Apple approves Firefox sync app

Firefox Home can synchronize open browser tabs, shown here, as well as bookmarks, letting Firefox users bring some continuity to the iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch.

Firefox Home syncs open tabs, shown here, and bookmarks.

(Credit:
Mozilla)

Apple may not be happy about letting other browsers on the iPhone, but it approved an application from Mozilla that synchronizes bookmarks and open tabs with versions of Firefox running elsewhere.

The Firefox Home application is an offshoot of the project once called Weave and now called Firefox Sync. Mozilla submitted Firefox Home to Apple’s App Store on June 30.

Synchronization is of growing importance as people use more computing devices in their lives–not just home and work computers, but now also mobile phones, TVs, and tablets. Firefox Sync is arriving in Firefox 4, and Google is building similar sync tools into Chrome.

The granddaddy of browser sync tools, Xmarks, can bridge across Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Safari. Not all sync is the same, though: bookmarks and tabs are one area, but sync also can extend to passwords, browsing history, and other aspects of browser use.

Although there’s no Firefox for iOS, Mozilla has released a version for Nokia devices running the Maemo operating system that’s on the way to becoming MeeGo through a partnership with Intel. And an Android version is on the way. Mozilla scrapped a Windows Mobile version of Firefox.

Originally posted at Deep Tech

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Donald Bell’s 10 favorite iPhone apps (CNET 100)

Editors’ note: Each day for the next 10 business days, CNET personalities you know and love will publish slideshows of their 10 personal favorite iPhone apps. With each post, you get a chance to vote for your own favorite app. Two weeks from now, we’ll collect the full list of 100 apps and announce the 10 that you, our readers, love the most.


Donald Bell

(Credit:
Corinne Schulze/CNET)

Today, check in with digital-media-loving, iPad-reviewing, Buzz Out Loud-talking Senior Editor extraordinaire Donald Bell for his favorite 10 iPhone apps.

No surprise: Donald loves him some music apps–Pandora and CBS Interactive’s own Last.fm among them. But Donald’s creativity doesn’t stop at music selection. His apps include a $.99 drawing app, plus a couple of games more appropriate for a toddler. Hmm. Find out more about what Donald does with his iPod Touch in his full slideshow:

Once you’ve seen all of Donald’s picks, return to this poll to let us know which app is your favorite, then check back each day on iPhone Atlas to see app choices from the rest of the CNET crew.

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

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Float your music to the clouds with MP3tunes

MP3tunes logo

Music services geared toward untethered listening are enjoying increasing popularity thanks to the fact that cell phones are swiftly replacing standalone MP3 players for many people. MP3tunes is one of many solutions that has cropped up as a solution for on-the-go listening. The company offers a music cloud service that lets you upload up to 2GB of music for free and access it from any Internet-connected computer as well as a variety of handheld devices.

The first step to using MP3tunes is to download the teeny, tiny LockerSync uploader tool, which lets the service analyze your library and add it to the cloud. MP3tunes accepts both audio and video files in a variety of formats including MP3, AAC, WMA, OGG, FLV, MP4, and M4A. It also recognizes iTunes playlists, which is a nice feature. Unsurprisingly, DRM-protected tracks are not supported.

MP3tunes screenshot

A view of the MP3tunes online library and playback interface.

(Credit:
Screenshot by Jasmine France/CNET)

Once your music is in the cloud, there are a variety of ways to access it. The first is via the Web player at MP3tunes.com. Here, you’ll find a well-organized interface with a visually pleasing playback box that displays album art. It’s easy to browse tracks by album, artist, or playlist. Several in-home and portable hardware devices are also compatible with the service, including the iPhone, Android phones, Roku boxes, and even through your TV if you have TiVo.

MP3tunes performed admirably during our testing. There were no notable hiccups with playback, and audio quality is about on par with any other streaming-audio service. That is, it won’t be audiophile-approved (especially since lossless formats aren’t supported), but music sounds pleasant enough for the mainstream listener.

As noted, you can store up to 2GB of media in your locker at no charge. If you need more space, MP3tunes offers 50GB of storage for a monthly fee of $4.99.

