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Thursday 16 June 2016

Samsung testing new TouchWiz UI

Samsung has begun rolling out a new user interface for Galaxy Note 5 users in China and South Korea as part of its 'Galaxy Beta Program'. The new UI is dubbed 'New Note UX', and notably does away with the traditional launcher button than Android users have become accustomed to over the past years.

According to a report on Playfuldroid, the new UI, despite being named 'New Note UX', will roll out to devices including the Galaxy S7, S7 Edge, S6, S6 Edge, and the S6 Edge Plus. The site also reports that the new UI will be rolled out to the mentioned devices in August this year, so long as there aren't any problems along the way.
Aside from the removal of the launcher button, the new UI comes packed with new rounded square icons - reminiscent of those used on Ubuntu Phone, an updated settings menu, and a new layout for the power toggle dropdown in the notification bar.
By removing the launcher button, Samsung is aligning TouchWiz closer to Xiaomi's MIUI which also does not have a launcher button. Instead, all the applications sit somewhere on one of the home screens. There is no information on whether the UI will become available outside of the two countries.










Galaxy S7 Active vs. Galaxy S7 Drop Test: Does The Rugged Smartphone Live Up To Its Name?

Samsung recently released its newest Galaxy S7 variant, the Galaxy S7 Active, promoting the phone’s tougher capabilities to meet the demands of more active users.


The phone’s primary features include a water- and dust-resistant screen, 4,000 mAh battery life and a MIL STD-810G protection that keeps the phone shatter- and, supposedly, drop-resistant as well, “to keep things intact even when it's bumped or dropped.”
Yet how many times can we accidentally drop the phone and still have it function, really?
In the latest video from the PhoneBuff channel on YouTube, the Galaxy S7 Active’s dropping limits are figured out in "Galaxy S7 Active vs. Galaxy S7 Drop Test!"
Pitted against its original counterpart, Galaxy S7, both phones undergo four rounds of dropping to test out the various angles the phones can land on. Both phones are released onto a hard block at the same time from equal heights and damages are accessed as soon as the phones are stable on the ground.
In round one, the back face of each phone is tested, and the S7 Active wins this round. Only a few scuff marks appear on the S7 Active which can be easily wiped off while the Galaxy S7’s back completely shatters, forming minor and major cracks throughout the phone’s back case.
In round two, the bottom side of both phones is tested and both devices win the round. The S7 Active and Galaxy S7 both suffer the same amount of minute scrapes and scratches, not easily noticeable unless focused upon.
In round three, the side on which the buttons exist on both phones is tested and the S7 Active wins against the Galaxy S7. Both phones suffered the same amount of scratches again, but the S7 Active’s damages only appeared on its top and bottom bumpers, protecting the rest of the device’s side, including the side buttons.
In round four, the front face of both phones is tested and the S7 Active survived the drop with a few scratches, while the Galaxy S7 became completely inoperative as its exterior and interior displays both shattered from the fall.
A bonus round was given to the S7 Active to see just how many times it could withstand the dropping and after about 50 times of repeated falls, the phone remained functional with minimal damages.
Overall, the Galaxy S7 Active undoubtedly wins with flying colors and thus, truly lives up to its name.
The complete video can be viewed below:

Saturday 11 June 2016

This phone case lets an iPhone run Android




Developer Nick Lee has earned himself a reputation for putting weird and wacky operating systems on Apple gadgets, including Windows 95 on an Apple Watch. Now, he's gone the practical route of bringing a full-fledged version of Android to the iPhone. There's just one catch: you need a special, 3D-printed smartphone case to make it work.
Lee decided to clone the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) and make a custom version of Android Marshmallow he could run on a board he bought himself. He then 3D printed an iPhone-sized enclosure he found on Thingiverse, and combined the board, a battery, a boost converter, and resistor to make a lightweight case. At first, it was quite bulky, resembling a brick you'd be more likely to have seen in a cellphone store 15 years ago.
But after slimming down the design, Lee was able to craft an enclosure not too much larger than your standard smartphone battery case. He also included openings for HDMI and USB ports, as well as a SD card slot. In his YouTube demonstration, Lee appears to slip a light sheet of plastic over the components before placing an iPhone on top.
He also appears to boot Android by way of a custom Tendigi app on the iPhone's home screen. Tendigi, where Lee works as CTO, is a mobile design and development studio in Brooklyn, and Lee uses its iOS app to communicate with the case and load his custom version of Android on an iPhone 6S's display. The whole process here took many days, Lee says, and it's not exactly practical. But it is a fascinating look at both the ingenuity it took to perform this feat and the lengths at which you have to go to get even a custom open-source version of Android running on Apple's flagship phone.

