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First Look: Rocknor’s Donut Factory

// July 29th, 2010 // No Comments » // Mac OS // Mac OS

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Rocknor’s Donut Factory is due to hit App Store on Monday. It is an iPhone update of a Windows game that was critically acclaimed back when it was released in 2003. It offers terrific puzzles and fun gameplay that’s unfortunately hampered on the iPhone by a too-literal transition from the original game.

In this game, you move dough through a factory — shaping it, cooking it, topping it, and shipping it out — using a variety of assistive machines. You have to be clever. Some of the factory floor layouts are fiendish. Getting each donut produced to order to meet your quotas isn’t as simple as you might think.

TUAWFirst Look: Rocknor’s Donut Factory originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 29 Jul 2010 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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App demo: BistroMath

// July 29th, 2010 // No Comments » // Apps, Mac OS // Apps, Mac OS

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It’s a tip calculator, check-splitter all-in-one app… and yes, there are a bunch of ‘em on the store. Check out the demo to see if BistroMath combines the power you need with ease of use you’re comfortable with. Ultimately, that’s the differentiator in these calculator apps: usability. If you can’t quickly split a bill, or split a bill fairly (say some guy ordered a bottle of champagne just for himself), then the calculator isn’t for you. BistroMath seems to do this and more quite easily, so if you’re in the market for such a calculator — and yes, some people use these quite often — check it out for iPhone or iPad for US$2.99. Try not to confuse it with the other Bistromath, which is not in the App Store.

TUAWApp demo: BistroMath originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 29 Jul 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why Apple’s "walled garden" is a good idea

// July 29th, 2010 // No Comments » // Apps, Mac OS // Apps, Mac OS

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Many developers and users of Apple’s iOS devices bemoan the “walled garden” of the App Store approval process, but it appears that the company’s measures have prevented mass data theft from iPhones, and iPads.

At the Black Hat security conference being held in Las Vegas this week, mobile security firm Lookout announced that an app distributed in Google’s Android Market had collected private information from millions of users, then forwarded it to servers in China. Worse than that, the exact number of affected users isn’t known, since the Android Market doesn’t provide precise data. Estimates are that the app was downloaded anywhere from 1.1 million to 4.6 million times.

The app appeared to simply load free custom background wallpapers, but in fact collected a user’s browsing history, text messages, the SIM card number, and even voice mail passwords, and then sent the data to a web site in Shenzen, China.

This is different from the recent AT&T website leak that could have let a hacker access 144,000 iPad 3G user email addresses, since in this case the data theft actually did happen, was being perpetrated by malicious hackers, involves much more personal information, and affected many more people.

So what’s the difference between the security methodologies used by Google and Apple? Apple approves iOS apps only after they’ve gone through a strict (and frustrating to developers) process, while Google’s Android Market simply warns the user that an app needs permission to perform certain functions during the installation. iOS apps must be signed by an Apple-created certificate, which means that malicious developers have a harder time distributing malware anonymously.

Lookout also noted that iOS remains virus-free, since third-party apps can only be distributed through Apple’s heavily-moderated App Store, and the apps run in a sandbox environment where they can’t affect the system. Lookout chief executive John Hering said that “he believes both Google and Apple are on top of policing their app stores.” It’s just those odd cases where apps don’t do what they’re advertised to do that can cause problems for users.

[via AppleInsider]

TUAWWhy Apple’s “walled garden” is a good idea originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 29 Jul 2010 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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