Android Trojan Malware Records Your Phone Conversations – SlashGear

A new Android malware has hit the scene that will surely cause some paranoia the next time you have a private—or at least you thought was private—phone conversation. According to researchers at CA Security Advisor, a new Android Trojan has been discovered that lodges itself in your phone when you download an infected app and then proceeds to record your phone calls.

The malware mimics legitimate apps, but once installed, it secretly records all of your phone calls in stores them on your handset’s SD card. It also inserts a configuration file with parameters for a remote server, suggesting that malware can also upload recorded conversations to a remote server.

via Android Trojan Malware Records Your Phone Conversations – SlashGear.

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Next Network Monitoring Tool: Your Smartphone – mobility Blog

Monitoring servers and network health are features that have been on smartphones for a while, but it often comes in the form of remote desktop access or mobile Web access, and support for multiple systems has been sketchy. That is changing though. Smartphones are becoming first-class citizens among devices that keep IT staff updated on what is going on with enterprise IT systems.

Derdack is readying a new app for Windows Phone 7 that will connect directly to Microsoft System Center Operations Manager; Windows Server 2008 Server Manager; HP Operations Center; and IBM Tivoli Monitoring. It should be available from the Windows Marketplace in late July.

The Mobile Alert App takes advantage of Windows Phone 7 features like live tiles and push notifications. You can also elect to get some alerts old school via SMS or voice.

The app doesn’t just alert you to an issue, but gives you full details on the incident so you can determine whether or not you need to get up from dinner and deal with it immediately or wait until you show up for work the next morning. Derdack also claims the app integrates with existing help desk systems so incidents should be able to be assigned right from the phone.

Making effective use of the Metro UI in Windows Phone 7, you can quickly see new alerts and which are resolved and unresolved. Once in an alert, you can view detailed information about it.

via Next Network Monitoring Tool: Your Smartphone – mobility Blog.

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Google+: Building a Use Case for the Enterprise | CMSwire

You knew this was coming. Google’s latest attempt at social networking has everyone talking, but more importantly it has everyone trying to twist and mold it into specific user groups. While Wave didn’t do so hot in anybody’s pool, here’s a look at why Plus — an obvious consumer choice — might make it in the Enterprise space.

Circles

First and foremost, Google is making a heavy play for organization. The Circles feature encourages you to sort the Google+ users you associate with into categories such as Friends, Colleagues, Family and Acquaintances. This allows you to post updates and share information with specified groups only:

Because users can create a Circle for whatever kind of group they wish — a specific project team, for example — it is much easier to control the primary area of Social Business that remains sketch: who has access to which information.

Another key point of Circles is the Internet giant’s aim to create a general-purpose network. A user can connect with any other Google+ member, meaning that, unlike private enterprise social networking platforms such as Yammer, Salesforce and Jive, you can use the app to communicate and collaborate with people outside of your organization— contract employees, for example.

Facebook gives its own users a similar degree of control with the Lists feature. Unfortunately for Zuck, it’s a fairly clunky offering in comparison and operates more like an afterthought than a central function.

Hangouts: A Virtual Water Cooler for Remote Teams

Hangouts is a built-in multi-user video chat tool, and a rumored Skype killer. The differences between the two platforms start right off the bat: rather than ping people in order to initiate a conversation, you literally ‘hang out’ in a room by advertising your presence with your face (your camera stream). If nobody is available to chat, you can let the app run in the background while you work.

When someone in the room speaks, their video stream is highlighted in a large central window while everyone else’s sits in strip of smaller windows just beneath. Meanwhile, a built-in IM feature for chatting, sharing links and so on is available, as well as a YouTube feature which enables users to watch videos together.

As far as the enterprise goes, the handiness of the tool is certainly appealing (because it’s browser based there’s no extra-launching needed) and the approach allows for much more spontaneous collaboration than most other video chat apps on the market.

“Hangout is a Skype killer,” wrote ZDNet’s Dennis Howlett, point blank. “It could also kill WebEx and with a bit of extra tweaking I can see it knocking over Adobe Connect. Those are enterprisey tools that Google has effectively rolled up.”

via Google+: Building a Use Case for the Enterprise.

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Apple’s iCloud and iOS 5: New challenges for the enterprise – Computerworld

Apple CEO Steve Jobs is known for wowing audiences with his presentation style and with new and polished technologies for Apple’s desktops, mobile devices and media services. His keynote address Monday at this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) was no exception. Jobs and other Apple executives showed off some of the features of the company’s Mac OS X 10.7 “Lion,” which is due out next month; the next generation of its iOS mobile platform; and the company’s new cloud service known as iCloud.

Apple and its products are generally seen as focused solely on consumers, though the ongoing march of iPads and iPhones into workplaces of all shapes and sizes is beginning to make Apple a fairly common tech brand in businesses and enterprises.

So, what do yesterday’s announcements mean for the enterprise?