Friday 10 June 2016

Twitter hack that hit co-founder Evan Williams and Mark Zuckerberg reveals 123456 is user's most popular password

The website LeakedSource revealed 32,888,300 Twitter usernames and passwords were also on sale on the dark web, which it is believed has already led to a rash of high profile hacks, including Mark Zuckerberg and Twitter co-founder Evan Williams.
Now, it has been revealed what the most popular passwords were - with more than 120,000 users opting for '123456'.  

That was followed by '123456789,' 'qwerty,' 'password,' and a host of other easily guessable passwords (including '12345'). 
A Saudi-based group of hackers is believed to be behind the attack. 
Now it seems the Facebook founder was not their only high profile target as Evan Williams, the co-founder and former chief executive of Twitter has also been hacked by the same group.
Mr Williams' Twitter account was hacked on Wednesday, through his Foursquare account, by the hacking group OurMine. 
The group reportedly posted a tweet, which has since been removed, that read: 'Hey, it's OurMine Team, we are just testing your security, please send us a message' followed by an email address.
A Twitter spokesperson told MailOnline the social media site itself had not been hacked.
'We are confident that these usernames and credentials were not obtained by a Twitter data breach – our systems have not been breached,' they said. 
'In fact, we've been working to help keep accounts protected by checking our data against what's been shared from recent other password leaks.' 
A number of other high-profile figures have been hacked, including Lana Del Rey, Drake and Kylie Jenner - although it is not yet known if those attacks are related.
Today, the website LeakedSource revealed 32,888,300 Twitter usernames and passwords were also on sale on the dark web. 
The attacks were probably achieved by retrieving passwords stored in people's browsers, like Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox, LeakedSource said in a blog post
'The explanation for this is that tens of millions of people have become infected by malware, and the malware sent every saved username and password from browsers like Chrome and Firefox back to the hackers from all websites including Twitter,' the blog said.

Thursday 9 June 2016

Facebook Debuts 360 Photos

The 360-degree photos promised by Facebook’s Oculus VR virtual reality subsidiary last month have officially arrived.
Product manager Andy Huang announced in a Newsroom post Thursday that 360 photos are currently available for viewing via Facebook on the web and the latest versions of its flagship iOS and Android applications, adding that the tools for users to share their own 360 photos will be made available “over the next few days.”
Once those tools are rolled out, Huang said users will be able to share panoramic photos taken via iOS devices or Samsung Galaxy phones, or 360-degree photos shot with 360 photo apps or cameras, the same way they would share any other photos and videos, and the 360-degree scrolling capability will be functional in News Feed for any photos that appear with a compass icon.
Users can move their phones or drag those photos with their fingers to experience them in 360, and tapping them will convert them to full-screen.
Samsung Gear VR users can click the “View in VR” button in the top-left-hand corner of photos and insert their phones into their headsets.
Huang also directed users looking for further information to the Facebook 360 site, the Facebook 360 Community group and the Help Center.




He wrote in the Newsroom post:




Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to Hold His First 'Live Q&A' on June 14


Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has had a busy month already. Apart from
chatting with ISS astronauts using Facebook Live, the 32-year-old entrepreneur
also found two of his social media accounts hacked - Twitter and Pinterest.
To make this month even busier, Zuckerberg on Wednesday announced he will be
 holding his first Q&A session on Facebook Live on Tuesday next week.
Making the announcement in a post on his Facebook profile, Zuckerberg said the
Q&A session powered by Facebook Live would be different from the Townhall
Q&As he has held in the past, saying the medium is more interactive.