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Turn your iPad into a second monitor


MaxiVista extends your Windows desktop onto your iPad in whatever direction and orientation you want.

MaxiVista extends your Windows desktop onto your iPad in whatever direction and orientation you want.

(Credit:
Rick Broida)

Can I be brutally honest? Much as I like my iPad, I’m just not using it much. (No, you can’t have it.) Turns out my iPhone is still my go-to device for e-mail, e-books, games, and other day-to-day stuff.

Needless to say, it troubles me to see that beautiful (and expensive) screen just sitting there going to waste. Well, waste no more! MaxiVista turns an iPad into a second monitor.

If this sounds familiar, you’re probably thinking of a similar utility: Air Display. However, that popular app works only with Macs. MaxiVista is the first such option for Windows users.

It costs $9.99, same as Air Display. The required Windows utility (scroll down to the bottom) is free. The latter taps your home Wi-Fi network to extend your Windows desktop to your iPad. Take a look:

So, what can you put inside a smallish second monitor? The possibilities are fairly endless. Maybe there’s a spreadsheet or Word document you frequently refer to throughout the day. Or a stock-market or sports site you like to monitor. Personally, I think the iPad would make an awesome holding tank for Windows gadgets.

That said, ask yourself if you really need to extend your desktop at all. As Scott Stein notes in his review of Air Display: “We’re not sure an iPad even needs to be used as second monitor in this
respect. You can use your iPad as a ‘second display’ without physically
linking it to a computer–as a dedicated e-mail window, or a Web
browser, or for information such as weather or stock prices. Air Display
is really best considered a way to extend a workspace that might need
instantly connected applications, such as multiple Word docs.”

You tell me: How would you use MaxiVista? Whatever you decide, you’ll need a good stand for your iPad. Here’s a roundup of five cheap ones.

One last note: In case you’re interested, MaxiVista can also turn an extra PC into a second monitor.

Originally posted at iPad Atlas

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Vlingo’s SuperDialer aims to be an Android 411

Vlingo's SuperDialer for Android

Vlingo's new Android app can use your voice to search the Web.

(Credit:
Vlingo)

If you own an Android phone, you already know how to use Vlingo‘s SuperDialer, a beta feature that expands the app’s vocally triggered “call” command to search not just your personal phone book, but also a wider directory of businesses.

Tap Vlingo’s home screen widget and speak out the name of the business or category of business you’d like to call, for example “Call Little Star Pizza” or “call pizza.” (Omitting the “call” command will trigger the default Google search, but not the SuperDialer’s business listings.)

Vlingo then returns a list of results from your phone book and from its own directory. You’ll press the green icon of a phone to directly dial the business. Or, you’ll tap the business name to get an aggregated summary page with reviews, the address, and tabs to call the business, view it on a map, navigate, or look up its Web site, if available.

At first, Vlingo’s SuperDialer sounds like a redundancy of Google’s voice search, which comes preinstalled with most of today’s Android phones.

However, there are differences. Start a voice search for a business name in Google, and in most cases you’ll see a Place listing surface, with ratings, a map, and a phone number you can click to call. Search in Vlingo, and you’ll get a summary screen that’s better integrated with Google Maps Navigation than Google’s own search. In fact, you can also ask for directions outright with a “directions” command.

We tested Vlingo’s voice search widget side-by-side with Google’s similar widget, and as long as there’s a Google results summary for the same business, and we remembered to precede our search with the word “call” with Vlingo, it was possible to dial a business using both services in just two taps. We should note that Vlingo does not use Google’s search engine to seek out business listings.

The other benefit that Vlingo presents is the rest of the Vlingo app itself, which obeys voice commands to draft a text message, update Facebook or Twitter status, or compose e-mail, in addition to browsing the Web and business directories. It can also launch third-party applications (though not always precisely, in our experience) and read your incoming e-mails and texts while you drive.