Ubiquitous data

Let’s start with iCloud, which aims to make access to anyone’s data ubiquitous across every computing device available. Given that Apple now considers a PC or Mac to be just another “device,” this could have some serious implications when it comes to the line between home and work.

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On the surface, iCloud is simply a consumer solution for syncing personal data: music, app and ebook purchases; personal photos and videos; personal information such as contacts, calendars; and it offers a free email account. Those aren’t likely to affect the workplace much.

But the document sync and device backup features are bigger issues in the enterprise for a simple reason: They allow information about your company to be stored outside of your infrastructure and place control of that information under a user’s personal Apple ID.

Granted, some of that risk already exists. A user can theoretically backup a device (personally or company owned) to an outside computer or use any number of cloud storage solutions — Dropbox, Box.net, Apple’s existing iDisk, Google Docs and others — to transfer business information away from the workplace. The difference is that a user has to make an effort to do so, while iCloud will do this all automatically. A user might not even be aware it’s happening; background operation and ease-of-use is, after all, what Apple is aiming for.

While document syncing may seem like the initial red flag, the bigger concern involves cloud backups. Document syncing will need to be implemented by app developers — only Apple’s iWork is slated to get it right now — and each app appears to need user activation first. Device backup is expected to include backups of purchased content, photos and videos shot with a device, ringtones, all device-wide settings, home screen layout, text/MMS messages and app data. That app data is the big concern because that could mean almost anything, depending on the particular app, everything from game scores to student grades and attendance to performance reviews, sales figures and meeting notes.

via Apple’s iCloud and iOS 5: New challenges for the enterprise – Computerworld.

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Windows 8: What You Need to Know | PCWorld

Microsoft showed its first public demo of Windows 8 on Wednesday, and it’s not at all like the Windows operating systems you’ve come to know over the past 25 years. The next version of Microsoft’s operating system (“Windows 8″ is just a codename) is a radical departure, designed around touch screens.

What Windows 8 features did Microsoft demonstrate?

Essentially, Microsoft showed how Windows 8 will work on both tablets and traditional PCs. The operating system’s home screen is filled with big, touchable panels, like the live tiles in Windows Phone 7, and from there you can tap and swipe your way to other touch-based applications. But underneath that touchy layer is plain old Windows, with a task bar, file manager, app icons–everything.

Swipe across to multitask. (Click to Zoom)How does the touch interface work?

From the start menu, which shows basic information like time and unread e-mail counts, users swipe upwards to reveal the home screen and its tiles. As with Windows Phone 7, apps can show some information within the tiles–users needn’t click on the weather app to see the current temperature, for example. Swiping from the right bezel brings up a menu that can take users from an app back to the home screen.

Users can multitask between open apps by swiping across from the left bezel. And therein lies the coolest-looking feature of Windows 8: When swiping in a new app, users can snap it in place next to the app that’s currently running. This allows users to view two apps at the same time–something that no existing tablet OS can do.

via Windows 8: What You Need to Know | PCWorld.

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7 iPad Habits of Highly Effective Remote Workers Online Collaboration

The use of the iPad by mobile workers is on the rise, and that brings with it both boons and challenges for worker productivity. Here’s how you and your remote staff can stay on top of iPad usage, lest iPad usage controls you and your organization instead.

1. These Are the Apps You Need; These Are the Apps You Don’t

Keep your productivity and entertainment app worlds separate on your iPad. I know it’s too much to ask that workers who are mostly using their own personal devices in the work place to use them strictly for work purposes, but everyone will be happier and better able to focus on getting work done if you keep your fun and games-related apps in a separate folder or folders. Keeping the productivity and work-related apps out in the open on the app’s home screen will give them priority seating when it comes to your attention span, and the distractions will be left just a little bit beyond finger’s reach, where they’ll be less of a temptation.

2. Carry a Keyboard

The iPad is a great consumption device, but as we’ve seen, people aren’t crazy about using it for data input. Having a Bluetooth keyboard handy makes working on the iPad exponentially better. You have a few choices when it comes to which keyboard to carry. I’m personally a fan of the ZAGGmate keyboard/hard case combo, which comes in both original iPad and iPad 2 flavors, but the official Apple Wireless Keyboard is an attractive option, too.

3. Have a Wireless Strategy

If you want to use the iPad to make mobile working easier, you’ll hit a wall pretty fast if you don’t have access to a reliable data connection. For users with a 3G-capable iPad, this means checking to make sure you have an active plan ready to go with the carrier of your choosing, and ensuring that your carrier offers service in the place you intend to use your iPad. If it doesn’t, shop around for a temporary carrier/SIM card for your working destination.

Verizon iPad owners will want to make sure that they have something other than a simple SIM switch in place for most international destinations, which largely use GSM technology to power their networks. Finding a provider that offers a pay-as-you go mobile hotspot solution might be a good workaround. Companies can help by issuing globally-compatible mobile hotspot hardware to remote employees who travel internationally.

