Showing posts with label android reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label android reviews. Show all posts

Monday, 29 August 2016

Updates to your Android apps will now be up to 50 percent smaller

Google has created a welcome modification to its Play Store app delivery system that should help to speed up updates and reduce information consumption by making them smaller.

An updated algorithm can cut back the size of updates by as much as 50 % by downloading solely the specified changes to APK files and merging them with existing files – presenting a much more economical system than previously enforced.

For approximately 98 % of app updates from the Play Store, only changes (deltas) to APK files are downloaded and integrated with the present files, reducing the size of updates. we tend to recently extended a delta algorithmic program, bsdiff that additional reduces patches by up to 50 % or additional compared to the previous algorithmic program


Bsdiff is specifically targeted to provide a lot of efficient deltas of native libraries by taking advantage of specific ways that during which compiled native code changes between versions. To be handiest, native libraries should be stored uncompressed (compression interferes with delta algorithms)

Google first rolled out support for delta updates – those which includes just the change – all the way back is 2012 but the latest algorithm improve the system quite dramatically.

Google impressive algorithm has been expanded to APK expansionfile – often used for large file like games – for the first time. This addition can reduce the download size of initial installs by 12 percent, and updates by 65 percent on average.

Application which makes use of uncompressed native libraries will see the biggest improvement whilst those which have already been compressed can only expect around five percent decrease.


The number of app updates being pushed out by android developers has been on a steady rise according to Google and so its great user can grab the latest version faster than before and use the less data in doing so. To assist users further, Google will now even report the size of the delta update before download 

Tuesday, 16 August 2016

Indus OS : World’s First Regional Operating System

Indus OS is world’s first regional operating system created by Mumbai based startup.It is the Second biggest OS in India. This OS is developed to cater the saperation between the economic, regional and the social classes of the country. This OS doing it by the medium of smartphone to connect all the classes with the digital world and with each other. these are the first customized smartphone that meets the real needs of the emerging market’s regional language through innovation,simplification and localization. In short Indus OS is focused in creating regional smartphone.

In this you’ll get whole interface in regional language. It is android based operating system having its own App store, called App Bazar. Currently it has 30,000 apps on the App Bazar. and targets 10,0000 apps over the next one year.

Features:

 • The Indus OS currently supports  English and 12 major languages (Malayam,Telugu,tamil,Odisa,Assamese,Punjabi,kannada,Gujarati,Hindi,Urdu,Bengali,Marathi)

 • In this on the swipe of your fingure you can translate text between English & regional language. This swipe is called Indus swipe.

 • It also supports word and Matra prediction in regional language.

 • This  OS convert Text to speech i.e text to in your native language. For instance if you are reading something online then you can select that text and after selecting that you’ll see two floating buttons one is of getting speech in english and another is of getting speech in your regional language. by selecting any of them your text will be translated  to that language in form of speech.

 • This OS is providing free text messaging service between Indus OS users.

 • Auto Correction Feature is also present in this OS. it have 200,000+ words database in 12 regional languages

 • It has “all-in-1″ Keyboard. It means we can type in regional language by using the English keyboard.

Growth:

 • Currently India has 220 million smartphone user.

 • out of smartphones sold between January and March, 1.6 million ran on indus OS.

 • Indus’s target of user base is of 100  million by 2018.

 • After Micromax, it is planning to  tie-up with other home grown smartphone market.

Wednesday, 10 August 2016

New Qualcomm-targeted android security bug is according to place '900 million' devices at risk. Here's what you would like to understand.

ONCE AGAIN, IT'S ANDROID SECURITY PANIC SEASON. THIS NEWS BROKE OF THE RECENT COLLECTION OF VULNERABILITIES, FOUNDED BY SECURITY FIRM CHECK POINT AND GROUPED TOGETHER UNDER THE CATCHY MONICKER "QUAD ROOTER." AS USUAL, MOST OF THE REPORTING HAS FOCUSED ON WORST-CASE SCENARIOS AND A SHOCKINGLY HUGE NUMBER OF POTENTIALLY VULNERABLE DEVICES — IN THIS CASE, AN ESTIMATED 900 MILLION.