Vlingo is a premium product at a limited-time $9.99 one-time fee in the Android Market, and in our view the SuperDialer doesn’t best Google’s own voice search enough to warrant a purchase on the call command functionality alone. But if you’re already a Vlingo user, or want to be, the SuperDialer is certainly a neat expansion of the Vlingo app for U.S. and Canadian residents. Vlingo works on Android phones running 2.0 of the operating system or higher.

Originally posted at Android Atlas

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Eric Franklin’s 10 favorite iPhone apps (CNET 100)

Editors’ note: Each day for the next 10 business days, CNET personalities you know and love will publish slideshows of their 10 personal favorite iPhone apps. With each post, you get a chance to vote for your own favorite app. Two weeks from now, we’ll collect the full list of 100 apps and announce the 10 that you, our readers, love the most.


Eric Franklin

(Credit:
Karyne Levy/CNET)

Let’s review what we all thought we knew about senior associate tech editor Eric Franklin. He manages our West Coast labs. He’s a gamer, and he cares deeply about the quality of the monitors he reviews at CNET. (Seriously, he does. Watch the video.) He knows a lot about smartphone screens, among other topics.

But don’t think Eric is just a geeky dude whose true loves include only World of Warcraft (WoW) and black boxes. This CNET editor is much more complicated. His favorite iPhone app–of all time–is a Farmville-style game called Sally’s Spa. We are not kidding, not even a little bit. Then again, there’s at least one WoW app in his pack of 10 favorites:

Once you’ve seen all of Eric’s picks, return to this poll to let us know which app is your favorite, then check back each day on iPhone Atlas to see app choices from the rest of the CNET crew.

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

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What to do with passwords once you create them

Cryptography expert Bruce Schneier used to write his passwords down on a slip of paper and keep it in his wallet.

Today, he uses a free Windows password-storage tool called Password Safe that he designed five years ago and released into the open-source community. The desktop application lets users remember only one master password to access their password list.

But Schneier still recommends the paper method for people who don’t have their computers with them at all times like he does. “Either write the passwords down and put them in your wallet, or use something like Password Safe,” he said in an interview on Wednesday.

Encryption image

PGP creator Phil Zimmermann stores his passwords in an encrypted text file, which he described as a “cumbersome, manually operated password management system.”

And crypto cracker Karsten Nohl’s method is much simpler yet harder–he stores all his passwords in his brain.

“I use a nontrivial function to diversify passwords for every use,” Nohl said. “Disclosing anything about the function would lessen its strength. Security-through-obscurity, but only because I cannot compute any strong ciphers in my head.”

An informal survey of a dozen or so security experts reveals that some of them still rely on the paper and pen method. One respondent even admitted to succumbing to the post-it-note under the keyboard clich�! (If you do choose to write the passwords down you should avoid including the Web site or other identifying information, obviously.)

Password management isn’t sexy but it’s a problem that touches everyone who touches a computer. Not only are people forced to create new passwords at a dizzying level as they join social networks, do e-commerce and deal with frequently expiring passwords at work, but there are new and novel password theft methods all the time. Just this week Mozilla disabled a Firefox add-on that was intercepting login data and sending it on to a remote server.

There are a variety of solutions for people who want to upgrade from the paper-based practice. To cover them all would be an exhaustive and impossible task, but I’ll mention a few notables.

For those whose computer is always at hand, password managers stored on the desktop can be a good option. In addition to Password Safe, sources recommended another open-source software called KeePass. For the Macintosh, there’s 1Password ($39.95), which my colleague Jason Parker said was “the best in its class for the Mac.”

I was curious about the USB-based password managers and gave MyKey ($29.99) a try. I found it worked great but it does have some limitations–it only works on Windows-based PCs with the MyKey software installed. This meant I couldn’t use it on my home Mac or on friends’ computers I used during a recent vacation, something I wouldn’t be able to do with a desktop-based system either.

The Yubikey ($25) is another USB password device, but it differs in that it works on any computer or major operating system platform and requires no client software.

“It’s the same thing as putting the passwords in your wallet; it’s putting them on something physical that you are securing,” Schneier said when asked his opinion of using USB devices for storing passwords. “People can lose their keys or their wallet. Just put the passwords on the one you are less likely to lose.”

