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An Evening with George Shearing & Mel Torm�
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- Of the three men who taught me how to sing, the last was Mel Torme. Apparently, Mel Torme is a joke to anyone more than a decade older than me, a living parody of a Vegas crooner. But I stumbled on th
- Tegan and Sara
So Jealous is the third album from these sisters, and easily the one to single out for an introduction to their music. Some people may not get on board with their vocal styles, which are slightly
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- The second and final album from this power-pop group makes me wish Jellyfish had been able to make just one more record together. The album is best enjoyed as a whole piece, flowing from one track to
- Led Zeppelin
- This album bears every flavor of genius from the five records that came before. It is, I believe, the band's finest. With Physical Graffiti, Zep came raging back to their musical home territory -- har
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Apple iPhone Takes its Own Screen Shots, Possible Security Issue
Thursday, September 11th, 2008 at 4:00 PM - by John Martellaro
iPhone forensic expert Jonathan Zdziarski has revealed that the iPhone takes its own screen shots as an internal programming aid, but the data could also be used by someone who comes into possession of the iPhone to view information the owner thought was deleted.
Apparently, there is no malicious intent on the part of Apple, and the shots are used to enable, for example, the home screen shrinking effect, according to tgdaily on Friday
As an iPhone forensic expert, Mr. Zdziarski noted that someone with sufficient technical knowledge could exploit that data. However, hes divided on the issue. Sometimes, experts are asked to assist with a crime, and that data along with other cached files, could come in handy when assisting police investigations.
As with a Mac, someone who is determined enough can break through security protections on the iPhone, he noted. "This flaw can only be exploited by somebody with physical access to a device, but your phone could get into the hands of someone with more malicious intent," he said. "Obviously, you dont want to trust any of your data to a passcode."
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