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First Third-party Native iPhone Application Released
Posted by
Zonk
on Fri Aug 03, 2007 04:51 PM
from the first-or-third dept.
from the first-or-third dept.
An anonymous reader writes "A third-party native application for the iPhone is now available. Gizmodo discusses the real full-fledged iPhone application with a graphic user interface and its own icon in the iPhone home screen. It is not a Web 2.0 app but the real thing. What is it? Ironically enough, MobileTerminal, 'a terminal emulator application for the iPhone. MobileTerminal.app is NOT an SSH client, nor Telnet for that matter. It can however be used to execute a console ssh-client application.' The iPhone dev revolution has just started."
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Apple: iPhone Root Password Hacked in Three Days 311 comments
unPlugged-2.0 writes "An Australian developer blog writes that the iPhone root password has already been cracked. The story outlines the procedure but doesn't give the actual password. According to the story: 'The information came from an an official Apple iPhone restore image. The archive contains two .dmg disk images: a password encrypted system image and an unencrypted user image. By delving into the unencrypted image inquisitive hackers were able to discover that all iPhones ship with predefined passwords to the accounts 'mobile' and 'root', the last of which being the name of the privileged administration account on UNIX based systems.' Though interesting, it doesn't seem as though the password is good for anything. The article theorizes it may be left over from development work, or could have been included to create a 'false trail' for hackers."
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SWEET! (Score:5, Funny)
Terminal!
Re:SWEET! (Score:5, Funny)
You can use it to pipe text messages to festival. Then it's like you're actually talking to the other person!
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
don't forget that OS X (iPhone's OS) is derived from Mac OS X, which in itself has a pretty powerful TTS engine, that frankly sounds MUCH more human, though still not natural. i'd be kinda surprised if apple's TTS engine isn't already on the iPhone waiting to be used - especially since they've been putting some resources into it lately. [link [archive.org] - it's a shame they don't have the sample for alex posted anymore... you'll hear it in october!]
Re:SWEET! (Score:5, Funny)
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Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
WebShell [umich.edu] is a project that is geared specifically as an SSH client for the iPhone. The problem is that it requires installation on any server that you want SSH access to.
GotoSSH.com [gotossh.com] appears to provide web SSH access that would probably also work on the iPhone. It seems unique because it doesn't require any software installation on the SSH servers. I've found it handy since I can connect to some of my servers that are outside of my
Re:SWEET! (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
Re:SWEET! (Score:4, Informative)
oh you didn't know??
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
It's beyond me how someone would switch carriers without trying out the service first. A $20 prepaid phone from RadioShack or similar comes with like $10 worth of airtime.
Well... for starters, I wasn't even aware that that that was an option.
it's just not that hard to figure out before signing a 2-year contract
A 2 year contract... with a 2-week trial period (with which, I naively assumed I could - and follow me here - try the service).
It's really your own fault if you lost that kind of money because you aren't in a good enough service area
Yes, it is my fault. I fully admit that. I didn't read the contract in detail, I stupidly assumed that when AT&T's own site [att.com] said
Network impact (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I think apple wasn't ready for it yet, meaning they didn't have a polished sdk to give to developers.
telemarketers (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
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Ultimate gaming platform? (Score:2, Funny)
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Re:Ultimate gaming platform? (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
PSPhone DS (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's the apple game dev ad [highendcareers.com].
This speaks legions to me, and it says Apple is not only going to turn the iPhone into a a cool smartphone, but they will also start selling games with it. IT has enough horsepower and screen real estate to take on the PSP..... and the DS, with the multi touch interface.
If it works and sells, Sony is going to shit big square bricks, Steve Ballmer is single handedly going to cause a world chair shortage, and Nintendo is going to be most challenged. Anything you can do with the DS, you can do with the iPhone.
Most, most interesting.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Except play brain training, or nintendogs, or pokemon, or new super mario bros, or have it cost you (and I mean the average person who can't hack it, and even if you can it's still gonna cost you £250+) less than £100.
The iPhone is a flashy gadget, it's not a games console and it won't ever be.
Ever.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Anything you can do with the DS, you can do with the iPhone.
Apart from use a stylus [wikipedia.org]. That's going to be quite a deal breaker, given that a lot of DS games require precise touches, which can't really be achieved with even the daintiest of fingertips. I don't think the whole touch thing is likely to work that well when you move from the few-pixels precision of the stylus on the DS to a big fat finger on the iPhone.
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Whoa there boy... (Score:4, Insightful)
1 and 2 are ridiculous claims based off of this information, and I'm pretty sure they were already aware of #3 based off of the grumbling developers and blogs after WWDC.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Oh don't you love the smell of burnt karma in the morning =)
Google's offering. (Score:3, Interesting)
That said it'll be hard for them to beat the Phase 2 OpenMoko [openmoko.org] for developer fun.
Re:IPhone Revolution? (Score:5, Insightful)
It does look cool, but without an Apple sized hype-machine and good support from cell phone companies and service providers I don't see it taking off.