Zuckerberg said the session will cover topics users are interested in, such
 as "connecting the world, artificial intelligence, virtual reality, live video,
 entrepreneurship, philanthropy, and more."
As before, users can leave questions that they want to ask Zuckerberg on the
Facebook post. The highest voted ones will be answered by the Facebook CEO.
The Facebook Live Q&A session with Mark Zuckerberg is scheduled for 11:30am
PT on Tuesday (12am IST on Wednesday).
Facebook is investing a lot into its new Live platform, and in the recent past has expanded the feature in several ways. This latest Q&A session will serve as an example of the power of the platform, something the company was obviously also looking to do with its ISS Facebook Live session earlier this month.

Related post: Watch | Zuckerberg hosts first Facebook Live with astronauts aboard ISS

Wednesday 8 June 2016

Twitter's Android app gets a new and much better design


Twitter for Android is getting a much better, much easier-to-use design. The new look was announced today, though you may have caught sight of it a couple months ago, as it's been in testing among Twitter beta users.
The redesign makes it much easier to move between the different sections of Twitter's app, allowing you to swipe from side to side to switch between your feed, Twitter Moments, your notifications, and your messages. The buttons for each of those sections are now much bigger, too, so you no longer have to tap tiny icons at the top of your screen.
The app's update is really about moving all of Twitter's features into much more accessible places. That includes the four areas mentioned above, but it also includes sections that were originally hidden within the gross "..." menu of the app. Those items are now all accessible through a pane that slides out from the side of the screen, which will let you quickly access your profile, settings, and Twitter's underrated Highlights feature. The app is also getting a Material Design-mandated floating button, which can be used to send a tweet from just about any screen.
Twitter says that the new design is rolling out to everyone on Android today. It's supposed to be available after an app update.

Lesson 2: How to remove mobizen watermark.


We saw in the last post the "6 best Android apps for screen recording". So in this lesson I will show you how to remove mobizen watermark. Don't forget to like, subscribe and share it with your friends.


[Apk Extractor]
[ZArchiver]
[Mobizen Screen Recorder]
[Mobizen for SAMSUNG]

Tuesday 7 June 2016

6 best Android apps for screen recording


One of our more frequent requests from readers is to tell them how to record your screen on Android. The functionality has been around for quite some time but usually requires some tinkering and adjustment to get it. In Android Lollipop, they have a screen recording method building into the OS and that’s how most people do it these days. Let’s take a look at a few Android apps and some other methods to get you screen recording.

Android apps that work on Lollipop and later


AZ Screen Recorder (no root required) 

[Price: Free with in app purchases]

First up is AZ Screen Recorder and this is one of the many screen recording apps that were designed to work specifically on Lollipop. Some of the features include the Magic Button feature to control recordings without showing anything on the screen, the ability to capture your front camera as well as screen recording, and some cursory stuff like countdown timers and video trimming. It’s free to use with some in-app purchases if you’re interested.







ilos screen recorder (no root required)

[Price: Free]
Ilos screen recorder is a totally free option when it comes to screen recording on Lollipop. It’s a very simple app that doesn’t have a lot of bells or whistles but it does record audio and it should work on all devices running Android 5.0 and higher. They also tout no advertising, no watermarks, and no time limits. The company also has an interesting web recorder on their official website that will record stuff from your computer if you need that functionality.






One Shot Screen Recorder (no root required)

[Price: Free / $0.99]
One Shot Screen Recorder tries to keep the process of screen recording simple. It puts the whole process into four easy steps for your convenience and that’s really all you need. The process aims to keep it easy to use over other options and it does fairly well at it. The free version is a trial that puts a watermark on your videos with the premium version removing the watermark, adds the ability to impose your own logo, hide the notification icon, remove ads, and more.







Telecine (no root required)

[Price: Free]
Telecine is the highest rated app on the list with a 4.5 out of 5 star rating on Google Play. It puts an overlay on your device so you know you’re recording and boasts that it doesn’t clog up your notification with various things you’d typically see with screen recording apps. It’s also totally free and has no watermarks. It’s also open source so developers can submit fixes and patches all on their own or build their own app based on this one.