If you want to use a password manager that is not tethered to a particular computer, there are also hosted services where the passwords are stored in the cloud. This offers convenience the other methods don’t, but it means you are at the mercy of the security measures deployed on whatever computer you are using, so be cautious about using Internet kiosks and other public Web-surfing computers. You also have to trust that the company hosting the server holding your passwords won’t get hacked or otherwise compromised.

If you are interested in a free online password manager service, CNET Blogger Dennis Reilly wrote about RoboForm Online late last year.

Many people find the saved passwords feature on browsers handy, but they may not realize that attackers who get physical or remote access to the computer can easily see those stored passwords. This CNET TV video shows you how to hide them in Firefox by creating a master password for the browser.

A free extension for Firefox, Chrome and Internet Explorer called LastPass encrypts passwords and stores them on your hard drive and is beloved by colleagues at CNET News, as well as Download.com and CNET sister site ZDNet. It runs on the major operating systems, syncs data between multiple browsers, and automatically logs you into a site with one mouse click. And if you are using a computer other than the one you normally use you can retrieve your login information from the LastPass Web site.

Regardless of how you manage your passwords, experts say you should be careful to choose ones that have an appropriate level of security for the intended use or Web site. For instance, you can get by with an easy password for a Web site where all you do is log on to read news. But you should choose a much stronger password–meaning it is more difficult to guess or to figure out using a dictionary attack tool–for banking and other sites dealing with sensitive information like credit cards. And use different passwords for the different sites so that if one password is compromised your other sites or accounts aren’t at risk.

Schneier has an excellent essay on how to choose more secure passwords, CNET blogger Larry Magid provides tips for creating strong but easy-to-remember passwords here, and I provide additional suggestions in this story.

“Passwords still work, as long as you use them properly,” Schneier said.

Originally posted at InSecurity Complex

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Mac Firefox users: Tabs on top coming next week


(Credit:
Mozilla)

Mozilla said it hopes to release its second beta version of Firefox 4 “on or about July 22,” bringing Mac users a major new user interface that the first beta enabled by default only on Windows.

That feature, called tabs on top, follows the look of Google Chrome and Opera, in which tabs get top billing over the address bar. It’s not revolutionary, but it’s hard to change the habits of software used by hundreds of millions of people, so Mozilla has made it easy to switch off and has been taking pains to explain its tab rationale.

“Recently modern browsers have been transitioning to placing tops on top, and that decision isn’t arbitrary, it isn’t about fashion,” said Firefox user interface designer Alex Faaborg. “The change to placing tabs on top isn’t about one browser versus another browser, it’s about the evolution of the Web as a platform.”

Not everybody sees things the same way. Apple tried a tabs-on-top approach with the Safari 4 beta more than a year ago, but moved them back to a subordinate position for the final release. It kept that design for Safari 5, too.

Mozilla’s Firefox planning meeting agenda, also coming in the Firefox 4 second beta are CSS transitions, a newer feature of the Cascading Style Sheets technology used for Web page formatting. Transitions enable visually elaborate changes in a Web page’s state, for example, making photos in a slideshow flip out of the way as a person moves from one image to the next.

CSS transitions enable the spiraling arrival and departure of the slides in a demonstration by Mozilla’s Paul Rouget at last week’s Mozilla Summit 2010.

Originally posted at Deep Tech

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Mozilla disables password-stealing Firefox add-on


(Credit:
Mozilla)

Mozilla has disabled and added to a block list a Firefox add-on that stole log-in information when users visited Web sites, the company says.

The software, called Mozilla Sniffer, had been downloaded about 1,800 times in the approximately five weeks it was available on addons.mozilla.org, Mozilla reported in a blog post on Tuesday.

The blocklist will prompt the add-on to be uninstalled for computers running the program. Users who installed it should change their passwords.

Mozilla Sniffer intercepts login data and sends it to a remote server that appeared to be down, according to the blog post.

The software was not developed by Mozilla, nor was it reviewed by the company. Unreviewed add-ons are scanned for viruses, Trojans and other malware, but some malicious activity can only be detected by reviewing the code, Mozilla said.

