Showing posts with label iPhone apps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone apps. Show all posts

Obama Backs iPhone Searches, But Not ‘Willy-Nilly’

President Barack Obama speaks at the opening Keynote during the 2016 SXSW Music, Film + Interactive Festival at Long Center on March 11, 2016 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images for SXSW)
President Barack Obama believes law enforcement officials should be able to force Apple to unlock iPhones when investigating certain criminal cases, but he cautioned against “willy-nilly” searches of mobile devices.
Obama’s comments were among his most substantive on the ongoing debate about Apple’s dispute with the Justice Department, which wants the technology behemoth to unlock an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters. His administration has been trying to help bring about a resolution, but so far as failed to do so.
The White House has tried to avoid weighing in on the specifics of the case, but Obama’s comments Friday at the South By Southwest conference in Austin, Texas, make clear he believes Apple has a responsibility to unlock the device. 
"If [law enforcement officials] can't get in,” he said of iPhones, “then everyone is walking around with a Swiss bank account in their pocket."
The president warned against “fetishizing our phones above every other value,” saying “that can't be the right answer."
Notably, Obama said he comes down "way on the civil liberties side" of the debate, meaning he agrees with those who believe the data on iPhones should be protected at all costs.
But, saying his role as president means he has to turn over every possible leaf to keep Americans safe, he argued “there has to be some concessions" that allow the federal government to gain access to iPhones in the case of some criminal cases.
Still, Obama said he is intent on ensuring the federal government cannot simply go looking "willy-nilly" inside individuals’ iPhones "without oversight or probable cause.”
Though some might criticize Obama for making arguments on both sides of the debate, he contended Friday that “you cannot take an absolutist view on this.”

Source: Roll Call Newsparer

Facebook buys popular selfie filter iOS app Masquerade with Snapchat-like features


Remember six months ago when Snapchat introduced its crazy selfie lens feature that sort of went viral? Facebook wants in on the “how’d you do that” action too so it bought the recently launched app Masquerade (stylized as MSQRD) to instantly have access to its own selfie filter features.

 Masquerade, which only launched on iOS in December, works similarly to Snapchat’s filter feature seen above by using facial recognition over video to transform faces with comical filter effects. Tech Insider first reported the acquisition; the developers behind the popular iOS app later confirmed the acquisition (without disclosing deal details) in a blog post. For Masquerade fans, the founders say to expect the app (which is also available on Android) to continue to be maintained with new features coming soon:
Now, we’re excited to join forces with Facebook and bring the technology to even more people. Within Facebook, we’re going to be able to reach people at a scale like never before. For starters, we’ll be able to bring our technology to Facebook’s audience of nearly 1.6 billion people. This is a scale of audience we never imagined was possible.

While we will be partnering with Facebook to integrate our technology, the app will stay up and running so you’ll continue to record fun selfies and keep using the product. You can also expect us to keep adding fun features!

Masquerade, which features technology that could easily make its way to Facebook’s own app, isn’t the first time the major social network has tried to take on its competitor Snapchat with similar features. 

Three years ago, Facebook turned its ‘poke’ feature from its website into a standalone appthat worked a lot like Snapchat, but pulled it after few updates and little traction a year and a half later. Giving the whole Snapchat thing another shot, Facebook later introduced another standalone app called Slingshot, then fast-forward a year and a half later and that too disappeared.


But Masquerade’s outlook seems promising at least in the short-term, and their technology could easily be put to use throughout Facebook’s photo services and messaging apps like Instagram and Messenger, and the standalone Masquerade app sound like it has some new features in the pipeline for its fans. You can download Masquerade for free on the App Store.