4. Have a Battery Backup

Battery backup offerings for the iPad are many and varied, but carrying a reliable one that has enough juice to give your iPad a decent bump is a good idea. You never know when you might lose your power cord, or forget to secure an adapter before a quick stopover in an international destination. Check out Dave Greenbaum’s roundup of iPhone and iPad battery backups for a good look at some of the better options out there.

5. Enable Find My iPad

Losing an iPad really sucks. But what’s worse is losing your iPad having not enabled Apple’s free Find My iPad service. Through MobileMe, Apple can help you locate a lost iPad if it’s enabled, or at the very least, you can use the service to remotely wipe your device, thereby protecting sensitive personal and work-related data. Enterprise is already nervous about the potential security hazards associated with consumer devices in the workplace; help make them less so.

6. Lock It Up

It may seem obvious, but even more important than enabling Find My iPad is setting up your device to require a passcode upon waking. You can do this in the iPad’s Settings app, under General > Passcode Lock. By default, the iPad will use a simple passcode consisting of a 4 digit number, but you can turn this off, which will let you set a longer password that can combine both letters and numbers. If you’re storing sensitive information on your device, you’re better off using a complex passcode lock.

via 7 iPad Habits of Highly Effective Remote Workers Online Collaboration.

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KnowledgeTree Takes on Box.net for Mobile Content Management

If you think Box.net is the only cloud-based document management provider with a handle on mobile, it’s time to think again. KnowledgeTree (news, site) has just announced their foray into mobile document management with a new Android app.

Going Mobile with your Documents

KnowledgeTree is a mid-market provider of cloud-based document management. Its solution is about managing the processes around documents and a bit of lightweight contract management and records management thrown in for good measure. And like its competitor, Box.net, it’s very collaboration focused.

Today, KnowledgeTree has launched a new Android application to support an organization’s document management processes anywhere, anytime. Organize, edit, sync and manage your documents from your secure KnowledgeTree vault and associated processes all from the comfort of your Android phone.

 

Included in the mobile apps is a secure vault for disconnected usage. This vault is encrypted and requires passcodes.

via KnowledgeTree Takes on Box.net for Mobile Content Management.

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Google Brings TRUSTe Certification To Apps Marketplace — InformationWeek

In an effort to make the cloud more transparent, Google has introduced a TRUSTe data privacy certification program for enterprise Web apps in its Apps Marketplace.

The Google Apps Marketplace opened in March 2010 with over 50 installable Web apps and grew to over 300 a year later. It is a business-oriented version of the Chrome Web Store, launched in December 2010.

Google’s goal with the Apps Marketplace has been to simplify the process of Web app discovery, evaluation, and deployment. Businesses that deploy Marketplace apps gain the benefits of Google account single sign-on and access through the universal navigation bar that those with Google accounts see when logged in. Some Marketplace apps also synchronize with Google Apps data.

Such convenience, however, invariably comes with concerns about how these apps handle corporate data. Given the reports of insecure and malicious apps in the Android Market, not to mention ongoing efforts to steal data or dupe users through malicious advertising, it’s understandable that business IT managers have asked Google for reassurance about the data handling and privacy practices of Web app vendors.

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To address such concerns, TRUSTe has created a certification program by which makers of installable Web apps can make their data and privacy practices more clear to current and potential customers. Certification is free for the first year and $300 for each year thereafter.

via Google Brings TRUSTe Certification To Apps Marketplace — InformationWeek.

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TweetDeck Releases Version 2.0 for iPhone

As social media dashboards go, the main benefit is often in the added functionality over the stock interface or application. TweetDeck (news, site), for one, is known for its flexible use of columns to help sort, manage and organize Twitter feeds. TweetDeck has recently launched version 2.0 of its iPhone app, with a handful of new, useful features and UI improvements.

A Re-Imagining of TweetDeck

TweetDeck’s creators say the 2.0 update is a re-imagining of the original TweetDeck iOS application, as the interface has been redesigned from ground up. TweetDeck 2.0 is touted as faster and more user-friendly than the original release, and features custom columns, support for new touch gestures, improved performance and support for long tweets with Deck.ly, among others.

Our team took the original iPhone app and distilled the essence of what made it so popular into a series of guiding principles. They then embarked on creating a brand new app from scratch, making use of all the latest technologies and design approaches, but all the while with an eye on those fundamental principles from the original.”

via TweetDeck Releases Version 2.0 for iPhone.

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Credit Card Squares: Square Releases a Credit Card Reader for the iPhone – iSmashPhone iPhone Blog

The iPhone has made a major step forward to interacting with customers financially, and credit cards have another step towards use in even the most casual of situations.

Square, Inc. has just released an iPhone app / Hardware combination that allows you to read credit cards right on your iPhone.  The ability to use your iPhone as a credit card reader has been discussed for years, and now it has been made practical on the consumer level for average users.

via Credit Card Squares: Square Releases a Credit Card Reader for the iPhone – iSmashPhone iPhone Blog.

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