Menu

Technology

Careful: Some free apps can steal your data

Kim Komando, Special for USA TODAY 7 a.m. EST November 14, 2014 Take care with what privacy permissions you grant smartphone applications.(Photo: scanrail, iStock/Getty Images)If I glanced through your smartphone or tablet, I bet most of the apps you installed are free. We all love free apps.Often, free apps have a privacy cost. When you install an app, you probably never read the app's terms and conditions. You merely click "Agree." In the terms and conditions, the app developer typically reveals what data you are voluntarily handing over to them such as your online activities, location, contact list, text messages, and more.Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University recently analyzed the Google Play store's top 100 apps operations, terms and conditions. They found the following 10 requested the most access to your smartphone or tablet's hardware: Backgrounds HD Wallpaper, Brightest Flashlight, Dictionary.com, Google Maps, Horoscope, Mouse Trap, Pandora, Shazam, Talking Tom Virtual Pet.It makes sense that Google Maps needs your location and song-identifying Shazam needs access to your microphone, but why does a virtual pet, dictionary or wallpaper app need anything like that? Both iOS and Android have built-in flashlights, so you don't even need an app.While the researchers looked at Android apps, almost all of these apps have iOS versions. iOS lets you set permissions on a case-by-case basis. Go to Settings>>Privacy and choose the permission, such as camera or GPS. Slide the slider to "Off" to deny a permission.Unlike iOS, Android doesn't have per-app permission controls. Google had it as a hidden feature in Android 4.4.2, but removed it. No one knows when or if it will be back.Before you install any Android app, check the app's page in the Google Play store. Google requires that developers reveal permissions that the app requires.On an app page, scroll down to the…
Read more...

SkreensTV wants to revive the family TV tradition

Marc Todd holds his SkreensTV device, which routes multiple sources of video onto a central home television.(Photo: SkreensTV)There once was a time when the family gathered around the living room TV. Then the tech era armed everyone but the family dog with their own personal screen. Now Marc Todd wants to go back to the future.SkreensTV, whose Indiegogo campaign launches Thursday, is a $399 ($499 after the crowdfunding campaign) 7-by-2-inch WiFi- and Bluetooth-enabled box with five HDMI outputs and storage capacity ranging from 4 to 64 GB. SkreensTV routes the action from multiple devices – cable box, computer, gaming console, streaming TV – onto one screen.A custom app turns your tablet or phone into a remote that allows you to customize the size of each screen projected onto your TV. One video source can use the TV's speakers for audio, while the other four audio tracks can be accessed by wireless headphones.That's right, Todd is convinced folks are so desperate to be together they'll put up with a giant home TV with warring images of sports, xBox, and Twitter feeds.“'It's not the family room now, it's the 'Whoever holds the TV remote' room.'”SkreensTV founder Marc Todd"It's not the family room now, it's the 'Whoever holds the TV remote' room, but I think people still want to be together even using different devices," says Todd, whose Foxboro, Mass., startup has a financial assist from Pags Group, the investment arm of Bain Capital managing director and Boston Celtics co-owner Steve Pagliuca."My kids will be playing a video game while I'm watching the Bruins and the Celtics, but we're in the same place," he says, adding that splitting our video attention is now the norm. "I call it the sports bar effect. Or just think of being on a plane (with satellite TV).…
Read more...

Alibaba's boutique shop 11 Main opens doors on mobile

11 Main, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Chinese ecommerce giant Alibaba, has new mobile apps for Apple iPhones and Android phones (an iPad app is due later this year). The shopping site has more than 1 million products from thousands of small U.S. merchants.(Photo: 11 Main Inc.)Already an e-commerce giant in China, Alibaba is stepping up its first major marketplace play in the USA with new mobile apps to woo shoppers on the go.The shopping site 11 Main[1], which opened on the Web in June, can be browsed on new smartphone apps especially designed for Apple and Android devices. An iPad app will launch this year.11 Main is not a full-frontal assault on the U.S. retail marketplace for Alibaba. Founder and chairman Jack Ma has said he wants Alibaba to become a global force[2], but 11 Main "is an entree to the U.S. market," says BMO Capital Markets analyst Edward Williams. "It represents a real-world environment for them to see how the U.S. consumer operates and what they are interested in."After today's mobile app launch, all the goods in the site's virtual Main Street-style market – from $28 candles to $800,000 wristwatches – can be bought on smartphones and other devices not only in the USA, but also in China."Our strategic priorities are to continue to maximize our growth with China's relatively under-penetrated online shopping population and to increase opportunities for merchants in the U.S. and internationally to sell their goods into China," said Jim Wilkinson, senior vice president of international corporate affairs for Alibaba Group.Mobile makes up a growing segment of Alibaba's sales in its Taobao Marketplace, in which consumers sell to each other as on eBay, and Amazon-like Tmall retail offerings. Among its 307 million shoppers, about 217 million use Alibaba's mobile apps. The company's total mobile sales for…
Read more...

