Arabia - which sent troops to repress anti-government protests in neighbouring Bahrain — harshly criticised the Syrian government and recalled its ambassador in Damascus for consultations.
Last Wednesday, the Security Council issued a presidential statement, its first response to the crackdown, condemning "the widespread violations of human rights and the use of force against civilians by the Syrian authorities".
Russia and China 
The UN's most powerful body was unable to take any action for months because Russia and China threatened to veto a European-initiated resolution condemning the violence, which was backed by the US.
India, Brazil and South Africa also refused to support the resolution.
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said on Monday that talking with Syria's leaders was the best solution to ending the bloodshed, saying Brazil is a nation that "believes in the value of dialogue" and that military action "should always be a last resort".
Paulo Cordeiro, Brazil's subsecretary for Middle East issues, is already in Syria waiting for his colleagues from India and South Africa and the three envoys are expected to meet with "high-level" Syrians on Wednesday, a Brazilian Foreign Ministry spokesperson said.
South Africa said its deputy minister for international relations and co-operation, Ebrahim Ismail Ebrahim, will take part in the Syria talks.
India's UN Mission said the country will be represented by Dilip Sinha, deputy permanent secretary in the Ministry of External Affairs.

Smartphone: New frontier for hackers


Las Vegas - Hackers are out to stymie your smartphone.
Last week, security researchers uncovered yet another strain of malicious software aimed at smartphones that run Google's popular Android operating system. The application not only logs details about incoming and outgoing phone calls, it also records those calls.
That came a month after researchers discovered a security hole in Apple iPhones, which prompted the German government to warn Apple about the urgency of the threat.
Security experts say attacks on smartphones are growing fast - and attackers are becoming smarter about developing new techniques.
"We're in the experimental stage of mobile malware where the bad guys are starting to develop their business models," said Kevin Mahaffey, co-founder of Lookout, a San Francisco-based maker of mobile security software.
Wrong-doers have infected PCs with malicious software, or malware, for decades. Now, they are fast moving to smartphones as the devices become a vital part of everyday life.
Some 38% of American adults now own an iPhone, BlackBerry or other mobile phone that runs the Android, Windows or WebOS operating systems, according to data from Nielsen. That's up from just 6% who owned a smartphone in 2007 when the iPhone was released and catalysed the industry. 
The smartphone's usefulness, allowing people to organise their digital lives with one device, is also its allure to criminals.
Thousands of attacks a day
All at once, smartphones have become wallets, email lockboxes, photo albums and Rolodexes. And because owners are directly billed for services bought with smartphones, they open up new angles for financial attacks. The worst programs cause a phone to rack up unwanted service charges, record calls, intercept text messages and even dump emails, photos and other private content directly onto criminals' servers.
Evidence of this hacker invasion is starting to emerge.
— Lookout says it now detects thousands of attempted infections each day on mobile phones running its security software. In January, there were just a few hundred detections a day. The number of detections is nearly doubling every few months. As many as 1 million people were hit by mobile malware in the first half of 2011.
— Google has removed about 100 malicious applications from its Android Market app store. One particularly harmful app was downloaded more than 260 000 times before it was removed. Android is the world's most popular smartphone operating software with more than 135 million users worldwide.
— Symantec Corp., the world's biggest security software maker, is also seeing a jump. Last year, the company identified just five examples of malware unique to Android. So far this year, it's seen 19. Of course, that number pales compared with the hundreds of thousands of new strains targeting PCs every year, but experts say it's only a matter of time before criminals catch up.
"Bad guys go where the money is," said Charlie Miller, principal research consultant with the Accuvant security firm, and a prominent hacker of mobile devices. "As more and more people use phones and keep data on phones, and PCs aren't as relevant, the bad guys are going to follow that. The bad guys are smart. They know when it makes sense to switch."
When it comes to security, smartphones share a problem with PCs: Infections are typically the responsibility of the user to fix, if the problem is discovered at all.
The emergence in early July of a previously unknown security hole in Apple's iPhones and iPads cast a spotlight on mobile security. Users downloaded a program that allowed them to run unauthorized programs on their devices. But the programme could also be used to help criminals co-opt iPhones. Apple has since issued a fix.
iPhone security issues
It was the second time this year that the iPhone's security was called into question. In April the company changed its handling of location data after a privacy outcry that landed an executive in front of Congress. Researchers had discovered that iPhones stored the data for a year or more in unencrypted form, making them vulnerable to hacking. 
Apple CEO Steve Jobs emerged from medical leave to personally address the issue.
The iPhone gets outsize attention because it basically invented the consumer smartphone industry when it was introduced in 2007. But Apple doesn't license its software to other phone manufacturers. 
Google gives Android to phone makers for free. So, Android phones are growing faster. As a result, Google's Android Market is a crucial pathway for hacking attacks. The app store is a lightly curated online bazaar for applications that, unlike Apple's App Store, doesn't require that developers submit their programmes for pre-approval.
Lookout says it has seen more unique strains of Android malware in the past month than it did in all of last year. One strain seen earlier this year, called DroidDream, was downloaded more than 260 000 times before Google removed it, though additional variants keep appearing.
Lookout says about 100 apps have been removed from the Android Market so far, a figure Google didn't dispute.
Malicious applications often masquerade as legitimate ones, such as games, calculators or pornographic photos and videos. They can appear in advertising links inside other applications. Their moneymaking schemes include new approaches that are impossible on PCs.
One recent malicious app secretly subscribed victims up to a service that sends quizzes via text message. The pay service was charged to the victims' phone bills, which is presumably how the criminals got paid. They may have created the service or been hired by the creator to sign people up. 
Ignoring warnings
Since malware can intercept text messages, it's likely the victims never saw the messages - just the charges.
A different piece of malware logs a person's incoming text messages and replies to them with spam and malicious links. Most mobile malware, however, keep their intentions hidden. Some apps set up a connection between the phone and a server under a criminal's control, which is used to send instructions.
Google points out that Android security features are designed to limit the interaction between applications and a user's data, and developers can be blocked. Users also are guilty of blithely click through warnings about what personal information an application will access.
Malicious programmes for the iPhone have been rare. In large part, that's because Apple requires that it examine each application before it goes online. Still, the recent security incidents underline the threat even to the most seemingly secure devices.
A pair of computer worms targeting the iPhone appeared in 2009. Both affected only iPhones that were modified, or "jailbroken," to run unauthorised programmes.
And Apple has dealt with legitimate applications that overreached and collected more personal data than they should have, which led to the Cupertino, California based company demanding changes.
"Apple takes security very seriously," spokesperson Natalie Kerris said in July. "We have a very thorough approval process and review every app. We also check the identities of every developer and if we ever find anything malicious, the developer will be removed from the iPhone Developer Programme and their apps can be removed from the App Store."
A criminal doesn't even need to tailor his attacks to a mobile phone. Standard email-based "phishing" attacks - tricking people into visiting sites that look legitimate - work well on mobile users. In fact, mobile users can be more susceptible to phishing attacks than PC users.
Risky behaviour
The small screens make it hard to see the full internet address of a site you're visiting, and websites and mobile applications working in tandem train users to perform the risky behaviour of entering passwords after following links, new research from the University of California at Berkeley has found.
The study found that the links within applications could be convincingly imitated, according to the authors, Adrienne Porter Felt, a Ph D student, and David Wagner, a computer science professor.
They found that "attackers can spoof legitimate applications with high accuracy, suggesting that the risk of phishing attacks on mobile platforms is greater than has previously been appreciated."
A separate study released earlier this year by Trusteer, a Boston-based software and services firm focused on banking security, found that mobile users who visit phishing sites are three times more likely to submit their user names and passwords than desktop PC users.
Mobile users are "always on" and respond to emails faster, in the first few hours before phishing sites are taken down, and email formats make it hard to tell who's sending a message, Trusteer found.
Still, mobile users have an inherent advantage over PC users: Mobile software is being written with the benefit of decades of perspective on the flaws that have made PCs insecure. 
But smartphone demand is exploding, with market research firm IDC predicting that some 472 million smartphones will be shipped this year, compared with 362 million PCs. As a result, the design deterrents aren't likely to be enough to keep crooks away from the trough.
"It's going to be a problem," Miller said. "Everywhere people have gone, bad guys have followed."