Opinion: Why Apple is likely to end up paying that estimated $8B European back-tax bill – and more



The European Union warned us this week not to expect a speedy conclusion to the long-running investigation into the legality of Apple’s tax arrangements in Europe. The delay follows a decision back in December to expand the scope of the investigation.
But while the wheels of EU tax investigations may grind exceedingly slowly, I’d be willing to wager quite large sums of money on the final outcome. It looks to me increasingly clear that Apple’s tax arrangements with the Irish government are going to be declared illegal, and that Apple is going to be faced with a significant bill for unpaid tax …
Let’s start with the basics of how the whole situation arose in the first place. You can skip this section if you’re already up to speed on the background.
In a simple world, one of two things would happen when I buy an iPhone in the UK. Either the Apple Store in London sends the money back to Cupertino, and Apple pays U.S. tax on it there, or the money is paid into an Apple UK bank account, and Apple pays tax on it in Britain. In reality, however, neither of these things happens – and there are two reasons for that.
First, every country in the world sets its own corporate tax rates – the percentage tax a company pays on its profits. In the USA, the federal corporate tax rate is 35%. In the UK, it’s 20%, so Apple would already be better off paying UK tax on British sales. But it realized it could do better than that if it shopped around.
Ireland has one of the lowest rates of corporate tax in Europe, at 12.5%. By establishing a European headquarters in Ireland, and sending all the money from sales across Europe there, it could pay a lot less tax. But it doesn’t end there.
Ireland sets its corporate tax so low because it wants global companies to establish their European headquarters there. That creates jobs, and pumps money into the local economy. The bigger the company, the greater the benefit to the economy. So for very large companies – like Apple and Google – Ireland offered them a special deal (reportedly brokered by Steve Jobs). ‘Choose Ireland for your European HQ,’ it said, ‘and you only have to pay 2.5% tax.’ That’s five times lower than the rate paid by most companies.
So rather than pay 35% for sending the money back to the USA, or 20% for keeping it in the UK, Apple funnels all sales from European countries into Ireland – and pays just 2.5% tax on the lot.



I should stress that all this is perfectly legal … for Apple. Apple’s legal obligation is to pay the tax each country demands from it. If Ireland demands only 2.5%, Apple’s only duty in law is to smile broadly and write the check. (Ok, it isn’t actually legally required to grin as it does so, but it would be hard not to, right?)
This was what allowed Tim Cook to truthfully tell a Congressional hearing into Apple’s tax affairs that “we pay every dollar that we owe.” Apple does indeed pay every dollar, or Euro, it is required to. The company has broken no laws.
But the same is probably not true of the Irish government. Ireland is a member of the European Union, and there are laws determining what member states can and cannot do where corporate taxes are concerned. Precisely because the EU knows countries might be tempted to offer special deals to large companies, and because it doesn’t want a race to the bottom where those companies end up paying next to nothing in tax, it specifically outlaws them.
Special deals offered only to certain companies are known as state aid, and that’s illegal.
State aid is any advantage granted by public authorities through state resources on a selective basis to any organisations that could potentially distort competition and trade in the European Union (EU).
While we’ll need to await the outcome of the investigation before we know whether Ireland’s deal with Apple is formally found to be illegal state aid, it’s hard to see how it could not be.
‘Any advantage’ – check. A tax rate of 2.5% instead of 12.5% is one hell of an advantage.‘through state resources’ – check. The deal was struck with the Irish tax authorities.
‘on a selective basis’ – check. Apple got a deal, as did other large companies like Google and Microsoft. Mama and Papa’s Pizza Place, not so much.‘distort competition and trade’ – check. When one company pays one fifth of the tax rate paid by competitors, that massively distorts competition.
And similar deals in Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands have already been declared illegal. So the case that Ireland broke the law seems to me cut-and-dried: it did.



I said earlier that Apple hasn’t broken the law, which means it’s not on the hook for penalties or charges. But it is on the hook for the difference between the tax it actually paid and the tax it should have paid. Which is the difference between 2.5% and 12.5%. On all of the revenue Apple funnelled through Ireland from the whole of Europe. For ten years. That’s a lot of money.
Apple last year told shareholders that it was unable to say just how much money that would amount to, only that it would be a ‘material’ amount – where ‘material’ is finance-speak for ‘a shedload.’
If the European Commission were to conclude against Ireland, the European Commission could require Ireland to recover from the Company past taxes covering a period of up to 10 years reflective of the disallowed state aid. While such amount could be material, as of March 28, 2015 the Company is unable to estimate the impact.
But that hasn’t stopped others doing the sums. Bloomberg estimated the total tax liability at more than $8B.



