Archive for the 'News' Category

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iPhone in Canada by October

iPhone Canada by Jesus Diaz @ Gizmodo
iPhone Canada by Jesus Diaz @ Gizmodo

Accord­ing to wild rumors (and we do mean wild), Cana­dian “lux­ury retailer” Holt Ren­frew — the Barney’s of the Great White North — will begin car­ry­ing a Canuck ver­sion of the beloved iPhone in about two weeks, for the deli­ciously low price of $799. The rumor appar­ently emanates from an “insider source” at the com­pany, though the store’s reps won’t con­firm the news. If you believe the leaker, the retailer will carry an 8GB, GSM ver­sion of the phone (obvi­ously, as no other ver­sion exists), and it will arrive on store shelves in mid-October. Sure, this sounds entic­ing, but why would a depart­ment store which spe­cial­izes in high-end goods be the first the carry the iPhone, and where is the announce­ment (or even rum­blings of an announce­ment) from a car­rier in Canada?

We’ve had rumors like this in the past, and I’m not get­ting my hopes up quite yet. If Apple is going to con­tinue to brick unlocked iPhones, I’m not sure I even want the device to come to Canada.… alright maybe I do.

iPhone com­ing to Cana­dian retailer Holt Renfrew? — Engadget, orig­i­naly from Dig­i­tal Journal

For more dis­cus­sion see: Infi­nite Loop, BetaNews, Gad­getell, Giz­modo, and Mac­si­mum News

Update: Tod Maf­fin has shed a lit­tle more light on the cur­rent state of the iPhone in Canada. Unlike what some peo­ple have spec­u­lated, he says that Rodgers really does want to bring the iPhone to Canada (even with the unlim­ited data plan), how­ever, there are cur­rently two prob­lems bar­ring the way. For one, there is trade­mark dis­pute between Apple and ComWave (who owns the iPhone trade­mark in Canda). Maf­fin also says that the rumored 3G upgrades com­ing in 2008 have con­tributed to Canada’s miss­ing iPhones.

Update 2: Another rumor has sur­faced stat­ing that the iPhone may come to Canada on May21st, 2008. I’m try­ing not to get my hopes up (not that I could afford it anyways).

Apple Causes Problems for iPhone Users

iEye by h.andras_xms
iEye by h.andras_xms

There is a lot of bad press going around about Apple’s iPhone at the moment. Peo­ple are upset for a cou­ple of reasons.

Crit­i­cism was ini­tially sparked a few weeks ago when the com­pany dropped the iPhone’s price by $200. While alien­ated early adopters where appeased with a refund, the resent­ment har­bored by oth­ers con­tin­ued. As a result, one group is now suing Apple for “price dis­crim­i­na­tion, under­selling, dis­crim­i­na­tion in rebates, decep­tive actions, and other wrong­do­ings”.

On another front, Apple has resently released a soft­ware update for the iPhone which effec­tively bricks those devices which have been hacked to allow extra options. Many peo­ple are not happy about Apple’s dis­re­gard for the rights of the con­sumer. Some review­ers who orig­i­nally love the iPhone are now going so far as to inform their read­ers to avoid buy­ing the iPhone. Dig­i­tal Copy­right Canada has a good anal­ogy of why these iPhone own­ers are so upset.

Here is the sce­nario. A home builder builds homes and puts their own locks on the door. They retain the keys, and do not give the keys to the new own­ers when the homes are sold. The builder, not the owner, then decides who can have keys and who can not — and the owner is not given a key.

Iama Liar, chief exec­u­tive of the home builders asso­ci­a­tion, has said the asso­ci­a­tion wanted to main­tain con­trol over the homes to pro­tect neigh­bour­hoods and to make sure the home was not damaged.

Some own­ers decide to pro­tect their own prop­erty rights and remove the lock added by the builder. In response, the builder does a few things depend­ing on the num­ber of mod­i­fi­ca­tion made: in some cases it sim­ply puts their own locks back on, in other cases is removes any­thing from the home that were added by the owner, and in other cases they burn the home to the ground.

Sounds ridicu­lous right?

While this sce­nario may seem far fetched, is is anal­o­gous to what Apple is cur­rently doing with iPhones. (See: Altered iPhones freeze up, Apple Users Talk­ing Class-Action Law­suit Over iPhone Lock­ing, Steve Jobs Girds for the Long iPhone War )

Apple sells the iPhone to cus­tomers in a way that they are locked down from being mod­i­fied by their new own­ers. Some own­ers have exerted their basic prop­erty rights and unlocked these phones. Once their prop­erty has had the for­eign lock removed, they can then choose what­ever phone net­work they want (Includ­ing buy­ing one and using it with a Rogers or Fido account in Canada), and to install and run soft­ware of their own choosing.

Apple is now dis­trib­ut­ing updated soft­ware through iTunes which will un-do these changes made by the own­ers. In some cases it sim­ply re-locks the phone and removes any non-Apple soft­ware added by the owner. In some cases it will “Brick” the phone, mak­ing the phone entirely inoperable.