“We’re already working on implementing a new security model for addons.mozilla.org that will require all add-ons to be code-reviewed before they are discoverable in the site,” the company said.

Originally posted at InSecurity Complex

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Evernote gets built-in, third-party app directory

SAN FRANCISCO–Web-based memory service Evernote on Wednesday unveiled what it’s calling the next phase of its business with something called “The Trunk.”

The Trunk is both a directory of third-party sites and a set of tools that can be integrated into the Evernote service to bring additional functionality. According to Evernote CEO Phil Libin, who held a press conference about the new offering here, The Trunk is not an app store, per se, but it will let other companies more easily bring features to the product that Evernote itself could not.

Libin said more than 2,000 partners are taking advantage of the company’s APIs. However, at launch, The Trunk will contain just 100 items from 67 different companies. These are split up by category to serve both mobile and desktop Web users.

This built-in directory is being rolled out to Windows, Mac, and Web versions of Evernote on Wednesday, followed shortly thereafter by iPad, iPhone, Android, and BlackBerry clients. Some of the initial partners include: Nitro PDF, which now offers a “send to Evernote” option in its software; Seesmic, which Evernote is working with to let its users export notes to the service; and Dial2Do, which is offering a voice transcription service that can transcribe audio notes into text notes, then save them to a user’s Evernote library.

When users want to add one of these features, or simply browse third-party Evernote-integrated services, they’ll be able to simply click the new Trunk button, which opens up the directory within the Evernote application:


The new trunk button

The new "Trunk" button.

(Credit:
Evernote)

For now, any paid service option from one of these third-parties will be done on that company’s site, but Libin said a release later this year will include a built-in payment system so that users don’t have to leave the app. The company also plans to add revenue sharing and an affiliate program for third-parties to make money off being featured in the directory.

Along with new features, the Trunk will also serve as a place for content providers to offer what the company is calling “branded notebooks.” These are pieces of content like articles and features from publishers–including California Home and Design, BlackBook, and O’Reilly’s Make–in the form of Evernote files that can be viewed alongside a user’s own Evernote notes. Libin explained it as a chance for users to “supplement professional content with [a user's] own thoughts and memories.”


The new branded notebooks directory

The new branded notebooks directory in action. Users can download these third-party notebooks into their own Evernote collection.

(Credit:
Evernote)

Besides the new Trunk feature and branded notebooks, Libin unveiled a new way for groups to work together. Evernote will now be able to collage shared items together into one folder so that users in different locations have the most up-to-date version. Libin explained it as one of the next steps in making Evernote friendlier for business and education users.

In the future, Libin says semantic analysis tools, templates, educational tools, and even games will make their way to the Trunk directory, as well as tighter integration with outside social networks. “The Trunk is a bridge to the social Web,” Libin said.

The Trunk

Evernote on Wednesday unveiled "The Trunk," a directory of third-party sites and a set of tools that can be integrated for added functionality.

(Credit:
Evernote)

Evernote says it’s now up to 3.7 million users since launching in June of 2008. In that time, its users have saved 145 million notes, which Libin said works out to 312 new ones every minute. While the service is free, it does have a premium subscription that costs $5 a month. Libin says that more than 80,000 of its users are currently premium subscribers–a number that has grown every month for the past two years.

According to Libin, there’s also been tremendous growth in the number of iPad users, which jumped from 9 percent of mobile users to 18 percent in just one month. He also said that Google’s Android platform has made considerable gains in its march to reaching 14 percent of mobile users, and as a result it’s requiring more of an investment. “We’ve more than doubled our Android team, and will be extending our efforts there dramatically,” Libin said. “We think over the next year, that the iOS and Android are the two main competitors.”

Evernote is currently available on 12 different platforms, and in 16 different languages. Of that, Windows users still dominate on the desktop side at 50 percent of total users, followed at 37 percent by Mac users. On the mobile side, iPhone and iPod Touch users account for the majority share at a combined 62 percent of total users.

Related: The Real Deal 209: Evernote (podcast)

Originally posted at Webware

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