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Discover New Music
- Red Hot Chili Peppers
- Billy Miles
- Take the voice of a young Billie Holiday and stuff it into a svelte, petite body with the face of an angel, and you have some idea of what it's like to experience the music of Billy Miles in her self-
- Brian Eno
- In his first proper solo release since 1996's relatively cold "The Drop," Brian Eno has constructed a whimsical and ecclectic masterpiece which is arguably one of the year's strongest records thus fa
- Congo Norvell
Very few albums manage to capture snapshots of a quality of life in the manner that Congo Norvell's sophomore record, "Abnormals Anonymous," does.
Comparisons to the Velvet Underground are
- Rush
- We all know it, right? Well, ya just gotta have it. 2112 finally showed Rush out on their own, doing their own thing, and doing it well, IMHO.
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News
WSJ: Do Hackers Threaten Smartphones?
Monday, May 26th, 2008 at 4:00 PM - by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
Smartphones, like computers, are vulnerable to hackers. So far the threat has been low, but as users start to use their smartphones more and more as mobile computers the risk will increase, according to the Wall Street Journal [Subscription Required] on Tuesday. Corporations are thinking more and more about the possible problems.
As a result, IT departments are starting to restrict access to their internal networks.
One reason is the popularity of smartphones thanks to the Apple iPhone. While smartphones comprise only 17 percent of the total market, their use is up 10 percent in one year. To date, the threat has remained low, and there are less than 500 known viruses for all phones [and none specifically for the iPhone], that work mostly through attachments or Bluetooth. Even so, companies with smartphone access to their networks are planning proactively.
One reason the threat is low right now is that, unlike Windows, a dominant OS hasnt yet emerged. Symbian has 65 percent of the market share and Windows mobile 11 percent. "Its very inefficient to write a virus for phones," said Nick Magliato, CEO of Trust Digital, a security vendor.
The major threats include unauthorized network access to private corporate data, through either snoopy viruses or malicious applications that arent digitally signed by a vendor, the transfer of malware into the corporate network, or the outright loss of the smartphone that contains sensitive corporate data. Thats why most corporations insist on a mechanism to wipe a smart phone clean remotely if its lost or stolen.
iPO notes that its been almost a year since the Apple iPhone was released, and there have been no known incidents like those cited above. Apple, with its recent enterprise initiatives, and its corporate customers are trying to keep it that way.
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