But Apple’s potential European tax liabilities don’t necessarily end there. A number of European countries have questioned the legality of Apple funneling profits from sales in their country back to Ireland. Those countries believe Apple should be paying tax in the country where the sales were made.
Some European countries have done more than question the arrangements: they have flat out rejected them. Italy, for example, last year accused Apple of failing to declare more than $1.3B of income earned from 16 Italian Apple Stores, and presented the company with an additional tax bill for €318M ($347M). Apple paid up.
If other European countries do the same, it could face similar bills from countries across Europe, with the total potentially running into more than a billion dollars, taking that $8B estimate to upwards of $9B.
In comments on past pieces on this topic, some have questioned the fairness of Apple being asked to pay more tax than was demanded at the time. If Apple paid what was asked of it, they argued, surely it’s unfair to come asking for more later? But the position for Apple is no different to that of you or I. If the IRS or HMRC makes a mistake in calculating our personal taxes, it doesn’t let us off when that error comes to light. It might offer us an apology and time to pay, but we’d still have to fork over the cash. The same is true of Apple.



Finally, if you’re in any doubt about the eventual outcome of the investigation, you need to consider the politics. At a time when European economies are – like the U.S. one – still struggling, there is enormous public anger at the idea of large companies being able to get away with paying less than their fair share of tax.
A deal struck between Google and the British government, where the company paid just £130M ($185M) for back taxes covering ten years was roundly condemned not just by the public but by Britain’s own public spending watchdog – and is itself likely to be investigated by the European Commission. Starbucks had to change its own accounting system so that it stopped funneling most of the profits from its UK coffee shops back to offshore accounts after being faced by customer boycotts. Amazon too had to agree to pay UK tax on sales to UK customers in the face of public anger.
So my view is that both the law and the public mood is clear. Apple is likely on the hook to hand over more than $9B in back taxes – or around three times the amount it paid for its largest ever acquisition, Beats. That’s got to sting. But with cash reserves of around $200B in the bank, perhaps not too much.


Source: 9to5mac


With Galaxy S7, Samsung still can't achieve Apple-level industrial design

This year shame as the last
Last year I wrote an article about the difference between Samsung and Apple industrial design. It attracted hundreds of thousands of readers and sparked a debate about the difference between aping a look and nailing the details.

Galaxies S6
The gist was, on last year's Galaxy S6 line, almost nothing was actually in line.



So, a year later, did Samsung get their ports and buttons in order?

Galaxies S7

 

From the looks of the just-announced Galaxy S7, not so much.



The ports, microphones, speakers, jacks, and other elements still don't line up. Not even close.
Seriously, again?
In fairness to Samsung, the Galaxy S7 is more of a Galaxy S6s — an updated version of last year's phone. That means there was probably little time or opportunity for Samsung to re-engineer between then and now. And that shows why it's so important to take that kind of care from the very beginning.
Like I said last year:
To align everything along the edge of a device takes designing and mounting the boards in a certain way, and the ports and speakers, and the buttons and jacks, and the grills and every other detail so they all line up at exactly the right place at the end. Painstaking is likely an understatement.
Is it worth the effort? For me, as a customer, knowing that Apple had the consideration and took the time and effort to align their hardware speaks to the overall quality of their work. It reassures me that the same consideration and effort were likely spent making sure not a millimeter nor milliamp of battery space was wasted, not a nanometer of die, not a gap left around the screen, or a dead zone in the capacitive sensor.
It's the kind of care that might seem superficial or even superfluous at first but that permeates every aspect of product design. It's why Apple took the trouble to protect fingerprint data on a secure enclave of the A-series system-on-a-chip, for example, instead of leaving them in a world-readable directory.
Apple can and will continue to make its fair share of mistakes, and Samsung will continue to earn its fair share of accolades. Different phones will always appeal to different people.
But there's something about knowing a company cares enough to build everything right, down to the smallest of details. Like Steve Jobs said, you don't always notice it but you notice it when it's missing.
And what's missing has become increasingly noticeable.

