Routing Around Apple's Restrictions, AppCertain & Others Bring Enterprise-Level Control To Consumers In The Interest Of Child Safety
In the interest of protecting children, a new iOS application called AppCertain has debuted a monitoring application aimed at parents. The app, whose goal is to alert parents about the nature of the applications their kids are downloading, involves the use of a “configuration profile” – special software Apple originally intended for enterprise use, not consumer-facing apps sold through its App Store marketplace. But Apple reviewed the application – for longer than most, founder and CEO Spencer Whitman tells us – and subsequently approved it. For how long that will remain the case is, however, unknown. “We think we are on a gray line with respect to Apple, but we don’t really know,” Whitman admits. Configuration profiles, for those unfamiliar, were designed for the enterprise environment, allowing I.T. departments to manage the iPhones and iPads used by a company’s employees. They’re typically employed by Mobile Device Management solutions, for example, which use the ...
activity
appcertain
apple
applications
ceo
compression
configuration
department
devices
environment
instance
ios
ipads
iphones
management
maps
onavo
permission
restrictions
safari
security
session
skycure
snappli
solution
spencer
submissions
technology
utility
vpns
wajam
whitman
wi-fi
Ohio-Based Entrepreneur's SketchParty TV Shows AirPlay's Gaming Power, But The Tech Needs A Spotlight
Apple's AirPlay streaming media technology has a neat trick up its sleeve for game developers, enabling them to create multi-screen experiences that allow a player to interact with an interface on a portable device like the iPad or iPhone, and see something different broadcast through their television attached to an Apple TV. One game that takes advantage of this is from Toledo, Ohio-based entrepreneur Matt Braun, who spoke to me about why the tech is so promising, and also about why we haven't seen wider adoption of it for gaming purposes as of yet.
adoption
airplay
apple
braun
devices
experience
ipad
iphone
matt
ohio-based
sketchparty
technology
television
toledo
Paul Irish on Chrome Moving to Blink
I know you’ve been asked this plenty of times already, but: no new vendor prefixes, right? Right? Nope, none! They’re great in theory but turns out they fail in practice, so we’re joining Mozilla and the W3C CSS WG and moving away them. There’s a few parts to this. Firstly, we won’t be migrating the existing -webkit- prefixed properties to a -chrome- or -blink- prefix, that’d just make extra work for everyone. Secondly, we inherited some existing properties that are prefixed. Some, like -webkit-transform , are standards track and we work with the CSS WG to move ahead those standards while we fix any remaining issues in our implementation and we’ll unprefix them when they’re ready. Others, like -webkit-box-reflect are not standards track and we’ll bring them to standards bodies or responsibly deprecate these on a case-by-case basis. Lastly, we’re not introducing any new CSS properties behind a prefix. Pinky swear? Totes. New stuff will be available to experiment with behind ...
adobe
ambitions
android
apple
applications
blink-powered
canary
chris
chrome
chromebook
chromeos
chromium
coffeescript
commitment
compatibility
confirmation
conformance
css
darin
dart
decision
deprecation
dev
development
devtools
divergence
dom
emscripten
expectations
experience
experiment
firstly
fisher
freedom
google
haha
implementation
integration
interoperability
ios
irish
javascript
javascriptcore
lastly
limitations
linux
mac
maintenance
management
mention
mozilla
non-webkit
nope
oilpan
opera
paul
performance
pinky
policy
practice
priority
quality
rangeexception
recalculation
resistance
safari
scalability
secondly
simplicity
technology
tradition
typescript
vbscript-y
version
webkit
webkit-based
wilson
windows
xmlhttprequestexception
Why Zuckerberg's Lobby Is Collapsing Like A House Of Cards Outside Of DC
“Power is a lot like real estate. It’s all about location, location, location.” — Frank Underwood, House of Cards At this very moment, Mark Zuckerberg’s political lobby, FWD.us, is probably taken aback at how reviled it has become, both from the public and its own members. After all, there are countless political technology lobbies, including Facebook’s own Political Action Committee, which routinely offer Republican candidates campaign cash for quid pro quo political favor. So, why, after discovering FWD.us indirectly supporting the controversial Keystone Pipeline initiative, have would-be supporters flooded their Facebook page with scathing comments, and its A-list supporters, such as Tesla’s Elon Musk, ditched the group? Unlike other lobbies, FWD.us burst on to the scene with a very public op-ed from its celebrity founder, promising to galvanize the latent civic passions of Silicon Vally’s netizens in a noble crusade to advance the knowledge society. While one hand extended ...
a-list
action
activism
advance
apple
californians
celebrity
comments
committee
community
conference
destruction
elon musk
evan williams
facebook
frank
fwd
house
immigration
intention
josh
keystone
location
mark zuckerberg
miller
million
nation
netflix
organization
passion
republican
secrecy
service
silicon
superpacs
technologists
technology
tesla
twitter
underwood
unlike
vally
wall street
washington
Researchers Are Developing Ad Hoc Networks For Car-To-Car Data Exchange
Lucas123 writes "Researchers are developing machine-to-machine (M2M) communication technology that allows cars to exchange data with each other, enabling vehicles to know what the cars all around them are doing, and perhaps, where they're going. Intel is working with National Taiwan University on M2M connectivity, an idea came from caravanning — an available, but-not-yet-deployed technology that uses direct line of site infrared (IR) and a range finder in order to automatically adjust the speed of cars so they can travel at a measured distance from each other. In other words, they're electronically tethered to one another. Now, imagine a group of cars traveling down the road together as an ad hoc network, each one aware of the location, any sudden actions or even the travel route of other vehicles as uploaded to the cloud from a GPS device. 'We're even imagining in the future cars would be able to ask other cars, "Hey, can I cut into your lane?" Then the other car would let you in,' said ...
action
car-to-car
communications
connectivity
devices
distance
gps
healey
hey
intel
jennifer
location
lucas
national
scientists
taiwan
technology
university