Wimpy attacked in London riots.

London - A South African-owned Wimpy in Clapham Junction in Twickenham, London, was badly damaged when looters attacked the restaurant last night. “It’s like a war there,” South African owner Odile Ham told City Press.

Her son, Michael, added: “The whole area looked like a tornado went through there.”

Caught in the middle of what has been described as the worst violence seen in the British capital city in recent years, Ham said the young thugs came down the street and smashed everything in their way.

“Our biggest fear was that a fire would break out. We have tenants upstairs from the Wimpy. When we drove to the restaurant to see what was going on we were faced with people on the rampage in the street. It was a bit scary and we got out of there. People on the rampage do not think about what they are doing.”

Ham said all the shops around her Wimpy, which she opened two years ago, were damaged. The looters ripped out the ATM from the bank across the street and stripped a local newsstand of everything, including its lottery machine.“The area is now a crime scene and we cannot get close as police are conducting their investigations. I do not know what the extent of the damage is,” she said telephonically.

“We’ve always felt safe in London.”

She said the rioters were everywhere and that made it difficult for police to quell the protests. Metropolitan police announced earlier today that about 13 000 police officers had been deployed in areas such as Tottenham and Liverpool.

South African Martin Pienaar, an accountant for Virgin Management, said in his five years in London he had not seen anything like the riots. “I live about two kilometres from the riots. The closest to me are the riots in Camden and Islington,” he said. “It’s really all over the place. People are cautious (about going) out,” he said.

Like many living in London, Pienaar has harsh words for the kids who have turned to thuggery and looting: “Society has become one of sitting at home and the appreciation for hard work and success is something these kids do not grow up with.

“The fact that the economy is doing as badly as it is, has the worst impact on the poorer communities in London, and it’s this lack of positivity and a bad attitude that has just culminated here.”

He says police are powerless because it is mostly children rioting.

Another South African, CornĂ© Bouwer, says the problem is police in London have not started to use rubber bullets on the rioters. “We are okay where we are now, but if those rioters come to our areas, we will sort them out ourselves,” he warned.