Samsung unveils new Note phones, Oculus-branded VR headset

TJ Donegan, Reviewed.com 5:14 p.m. EDT September 3, 2014 Samsung unveiled its newest Note phones and a new VR headset.(Photo: Samsung)Samsung's Galaxy is growing today, as the company has revealed two new Note smartphones and a co-branded Oculus virtual reality headset at simultaneous press events in New York City, Beijing, and here in Berlin at the IFA 2014[1] show.The new Galaxy Note 4 and the Galaxy Note Edge are both Android-powered "phablets" that pack powerful 2.7GHz quad-core processors, quad-HD Super AMOLED screens, and Samsung's signature S Pen. The Note Edge boasts a unique curved display that wraps around the right side of the device.Also revealed at the event is Samsung's new Gear VR, a headset that utilizes the Note 4 in concert with technology invented by Oculus VR. The Gear VR utilizes the Note 4's battery and processor along with its own set of physical controls and motion sensors to deliver virtual reality experiences similar to that of Oculus' own VR headset.The Gear VR is a stand-alone device, using the Note 4 for its power and processing so it doesn't have to be tethered to a computer. Samsung reps pegged the battery life of the Gear VR at around that of "a feature-length movie," but there's no way to recharge the device while it's in use.Currently, the Gear VR is only compatible with the Note 4. The situation is not dissimilar to that of the original Gear smartwatch, which could only function in tandem with the Note 3.Samsung gave no pricing information on the Gear VR, but promises to have it on store shelves by year's end. It will ship with a 16GB microSD card pre-loaded with compatible content, including a walkthrough of Tony Stark's lab from the upcoming Avengers: Age of Ultron, the Pacific Rim: Jaeger Pilotgame that premiered…
Read more...

First look: Hands-on with Samsung's Note 4, Gear VR

Samsung Galaxy Note Edge (left) and Galaxy Note 4 (right)(Photo: Eli Blumenthal)NEW YORK — Samsung is relentless when it comes to introducing new products. At the IFA international trade show in Berlin, Samsung expanded its Galaxy Note "phablet" series with new Note 4 and Note Edge models. Samsung also teamed with Oculus on a Gear VR virtual reality headset that relies on the Note 4. Here are my takeaways following a hands-on first look at a press briefing in Manhattan.Samsung hopes the 5.7-inch Galaxy Note 4 that is coming next month will help it continue to dominate the large screen phablet category it pioneered. According to Samsung, phablet users spend more time on their devices than smartphone or tablet customers do, and are more satisfied and loyal.To keep it that way, the Note 4 incorporates several evolutionary improvements. The camera system has been beefed up. The rear-facing 16-megapixel camera gains optical image stabilization to reduce the shakes when you're capturing video. Samsung says the camera can also extend the exposure time when you're shooting in a dim environment.The front 3.7-megapixel camera has a wider angle designed to improve group "selfies."Samsung adds a rapid battery-charging feature that it says will let you go from a zero charge to 50% in just 30 minutes.The Quad-HD (2560 x 1440) Super AMOLED display on Note 4 is a looker. The latest design incorporates a new metal frame that complements the removable soft-textured back cover (so you can replace the battery).Samsung also claims to have improved the fingerprint scanner that lets you unlock the device with a finger, but I didn't get to try it.As with its previous phablets, the latest Note employs a souped-up stylus called the S Pen, slightly refined this time around, that you can use for notes, natural handwriting and mouse-life…
Read more...

Waiting in line for an iPhone 6. Never too early.

Waiting in line for an iPhone 6. Never too early. 3138 15 Share This Story!Let friends in your social network know what you are reading aboutWaiting in line for an iPhone 6. Never too early.Some folks are already waiting in line for the next iPhone. And getting paid for it. Post to Facebook Try Another Audio CAPTCHA Image CAPTCHA Help {# #} CancelSendSent!A link has been sent to your friend's email address.Posted!A link has been posted to your Facebook feed. The latest iPhone from Apple isn't expected for a couple more weeks, but that hasn't stopped folks in New York from lining up. Waiting in line for the iPhone: Joseph Cruz, Brian Ceballo and Moon Ray.(Photo: Eli Blumenthal)NEW YORK—Are you crazy enough to brave the elements waiting in line at an Apple Store for more than two weeks waiting for an iPhone 6? It's not as crazy as it sounds to 25-year old Mississippi actress and model Moon Ray, or two cousins, 20-year old Brian Ceballo and 21-year old Joseph Cruz. The trio sits at the head of the line at Apple's flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York, but it's not necessarily for love of Apple's highly anticipated new handset.They are each being compensated to attract attention and pitch a product, a telemedicine app called VideoMedicine in Moon Ray's case, and BuyBackWorld.com, a phone buy-back service in the case of Ceballo and Cruz.In fact, Moon Ray who is sharing "waiting" duties with her husband Jason, paid $1250 each to Ceballo and Cruz to move up to first in line. The cousins took the news in stride with Cruz saying with a laugh "that's not a bad deal at all." Cruz and Ceballo are veterans of the iPhone waiting game, having waited each of the last five years. They've…
Read more...
Subscribe to this RSS feed