Unlimited Screen Recorder Free (no root required)

[Price: Free]
Unlimited Screen Recorder is our last Lollipop-centric screen recording app. It’s another totally free option that has no watermarks, unlimited video recording, and more features. It features a simple, one-touch interface and records both video and audio. There are also some advanced settings for experienced users.





Android apps that work before Lollipop


Mobizen (no root required)

[Price: Free]
Mobizen is an option that lets you do all kinds of stuff including sending SMS from your desktop, transfer files to PC, and stream video directly to your computer screen. You can also record the screen and this is one of the very few ways you can record using an Android app before Lollipop without root. Unfortunately, the screen recording isn’t great and there will likely be jumps, skips, and frame rate drops. It’s not perfect but it is there and it’s free.








Jack Dorsey “co-founder and CEO of Twitter” Tweet: Ramadan Kareem ☽



Ramadan is not only a religious time to be closer with Allah, but also moments to share and interact with others, especially Iftar and Suhour. The holy month of Ramadan is a great time for 1.6 billion Muslims everywhere to use Twitter. Despite Twitter seeing has been struggling to expand its relevance with product updates, Arabic is the fastest growing language on Twitter.
In 2015, Tweets about Ramadan were seen 8.4 billion times, on and off Twitter. Such massive volume of tweets isn’t being ignored.
For Ramadan 2015, Twitter has announced three hashflags – its term for custom emoji that show up in most of its apps and on the Web – to celebrate Ramadan when you use the appropriate hashtag in either Arabic or English.

According to latest Twitter stats published April 2016, stats that 77% of Twitter’s Monthly Active users are from outside of US. With large, distributed conversations happening on every corner of the network.
For the first time since the first tweet was written by co-founder and CEO of Twitter, Dorsey on 21 March 2006. Jack Dorsey decided to acknowledge the importance of the holy month for Islam, and wish all Muslim users a Ramadan Kareem.
Also to help people around the world celebrate the holy month marked ninth of the Islamic calendar, Twitter used to launch several initiatives to make Twitter more fun and useful every day during Ramadan.
For Ramadan 2016 celebration, Twitter launched a special Twitter emoji for Ramadan again to be available globally, but this year Twitter extending this fun form of self-expression to Periscope, too.


On Twitter, use any of the hashtags above in your Tweets and you’ll see a crescent moon appear next to these terms, from today to the end of the holy month.

HOW MUSLIM USERS REACTED TO 



Monday 6 June 2016

How to unlock iPhone without password


A VIDEO has emerged showing a seemingly easy way to access your iPhone without needing to enter the passcode.
It is claimed that this simple trick will apparently let you bypass the phone’s security in seconds, meaning you can get to your device even if you’ve forgotten your code.
With just a few simple steps, the video shows how surprisingly easy it can be to get into the phone without going through its security, The Sun reports.
According to the video, you have to hold down the home button on the lock screen and wait for Siri to pop up.
When Siri is listening, just ask what the time is and click the clock symbol to take yourself into the ‘clock’ app.

How to unlock iPhone without password


This should lead you to the ‘World Clock’ tab, where there is a section that allows you to pick what tone is played once the alarm goes off.
From this menu, there is the option to buy more tones, which redirects you to the iTunes store.
From here, by clicking the home button, you can get to the phone’s home screen without entering the passcode.
Confused commenters claim it works for some people on some phones, while others have had no luck with the trick.
One viewer explained the trick only works if you have enabled touch recognition, since the phone uses your fingerprint to bypass the passcode.
This article originally appeared in The Sun and was reproduced with permission

