Posted in Apple, hacking, twitter on March 13th, 2012 by jgmullor
Archive for the ‘Apple’ Category
Posted in 1password, Apple, emergency, geek, ios, kit, Mac, macosx, ping.fm, security on March 13th, 2012 by macstansbury
Posted in Apple, Application Development, Development Environments, Google, Google Dart, javascript, Oracle, perl, python on March 12th, 2012 by Paul Krill
Oracle, Microsoft, and Apple all have a programming language ranked prominently in an industry index that monitors language use, but Google's efforts have yet to yield results, according to an official with Tiobe, which publishes the monthly Tiobe Programming Community Index.
Posted in Apple, Application Development, Development Environments, Google, Google Dart, javascript, Oracle, perl, python on March 12th, 2012 by Paul Krill
Oracle, Microsoft, and Apple all have a programming language ranked prominently in an industry index that monitors language use, but Google's efforts have yet to yield results, according to an official with Tiobe, which publishes the monthly Tiobe Programming Community Index.
[OFFICIAL] The time has come. Your destiny awaits. You have been chosen to be our next cracker. – Hackulous
Posted in #OLD, app, Apple, apps, crack, crackulous, hacking, installous, IPA, iphone on March 11th, 2012 by sshadowsslayer
Posted in Apple, Exported, From, geolocalization, hack, iphone, location, Mac, metasploit,, my, pen-testing, pentest, twitter on March 9th, 2012 by angelblade17
Posted in Apple, China, hack, hacking, iphone, iPod, Mac, Mobile, software, weibo-ref on March 9th, 2012 by chennan
Posted in Apple, business, deployment, ios, iPad, ipads, management, resources, security on March 9th, 2012 by sewebb
Posted in Apple, Application Security, Mac OS X, Patch Management, Safari, security, security management, Web Browsers, Web Security on March 9th, 2012 by InfoWorld Tech Watch

Danish security firm Secunia published information on two unpatched vulnerabilities in Apple's Safari 5 browser on Friday, after the consumer-technology firm allegedly failed to provide status updates on the patch process.
Posted in Apple, Application Security, Mac OS X, Patch Management, Safari, security, security management, Web Browsers, Web Security on March 9th, 2012 by InfoWorld Tech Watch

Danish security firm Secunia published information on two unpatched vulnerabilities in Apple's Safari 5 browser on Friday, after the consumer-technology firm allegedly failed to provide status updates on the patch process.