Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts
A British online satnav retailer has started taking pre-orders for the TomTom iPhone kit and app, priced at £113.85
TechRadar has spoken with TomTom reps in the UK and I am still awaiting the 'official' confirmation of pricing and a release date, which I should be hearing about soon. For now, the release date is still down as 'summer'.
Pop it in the car
If you are an iPhone owner and are in need of a pocket-friendly GPS device to guide you around the UK and the rest of Europe that you can easily pop into the dashboard car-dock when necessary, then this might prove to be not a bad price at all.
Alternatively, if you are not that desperate to upgrade your current satnav you might want to stick with the good old Google Maps on the iPhone for the time being.
Indeed, opinion in the TechRadar office is currently divided - on the one hand, there are those who argue they would rather invest in a dedicated satnav device for the car; on the other hand, the idea of having satnav functionality on your iPhone at all times seems quite appealing (particularly for road trips to unknown towns).
I've had a go with Navigon on iPhone, which beat TomTom by being the first turn-by-turn app for the iPhone.
TechRadar has spoken with TomTom reps in the UK and I am still awaiting the 'official' confirmation of pricing and a release date, which I should be hearing about soon. For now, the release date is still down as 'summer'.
Pop it in the car
If you are an iPhone owner and are in need of a pocket-friendly GPS device to guide you around the UK and the rest of Europe that you can easily pop into the dashboard car-dock when necessary, then this might prove to be not a bad price at all.
Alternatively, if you are not that desperate to upgrade your current satnav you might want to stick with the good old Google Maps on the iPhone for the time being.
Indeed, opinion in the TechRadar office is currently divided - on the one hand, there are those who argue they would rather invest in a dedicated satnav device for the car; on the other hand, the idea of having satnav functionality on your iPhone at all times seems quite appealing (particularly for road trips to unknown towns).
I've had a go with Navigon on iPhone, which beat TomTom by being the first turn-by-turn app for the iPhone.
For the time being, this is what it looks like.
You can get more details and pre-order the TomTom iPhone car kit for £113.85 over on Handtec right now.

If you ever needed evidence that Apple takes device security very seriously indeed, then it has been provided in the shape of the new iPhone firmware patch arriving even earlier than planned.
Instead of waiting to deliver OS 3.0.1 to fix a security vulnerability as promised this Saturday, Apple slipped out the update through iTunes late on Friday evening.
No one affected
The almost 300MB download repairs a vulnerability that used incoming SMS to take over control of an unpatched iPhone.
Apple not only moved to issue the update less than a day after it was made public, but also reassured iPhone users that no handsets had actually been affected yet.
Anyone wishing to apply the patch need only seek out the 'Check for Update' button in the iPhone settings page in iTunes.
Instead of waiting to deliver OS 3.0.1 to fix a security vulnerability as promised this Saturday, Apple slipped out the update through iTunes late on Friday evening.
No one affected
The almost 300MB download repairs a vulnerability that used incoming SMS to take over control of an unpatched iPhone.
Apple not only moved to issue the update less than a day after it was made public, but also reassured iPhone users that no handsets had actually been affected yet.
Anyone wishing to apply the patch need only seek out the 'Check for Update' button in the iPhone settings page in iTunes.
If you whant more info on the SMS hack then

An SMS message that lets hackers take over iPhones remotely is set to be exposed at a Black Hat conference.
The flaw allows the hacker to gain access to nearly all access of the phone, meaning the camera, browser and phone functions can be remotely used.
Charlie Miller, the security researcher who uncovered the flaw (along with fellow researcher Collin Mulliner) says he has notified Apple to the problem, and the company hasn't (yet) responded with a patch.
The hack works by sending 512 text messages to a phone (although only one is visible) and then using an exploit in software to let the code from the text overrun into other parts of the phone.
Unknown attacker
The symbol on the one message could actually be changed to anything, so the person wouldn't know they've been the victim of an attack.
The hack will then use the phone to send texts to other users, meaning if left unchecked it could easily spread around the world.
The duo both say they've given Apple more time than ever to respond to the attack, yet it hasn't released a patch, so will be going ahead and revealing the exploit.
They've also found a similar problem with Windows Mobile, but admit they only found that last week and haven't notified Microsoft as yet.
The flaw allows the hacker to gain access to nearly all access of the phone, meaning the camera, browser and phone functions can be remotely used.
Charlie Miller, the security researcher who uncovered the flaw (along with fellow researcher Collin Mulliner) says he has notified Apple to the problem, and the company hasn't (yet) responded with a patch.
The hack works by sending 512 text messages to a phone (although only one is visible) and then using an exploit in software to let the code from the text overrun into other parts of the phone.
Unknown attacker
The symbol on the one message could actually be changed to anything, so the person wouldn't know they've been the victim of an attack.
The hack will then use the phone to send texts to other users, meaning if left unchecked it could easily spread around the world.
The duo both say they've given Apple more time than ever to respond to the attack, yet it hasn't released a patch, so will be going ahead and revealing the exploit.
They've also found a similar problem with Windows Mobile, but admit they only found that last week and haven't notified Microsoft as yet.