Parent
Re:IPhone Revolution? (Score:5, Insightful)
With no official SDK who is going to make applications for it? Maybe a couple of geeks happy to mess with something that's not documented and for which there's absolutely zero support from the vendor, but nobody of much importance. They'll have exactly the same problem you say OpenMoko has: That very few people will ever hear that something can be installed into an iPhone, and fewer yet will install something.
Installing applications will probably not be just a matter of point and click on a standard phone either.
Parent
The iPhone has an SDK (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't care for the iPhone, myself -- another closed proprietary system? I'll wait for OpenMoko.
But you kind of have to give them credit for one thing. If they had released an iPhone-only SDK, you'd see iPhone-only apps. By not releasing any SDK, and by releasing a real web browser for it, people are writing web apps designed for mobile devices [colloquy.info]. Which means they're not really tied to the iPhone.
I think that's kind of cool, actually.
Parent
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Installing applications will probably not be just a matter of point and click on a standard phone either.
Installing third party software is a matter of point and click on a standard phone, if you haven't got an old relic of a phone that doesn't support MIDP [sun.com].
It goes like this:
1. Use standard broser to download an application you like, for instance Wayfinder Earth [wayfinder.com] or Opera Mini [operamini.com]
2. Copy the application to your SD or MS-card, if your phone support those, or connect your phone to your pc via USB, IR, Bluetooth or serial and install it using the application-installer supplied by the producer of your phone, whatever
Beg to differ (Score:3, Informative)
With no official SDK who is going to make applications for it?
Well all these [modmyiphone.com] people care enough about it as a platform to write what apps they can using the browser as SDK.
One of them in particular, is Popcap with the well known game bejewled.
Now you might say, that doesn't count because it's "just" a browser based app. But all of the applications listed there have been tailored to fit and work well on the iPhone. Most of the even use fragments of cust
Re:Beg to differ (Score:4, Insightful)
It's fantastic. For years, I've heard Mac fans (amongst others, sure) moan loudly about web standards. Browser independence. Railing against websites that discriminate against Safari. That are "best viewed in IE".
Now, there's the iPhone. And suddenly coding HTML and CSS to meet the needs of one device / browser combination is apparently A-ok, because it's their device. I see.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
1) automatically check unknown numbers against whocalled.us type telemarketer lists
2) log ALL calls - especially useful to see how many times ppl from 1) have called you if you set it up to show while ringing
3) *MY* ringtones - they don't sell Wagner, Scriabin, Schnittke or death metal on those services - not that I'd want to pay for music I already own.
4) ringback tones
5) advanced blacklisting functionality
6) the ability to have my phone
Re: (Score:2)
"Currently it is not suitable for users. The state of the software at the moment is pre-alpha. If you order a Neo1973, DO NOT expect to be able to use it as an everyday phone."
Nice "phone" you've got there.
Re:Revolution? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Revolution? (Score:4, Funny)
You have answered the age old quesiton: do you want to post to slashdot, or do you want to CHANGE THE WORLD??? Well, I think in this post you have clearly accomplished both.
Parent
Re:Revolution? (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, sorry, I didn't realize you were blind.
Parent
Functional (Score:5, Insightful)
No, the iPhone is a really functional device that sucks a lot less than so many other phones, and fans of dynamic symbolic UI finally have a device that doesn't wimp out in presenting us with a virtual interface. Plus the screen DPI is so high it actually makes reading really small text practical so the screen is much more usable than you would think only from looking at the size in specs.
Furthermore it's also a device with a huge amount of potential, in part from Apple but also in part from hacking. And as we have seen with the Apple TV and other devices, Apple devices are generally hackable and Apple doesn't push back the way Sony or Nintendo or Microsoft do.
I don't quite know if revolution is the right word either, but it sure is a breath of fresh air in a world that until now has been a fetid swamp.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, well they fixed that in newer Macs (and by "newer" I mean in the early 90's with OpenFirmware, not 2006 with the Intel switch).
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Yeah, well they fixed that in newer Macs (and by "newer" I mean in the early 90's with OpenFirmware, not 2006 with the Intel switch).
*ahem* First of all, I wouldn't call 1995 "early 90s" (the PowerMac 6200 was the first Mac to ship with OpenFirmware, and was introduced in May of that year). Secondly, I wouldn't call the problem "fixed" on Old World Macs - it wasn't until the release of the iMac in August 1998 that it became simple and easy to boot operating systems other than Mac OS.
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Re:Revolution? (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, a terminal app on my iPhone? Are you kidding? Hell yes, I'll set it up. It's not so much that it gives me a command line interface, it's that it gives me access to the Unix system in my pocket. Again, if you don't value that and don't get it, it's _fine_, really, but that doesn't mean it's without value to those who understand the value of such a thing.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
PS: Yes, I got a 770 in the recent mass discounting craze. Yes, I love it. Yes, I use it for VOIP over EDGE... making it a phone.
Re:Revolution? (Score:5, Interesting)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:problems with it ... (Score:5, Informative)
Simon
Parent
Re:What does it do? (Score:5, Informative)
Meaning, it's "a console window for the iPhone's operating system", yes.
Which also means that if the iPhone had a serial port, you could talk to that with MobileTerminal. Or if you want SSH or Telnet, those clients will run in MobileTerminal.
Parent