Any­one who has the most remote respect for tan­gi­ble prop­erty rights should be up at arms about this. If Cana­dian law does not already make this prac­tise ille­gal, the provin­cial and fed­eral gov­ern­ments should come together to ensure that it becomes ille­gal. It is impor­tant that fed­eral par­lia­men­tar­i­ans under­stand this issue given there has been inter­est to legally pro­tect these dig­i­tal locks applied to devices by other than their own­ers, giv­ing a legal free ride for device man­u­fac­tur­ers and oth­ers who cir­cum­vent the most basic of prop­erty rights for own­ers of IT devices.

Quote by Rus­sell McOr­mond at Dig­i­tal Copy­right Canada

Nokia Ad

Other com­pa­nies are cur­rently attempt­ing to ben­e­fit from this dis­con­tent by run­ning mar­ket­ing cam­paigns high­light­ing their “open” and “free” phone polices. It’s incred­i­ble that a com­pany such as Apple, with all is hype and rabid cult fol­low­ing, would decide to take actions against con­sumers this way. Per­haps they assume that this kind of press won’t hurt them after the ini­tial back­lash. Maybe they are right.

Update: Apple’s new firmware has been hacked again.

Man Steals Computer, Upload Photos Of Himself to Owner’s Flickr Page

Dumb Criminal

This story was in the local paper yesterday…

Dane Brown says,
“Last week a num­ber of com­put­ers were stolen from our office in Van­cou­ver, BC. One of those com­put­ers was a shared iMac with Flick­r­booth, an app that auto­mat­i­cally uploads photo booth shots to our flickr account, installed on it. Just this morn­ing a friend called to tell us that there are pho­tos of who­ever has the com­puter now in our flickr stream! Obvi­ously the guy didn’t know he was upload­ing images of him­self and his awe­some tattoos.”

Here’s a link to the shots on the company’s flickr account. Do you know who this guy is? The theft vic­tims and the Van­cou­ver police would love to hear about it. Looks like the Some­thin­gAw­ful forums are all over the case, too.

Update: A gem in the com­ments thread: “There should be a word for this, think­ing you’re get­ting away with some­thing on the sly while the world laughs at you, antic­i­pat­ing your inevitable demise — schaden­douche?” [beat­nik]

And looks like there are more secu­rity cam pho­tos of this man here, and video here.

via Idiot crim­i­nal uploads pix of self from stolen iMac — Boing Boing

Here are some of the links from around the net: Metroblog­ging Van­cou­ver, Digg, billmacewen.com, Beyond Rob­son.

Update: The guy has turned him­self in to Vic­to­ria police claim­ing he bought the lap­top from a friend who in turn bought it from some­one else. Likely story.  Hard to hide when your pic­ture has been viewed over 350,000 times on the orig­i­nal flickr page alone.

Led Zeppelin to Reunite for Concert

Led Zeppelin by SteveHarradine
Led Zep­pelin by Steve­Har­ra­dine

Fol­low­ing weeks of intense spec­u­la­tion by fans and the news media, a con­cert pro­moter announced yes­ter­day that the three sur­viv­ing mem­bers of Led Zep­pelin — Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones — would play a con­cert in Lon­don on Nov. 26. Jason Bon­ham, the son of John Bon­ham, who died in 1980, will fill in for his father on drums.

The show, at the O2 arena, will be a trib­ute to Ahmet Erte­gun, the Atlantic Records founder who died in Decem­ber. The pro­moter, Har­vey Gold­smith, said that the bill also includes Pete Town­shend, Bill Wyman, For­eigner and Paolo Nutini, a 20-year-old Scot­tish heart­throb who was the last act Mr. Erte­gun took under his wing.

Led Zep­pelin to Return for a Trib­ute Con­cert — New York Times

World’s Tallest Man Marries 5′ 5″ Woman

Bao Xishun married Xia Shujian

Bao Xishun ®, 56, a 2.36-metre (7 feet, 9 inches) herds­man listed by the Guin­ness World Records as the tallest liv­ing man, and his bride Xia Shu­juan, 29, 1.68 metres (5 feet, 5 inches), stand dur­ing their wed­ding cer­e­mony on the out­skirts of Erdos in north China’s Inner Mon­go­lia Autonomous Region July 12, 2007. The world’s tallest man, whose search for a bride cov­ered the world, ended up mar­ry­ing a woman from his home town nearly half his age and more than two feet shorter, Chi­nese media reported.

World’s tallest man mar­ries on Yahoo! News Pho­tos via Digg

Update: Here is a pic­ture of the world’s tallest man, Bao Xishun, shak­ing hands with He Ping­ping, a con­tender for the title of world’s short­est man (2-feet, 5-inches tall).

World's tallest man shakes hand with world's shortest man

Update 2 (03÷24÷08) — Here is an arti­cle on Leonid Stad­nik, a for­mer Ukrain­ian vet­eri­nar­ian who is 2.59 meters (8,5 feet) tall. Accord­ing to the arti­cle, the Guin­ness Book of Records now calls him the world’s tallest liv­ing man.