Source: iMore

Hound, Thumb Drift, and other awesome apps of the week for Apple

Photo: Ste Smith/Cult of Mac
If you’re looking to unwind this fine Sunday by sampling the latest App Store delectables for your iPhone, iPad or Apple Watch, look no further: Cult of Mac has your hookup!
Whether you’re on the hunt for a fun racing game, a new and surprisingly great alternative to Siri, or a promising photo and video-editing app created by a 16-year-old dev, we’ve got what you’re searching for.
Check out our picks below. You won’t be disappointed.

Injustice: Gods Among Us


Quite possibly against my better judgment, I’m excited about Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, which will finally bring to the big screen the epic Dark Knight vs. Man of Steel clash comic fans have been waiting for since Frank Miller’s Dark Knight Returns graphic novel.
This week, Injustice: Gods Among Us got a new update, bringing the Zack Snyder versions of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman to the super-powered fighting game’s roster — alongside a handful of other new characters.
Whether the idea of staging a Supes vs. Bat-fleck battle on your iOS device appeals to you will no doubt depend on your level of geekery. But it certainly got me to re-download this entertaining free-to-play fighting game.
Available for: iPhone/iPad
Costs: Free (with in-app purchases)
Get it from: App Store

glaze



There are some great video and photo-editing apps available for iOS, but if you’re looking for a new one to play with try out 16-year-old (!) developer Ryan Stephen’s glaze app. Simple to use and with a neat range of filters, basic drawing tools, and text boxes available, it is a nifty app that can be applied to everything from selfies to video to, yes, even Live Photos on the iPhone 6s.
Well worth a punt at $0.99 — and, heck, when 16-year-old Stephen winds up becoming the next Kevin Systrom or Mike Krieger (two guys who made a little thing called Instagram), you’ll be able to say you downloaded one of his first apps.
Available for: iPhone/iPad
Costs: $0.99
Get it from: App Store

Facer 



Previously available only for Android Wear, watchface customization app Facer has now landed on Apple Watch — giving users the ability to customize their watches in various ways.
This includes Instagram and Tumblr picture integration, flashcards to help you learn and memorize facts, and licensed material from brands including Popeye, Garfield and Betty Boop.
A “must have” if you’re an Apple Watch user!
Available for: Apple Watch
Costs: Free
Get it from: App Store

Thumb Drift – Furious One Touch Car Racing


A fun racing game for iOS, Thumb Drift takes the simple game mechanic of “drifting” and runs… well, drives with it. A big complaint about many games on iOS is that the touchscreen isn’t a worthy substitute for either a controller or a keyboard/mouse setup. In Thumb Drift, the touchscreen controls work fantastically well — arguably better even than previous alternatives — and are a large part of what makes this game so fun.
I love the flat shaded, low polygon-count graphics, too. And who can hate a racing game where each crash results in your car exploding into pieces like it’s made of matchsticks?
Available for: iPhone/iPad
Costs: Free
Get it from: App Store

Hound Voice Search & Assistant




I use Siri a lot more than many people I know, but there’s no doubt that Apple hasn’t yet perfectly nailed the virtual assistant concept.
Hound is an attempt at a rival app, which gives users quick and accurate voice search, using a card-based approach not dissimilar to Android’s Google Now. You can get weather, news, directions, hotel locations, restaurant info and far more — all executed in a way that often betters Apple’s built-in Siri.
Definitely worth a download, although it’s unfortunate that there’s no way to set up iOS so that it activates Hound by default instead of Siri. Still, if you find yourself using it regularly, it’s only a couple of extra taps to get it up and running.
Available for: iPhone/iPad
Costs: Free
Get it from: App Store


 Source:Cult of Mac