cturkoanje
Chris
cturkoanje

Well PhoneGap is a platform that allows you to make native like applications across multiple platforms using custom PhoneGap functions. So I can build an app once using HTML (You can use something like JQuery Mobile or Sencha Touch) with CSS and JavaScript and just add the files to your Android project or iOS project.

This is something completely different, the Pre would mimic the USB vender ID of the iPod and actually show up in iTunes, no 3rd party software needed. This just reads the iTunes library data which is nothing new, DoubleTwist, BlackBerry Desktop Manager, and other programs have been able to do this for years, nothing

No problem, compile an Application using PhoneGap, then have it check a server on launch. You can then send a remote JavaScript file to it and use JavaScript to get all the contacts.

Nope, "4G" HSPA+

No, your just in a bad area, this was done out on Long Island not the city.

If you are downloading a 2GB file then yes.

This is what I get on my 4S

I may be doing this wrong but it looks like on iOS 5.0.1 beta it doesn't work.

I am thinking that developers can make an App that uses private APIs to change the file and load it to their phones?

So, how does a developer get "developer access for this"?

" A hacker could see a user's contacts and photos, play sounds on the phone and activate vibrate mode."

Miller is a big person, just posting it on his twitter account would have made it get the same amount of attention. The way he approached it is why he is wrong.

It is in section 8 of the developer terms found here: [cl.ly]

Why? Because the guy broke the rules and knew that he would get banned?

Statutory rape can happen even if the male agrees to the contact. If he was 18 it wouldn't be statutory rape.

Age of content is 18 in California where this supposedly happened.

Never said that, your taking that comment out of context, I said don't list things if you don't know anything about it such as OS requirements or features. If you don't know if it is true or not then don't list it.

Even without the exploit developers could have still accomplished this.

Works fine for me in Safari 5.1.1 and Chrome 16.0.912.21 on a Mac