In 2006, Stad­nik was offi­cially mea­sured at 2.57 meters tall (8 feet 5 inches), sur­pass­ing a Chi­nese man to claim the title of the world’s tallest person.

His growth spurt began at age 14 after a brain oper­a­tion that appar­ently stim­u­lated the over­pro­duc­tion of growth hor­mone. Doc­tors say he has been grow­ing ever since.

“Looting” vs. “Finding”

Looting vs. Finding

Spiderman (Alain Roberts) Climbs the Petronas Towers in Malaysia

Alain Robert

French Alain Robert, 44, known as Spi­der­man climbs Petronas Twin Tow­ers with his bare hands, in Kuala Lumpur, the cap­i­tal of Malaysia, on March 20, 2007. Alain Robert com­pleted the climb in only 20 min­utes. Alain Robert also climbed the Sears Tower in Chicago, Abu Dhabi Invest­ment Author­ity tower in UAE, Eif­fel Tower in Paris and Empire State Build­ing in New York City.

» Spi­der­man in Malaysia — Ah Boon.Net 阿文

If Windows Vista Was A Woman…

Vista Girls

Here’s a poetic con­tin­u­a­tion of those Mac ads we’ve all seen.

I wake. For a moment, I stare at the ceil­ing try­ing to remem­ber some­thing. Some­thing impor­tant. Some­thing impor­tant hap­pened last night, but the details escape me. Some­thing fas­ci­nat­ing yet sin­is­ter, like tour­ing the CIA offices. Some­thing exotic yet some­how famil­iar, like putting hot sauce on meat­loaf. I won­der if I have a hang­over. I won­der why I am think­ing about the CIA and meat­loaf. I roll onto my side.

There is a strange woman in bed with me.

A lot of things hap­pen at once. First, I real­ize that this is the most beau­ti­ful woman I have ever seen, and I am a lucky, lucky man. Sec­ond, I real­ize that this is not my wife, and I panic. Third, I real­ize that she’s awake, has been watch­ing me sleep. Fourth, before I can really react to thoughts 1 and 2, she smiles at me and speaks with a lovely accent I can’t quite place: “So. You like new wife, yes? Yes. Up now, I make breakfast.”

She gets out of bed and stretches, per­fect curves slid­ing under silky lin­gerie and momen­tar­ily mak­ing me for­get about break­fast, meat­loaf, and who­ever it was I was mar­ried to before last night. She seems to know this, and smiles at me again, but appar­ently she’s seri­ous about mak­ing break­fast. She turns and strides con­fi­dently from the room. As she does, I see for the first time the large Microsoft logo splayed across her back. My stom­ach lurches as I sud­denly remem­ber everything.

Win­dows Vista. I bought a new com­puter yes­ter­day… and it came with Win­dows Vista.

…con­tinue read­ing at cha­lain: So Beau­ti­ful, So Dis­turb­ing. Wait for the part where she stran­gles the paper­boy.  You can also look at Yahoo New’s “Most Annoy­ing Things About Win­dows Vista”.

Paraglider Pulled Upwards By Storm Reaches 32,000 ft

Wisnerska rated her chances of survival as

“You can’t imag­ine the power. You feel like noth­ing, like a leaf from a tree going up,” she told Aus­tralian radio.

Wis­ner­ska, from Ger­many, was prepar­ing for the 10th World Paraglid­ing Cham­pi­onships above the town of Manilla in New South Wales when the storm struck on Wednesday.

With ter­ri­fy­ing speed she was whisked from 2,500 ft to an esti­mated 32,000 ft in about 15 minutes.

A 42-year-old Chi­nese paraglider, He Zhong­pin, was also caught in the storm and died, appar­ently from a lack of oxy­gen and extreme cold.

Storm whips paraglider to heights of 32,000 ft

Vancouver Police Ignorant to WiFi Benefits

#01 workingman by by moaan
#01 work­ing­man by moaan

Vancouver’s cops have espoused vague, tech­no­log­i­cally igno­rant objec­tions to city-wide WiFi. They argue that the abil­ity to com­mu­ni­cate anony­mously will help crim­i­nals (cough pay-phones cough) and that WiFi is all about peo­ple steal­ing each oth­ers’ con­nec­tiv­ity. It’s like the Van­cou­ver cops have never even con­sid­ered the pos­si­bil­ity that peo­ple might delib­er­ately share their Inter­net con­nec­tions with their friends and neigh­bors just to be neighborly.

Police are con­cerned that unre­stricted wire­less access would give crim­i­nals an advan­tage by mak­ing it more dif­fi­cult to track them… “In this par­tic­u­lar project, we’re not con­cerned about the project in itself. We will mit­i­gate risks prop­erly. In the gen­eral sense, how­ever, we have con­cerns. You can go by cof­fee shops and even people’s houses and pig­gy­back on their wire­less,” he said.

This is kind of like say­ing that we should ban cell phones because they allow crim­i­nals to com­mu­ni­cate with one another more efficiently.

globeandmail.com: Wire­less net­work needs safety net, Van­cou­ver police say via Boing Boing