1. It's a Qualcomm thing


Check Point specifically targeted Qualcomm due to its dominant position in the Android ecosystem. Because so many Android phones use Qualcomm hardware, the drivers Qualcomm contributes to the software on these phones make for an attractive target — a single set of vulnerabilities affecting a large proportion of the Android user base. (Specifically, the bugs affect networking, graphics and memory allocation code.)

Qualcomm's drivers are a big, attractive target.

All four of the exploits that make up Quad Rooter affect Qualcomm drivers, so if you have a phone that uses no Qualcomm hardware at all — for example, a Galaxy S6 or Note 5 (which uses Samsung's own Exynos processor and Shannon modem), you're not affected by this.

2. It’s serious, but there's no evidence of it being used in the wild

As the name suggests, QuadRoot is a collection of four exploits in Qualcomm's code which could allow a malicious app to gain root privileges — i.e. access to do basically anything on your phone. From there, you can dream up any number of nightmare scenarios: attackers listening in on phone calls, spying through your camera, pilfering financial details or locking down your data with ransomware.

No-one's talking about these exploits being used in the wild yet, which is a good thing. (Check Point estimates that the bad guys will have it packaged into functioning malware within three or four months.) However given the challenges involved in updating the software on the billion-plus Android devices out there, malware creators will have plenty of time to figure out a practical application.

But...



3. Chances are you're not actually "vulnerable"


QuadRooter is one of the many Android security issues that requires you to manually install an app. That means manually going into Security settings and toggling the "Unknown Sources" checkbox.

Given that Check Point first disclosed the vulnerabilities back in April, Google has almost certainly been scanning Play Store apps for these exploits for quite some time. That means you'll be fine if, like most people, you only download apps from the Play Store.

And even if you don't, Android's "Verify Apps" feature is designed to act as an additional layer of protection, scanning apps from third-party sources for known malware before you install. This feature is enabled by default in all Android versions since 2012's 4.2 Jelly Bean, and because it's part of Google Play Services, it's always updating. As of the most recent stats available, more than 90 percent of active Android devices are running version 4.2 or later.

We don't have explicit confirmation from Google that "Verify Apps" is scanning for QuadRooter, but given that Google was informed months ago, chances are it is. And if it is, Android will identify any QuadRooter-harboring app as harmful and show a big scary warning screen before letting you get anywhere near installing it.

In that case, are you still "vulnerable?" Well technically. You could conceivably go to Security settings, enable Unknown Sources, then ignore the full-screen warning that you're about to install malware and disable yet another security setting elsewhere. But at that point, to a large extent, it's on you.

4. Android security is hard, even with monthly patches


One interesting aspect of the QuadRooter saga is what it shows us about the Android security challenges that still remain, even in a world of monthly security patches. Three of the four vulnerabilities are fixed in the latest August 2016 patches, but one has apparently slipped through the cracks and won't be fixed until the September patch. That's cause for legitimate concern given that disclosure happened back in April.


Even once patches are issued, they need to go through device manufacturers and carriers before being pushed out to phones. And although some companies like Samsung, BlackBerry and (naturally) Google have been quick about making sure the latest patches are available, most of the folks making Android devices are nowhere near as timely — especially when it comes to older or lower-priced phones.

QuadRooter underscores how the ubiquity of Qualcomm-based Android devices makes them an attractive target, while the variety of hardware as a whole makes updating all of them near impossible.


5. We've been here before


Catchy marketing name? Check.
Big scary number of "vulnerable" devices? Check.
Free detection app peddled by security company with a product to sell? Check.
No evidence of use in the wild? Check.

Press at large ignoring the Play Store and Verify Apps as a roadblock against app-based exploits? Check.

It's the same dance we do every year around security conference time. In 2014 it was Fake ID. In 2015, it was Stage fright. Unfortunately, understanding of Android security issues in the media at large has remained woeful, and that means figures like the "900 million" affected bounce around the echo chamber without context.

If you're being smart about the apps you install, there's not much reason to worry about. And even if you're not, chances are Play Services and Verify Apps will have your back.


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