#Mobile news: #Android #Samsung #Linux #4G #LTE #EE

Google blocks Adblock Plus during Android security update
AdBlock Plus no longer works out of the box on non-rooted devices running Android 4.1.2 or 4.2.2, instead having a warning box saying they must manually configure a proxy server .. for the app to work, it must also run a little (proxy)server to filter out the ads before they are shown in the browser.

But Google thinks there is a significant security risk in allowing software to automatically redirect web connections in this manner – perhaps fair enough. Adblock have published an 8-step process for the S3 to get around the problem. However Google has also been removing the app from the market to prevent downloads ..

Alternatively install Firefox browser .. there’s something comforting about seeing that icon again on the home screen. At first glance, the memory footprint is small and the FF team say it now has a minimum requirement of only a 600MHz processor (down from 800). So older phones could benefit: that works for me.

Some comments:
.. Google will not change this and it’s unlikely they’ll even read the complaints. It’s the Google way, they don’t do feedback from anything smaller than governments. And they don’t pay much attention to governments
Do no evil [unless we loose money because people don’t like adverts and try to block them]
My computing device. I get to decide what it downloads and displays. Don’t want to serve me content? Go ahead and block me, I’m cool with that. Just please don’t try to tell ME what to do with MY device
– ed.: it is sometimes said its THEIR OS, market, etc. but whether they supply it free to the phone co.s isn’t our concern

New Firefox 19.0 gets JAVASCRIPT PDF viewer
helping to avoid the security issues that have recently affected Abobe and Foxit products (until someone hacks FF too)

Linux for Mobiles and Tablets
Ubuntu will be making a developer preview on Feb 21st. but it wont be a retail product until at least April 2014. Initially aimed at Nexus devices as they ‘are hackable’.
And Samsung are set to merge Tizen OS and Bada? into a new mobile OS to compete with Android.

EE struggling with take up of 4G
Tariffs certainly aren’t cheap, eg. £36/ mo with only 500MB data (which at full speed would be used up in a few minutes). Three conversely (lov’m-or-hate’m) aren’t planning on charging extra when they roll out the service – you do of course, in both cases, need a compatible phone (not helpful if you’ve only just signed up to a 24m contract, d’oh)

Have to ask, are the current problems with the 3G service down to signal or protocol congestion, or simply that the masts cant get enough bandwidth to distribute to all the connected phones?
– from what we’ve heard, 3G works a dream, and at full speed, when you get away from urban areas.
Is this just marketing hype?
Will 4G slow down too when more people adopt it?
We will start to see in the summer, when the 4G network is opened up to rival telcos.

Tech news & thoughts this week #restart #opendata #windows8 #4g #restart

EE 4G fieldtest results: Is it really as fast as the network claims?
http://www.itpro.co.uk/643918/ee-4g-fieldtest-results-is-it-really-as-fast-as-the-network-claims
Unsurprisingly, we found that the more congested the location, the slower the download speeds as more people are using their devices.
With 24-month consumer contracts starting at £36 per month and including a monthly allowance of just 500MB, 4G is expensive considering the speed on offer. If you commute into one of the major cities with 4G from surrounding towns, you’ll drop down to HSPA+ connectivity.

Microsoft Windows Phone 8 review: First look
http://www.itpro.co.uk/643834/microsoft-windows-phone-8-review-first-look

Drawing lessons from Sandy’s wrath
http://www.itpro.co.uk/643888/drawing-lessons-from-sandys-wrath
The greater New York area is one of the world’s most important concentration points for internet traffic. This nexus of networks and data centres supports businesses far beyond the US East Coast, with data centres, “carrier hotels” and internet exchanges both in New York and New Jersey; the area is home to 150 data centres, according to Datacentermap. A number of large companies, especially in financial services, have their backup and disaster recovery facilities in the New Jersey area.

EU data proposals
http://www.itpro.co.uk/643903/eu-data-proposals-must-try-harder
These plans would give EU citizens new data protection rights as set out in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and the Lisbon Treaty. .. Sir Alan Beith, MP and chairman of the Justice committee said that the current data protection laws for general and commercial purposes need to be updated as they do not account for the digital world. .. It will be 2014 before any changes are made to the law in the UK. Final regulation will take effect two years after being adopted.