Sunday 5 June 2016

Snapchat Passes Twitter in Daily Usage


Snapchat Inc. has 150 million people using the service each day, said people familiar with the matter. That makes the four-year-old messaging app more popular than Twitter Inc. by daily active users.
Snapchat has been growing quickly, boosted by its popularity among young people. The app had 110 million daily users in December, said the people, who asked not to be named because they weren’t authorized to speak about the numbers.
Twitter, which was founded in 2006, has less than 140 million users interacting with the service daily, according to an average of analysts’ estimates surveyed by Bloomberg. The short-messaging service was once the largest social network after Facebook Inc. but has since been surpassed by Facebook’s other apps, including Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp.
Twitter has 310 million monthly active users, according to its most recent earnings report. The company doesn’t disclose how many of those people check in daily, but in the third quarter, it said about 44 percent of monthly users are active each day in the service’s top 20 markets. Twitter Chief Financial Officer Anthony Noto said at the time that the percentage had been stable but that “we’ll be sure to disclose” if there was a significant change. The company hasn’t given an update since then. This implies a daily active user count of 136 million. Twitter and Snapchat declined to comment.
Snapchat has made communicating more of a game by letting people send annotated selfies and short videos. It has allowed people to use its imaging software to swap faces in a photo, transform themselves into puppies, and barf rainbows. (In March, Facebook said it acquired the startup behind an app called Masquerade, which offers similar photo-manipulation tools.) Snapchat encourages people to visit the app frequently with features such as the "Snapstreak," which counts the number of consecutive days they’ve been communicating with their closest friends. Snapchat’s other content, such as news and Live Stories, disappear after 24 hours.

Messaging on Snapchat is “very modern,” Twitter Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey said on Wednesday at Recode’s technology conference. He acknowledged that Twitter at times can be confusing and alienating—something he’s trying to fix.

Lesson 1 : how to download any original version of windows for microsoft servers.


In this lesson I will show you how to download any original version of windows for Microsoft servers. Just open the link below and follow all the steps to know how to download the other versions. Don't forget to like this video and share it to your friends.

download link: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/techbench


Script:

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British teen who hacked North Korea's version of Facebook reveals Kim Jong-un's 'easy to guess' password

The teenager told Mirror Online: “I’d love to visit North Korea one day but I think I just blew my chances”.


North Korea is one of the most restrictive countries in the world but they seem to be testing a social network

A British teenager hacked North Korea's version of Facebook after correctly guessing a password on Kim Jong-un's internet servers.
The youngster, who is studying computing at college, guessed the logins for StarCon by looking up details of the software used to create the site.
He used “admin” and the default password “password” to gain access to the site’s admin page and says he could delete and suspend users, change the site’s name, censor certain words and manage the adverts.
The teenager – who we are not naming – told Mirror Online: “I was curious and decided to visit it. The site was created using off the shelf software, so naturally i went to the vendor's website looking at what features it had.
“I came across a default username and password and though why the heck not.
“Once I logged in I was able to see the sites statistics, basic user information, site settings and change the site’s adverts.


Kim Jong-un is one of the few people in North Korea allowed to access the internet

“I went ahead and changed the adverts saying that I found the login details then changed them to prevent anyone coming in and trying to do anything malicious.”
The website has a similar design to Facebook – including a newsfeed, likes and profile pages – and was discovered by researchers.
It appears to have been built using software called phpDolphin and analysts say it could be a “trial that was inadvertently made public”.
The teenager who gained access says he was “expecting an error”.
He said: “I was surprised it even worked, surely this should have been changed before going live?”
His advice for North Korean officials is to “always test for vulnerabilities before making a site live, and of course, change the default password”.
He added: “I’d love to visit North Korea one day – though I think i just blew my chances.”


The StarCon website appears to be a clone of Facebook (stock photo)
Internet researcher Doug Madory told VICE that the site’s servers are located in North Korea. It has since been taken down by hackers and redirected to a YouTube video.

He said: “It seems like it’s brand new. Very few websites resolve to the North Korean address space, and this one does.
“It seems kind of weird that they would build this, but maybe they did.”
The site appears to be unfinished and many pages are still populated with English filler text.
North Korea is considered one of the most restrictive countries in the world having banned Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.


North Korea has been linked to a number of cyber attacks in the past and is said to have teams of thousands of trained hackers

Researchers estimate there are only a few hundred internet users in the country.
But the country is not averse to technological development.
North Korea has its own computer operating system called Red Star OS and has repeatedly been linked to hacks including that of Sony Pictures in 2014.
Last year defector Prof Kim Heung-Kwang revealed that the country has thousands of trained military hackers and could destroy infrastructure or even kill people.

Related post: North Korean social network’ appears