Government bodies must comply with open standards
http://www.itpro.co.uk/643915/government-bodies-must-comply-with-open-standards
The UK government has moved to make all governmental bodies comply with open standards to avoid vendor lock-in and promote government IT .. £409 million has been saved on IT services in the first six months of this year

TV-on demand being problematic
Virgin Media getting it in the neck over ‘peering issues’ that mean download speeds drop like a rock at peak evening times then magically restore after about 11pm.
However, we are also hearing reports iPlayer, etc. are almost unusable for ADSL (T) customers too: when they complete the BBC’s own speedtest, they pass with flying colours. Could some of the problems actually stem from the broadcasting sites themselves?
Test it yourself and left us know.

PC sellers struggling to shift new machines – we just dont need ’em any more
IHS iSuppli, a market watcher, this week said it had found that only six per cent of the desktop PCs that have been and are yet to be sold this year are what techies might call a “performance” machine – a computer based on the latest processor, graphics and storage technologies. For notebooks, the figure is slightly higher: 9.2 per cent.
Instead, punters are focusing their interest on what iSuppli calls the “value” and “mainstream” segments – defined, respectively, as machines cost $500 (£314) or less, and those in the $500-1000 (£314-629) band – of the desktop and laptop markets. Each accounts for more than 45 per cent of the whole.

People really are finding their 2-5 year old computer can do everything they need, so why spend hard earned cash when money is on such short supply?
Sure computers slow down and performance worsens with time, but simple, regular and appropriate maintenance fixes that. How many times have our clients been amazed at their old machine when the OS has been re-installed and returned to factory-new condition? No hardware changes!

Modern software however can be an issue (especially on certain Macs where OS upgrades are demanded by the fruity maker). Here perhaps the finger can be pointed at sloppy programming – dont get me started on today’s webpages needing to 100-200kb in size … what about people on dial-up? Dont laugh, the gods will make your broadband go pair-shaped.

It is one of the greatest advantages a desktop machine has over a laptop, the ability to easily swap out older hardware and upgrade the individual components. ‘Franken-machines’ as some call them, like my old Grandad’s hammer, only had 4 new handles and 2 heads, best hammer I ever owned.

We regularly run courses on computer maintenance around N. London, and work with therestartproject.org to help save servicable machines from landfill. Drop us a line.

Or stick Linux on it .. (whatever ‘Linux’ means) 🙂

Google Android open-love
In addition to flack over paying taxes, along with many other companies at the moment, there’s more and more talk about the alleged true openness of Android: its supposed to be ‘free and open source’ as per Linux. Google’s latest bug-bear has been ‘fragmentation’ of Android, perhaps aimed at Chinese manufacturers producing their own cheapo versions and cutting Google out of the profit line. Many point the finger in fact at Google, for having too quick a release cycle (3 in 2 years) and at phone OEMs who customise ‘user experience’.
It is noted the likelihood of phones going the same way as PC hardware: what differentiates one computer from another? The OS or the hardware (eg. PC/Windows or Apple/Mac/iOS? If the phone hardware field levels out, as is likely in a few years (unless someone massively improves batteries), it will only be features built into software (the OS) that will make punters choose on over the other.

Google worries me much more especially because of the insidious nature of Google’s lock-in tactics, which most consumers (and indeed journalists in the tech media who should know better) will be completely unaware of until they buy a device a few years in the future. Apart from the dubious reputation on privacy and the forced use of Google services for location awareness and backup etc., one aspect that most concerns me is application DRM, meaning that in 5 years time when there is a good fork of Android out there, most user’s paid apps will not be compatible due to being DRM-locked to the Google Play Store which will not be legally permitted on their devices.

oh, and Apple’s been done for trademark infringement
by Swiss Railways, for ripping off their clock design and using it on iPads, to the tune of a $21m fine.

whilst registering the turning of pages as a unique idea
True: the US Patent and Trademark office has granted Apple a new design patent, D670,713, entitled “Display screen or portion thereof with animated graphical user interface”. see here
Or maybe Apple haven’t understood ‘prior-art’ either.
Putting in an Apple flavoured comment always increases visitors too .. can I patent that?

Also in trouble with Applecare
especially in Italy where is has been withdrawn and is now unavailable. W shall see if many other ‘extended warranties’ have similar problems, a clash with the U regulations requiring 2 year warranty in electrical goods. This policy is well established in Italy, and theory at least are enforcing it: previoulsy Apple had only recognised the first year of use as covered should a fault appear (although apparently often extended on a case-by-case basis).
In the UK for example, the Sale of Goods Act provides even greater protection than the European directive so the 2 year clause is redundant.

read more about consumer rights here

and finally, replies have been switched on for bone fide readers, for a trial period ..
PS I think I’ve broken my keyboard