- #FORUM QTFAIRUSE CRACKED#
- #FORUM QTFAIRUSE MP4#
- #FORUM QTFAIRUSE FULL#
- #FORUM QTFAIRUSE ANDROID#
- #FORUM QTFAIRUSE SOFTWARE#
It's the same if I drive out into the middle of nowhere.
And my friends who are still on Verizon still drop calls all the time. We used to be on Verizon, and we would always get dropped calls. I and no one else that I know has ever had an issue with AT&T in our area (Ann Arbor, MI). I honestly don't understand why people are always complaining about AT&T. If HTC made a better phone I'd gladly go pick it up, but I'm simply posting my experiences. I couldn't exactly call myself an Apple 'fanboy' either. Pretty judgemental and silly post in my opinion. Judging from the responses I'd say these guys seem pretty fair. I already feel great about my purchase, and I haven't been here long enough to know if the users are fanboys. I'm just posting about some harassment I've been experiencing because of the phone I've purchased and was wondering if other iPhone owners have experienced it, and by judging from the responses a lot have. Thats some pretty narrow minded thinking there buddy. You're either a balanced 'reviewer' or an Apple apologist (plenty of them here!). Shame they can't produce them all the same (my 32GB is pee-yellow while my 16GB is very white). I gotta admit that my 4's screen is crisper. Mobile ASV on it is as good, if not better than, the iPhone's IPS technology. My iPhone 3G OTOH.ĭoing the same things (heavy web browsing, 1~2 hours of talk time, 1 hour of A2DP BT music streaming in my car) I get just under 1 days' battery life on both my NS and iPhone 4.Īs for the screen- less pixel dense on my NS obviously but in direct sunlight the NS's SAMOLED is way better than my iPhone. Runs nice and smooth on 2.2 (general usage and games). Never had Angry Birds run at '2FPS' and I have the 'original Google phone'- a HTC G1.
#FORUM QTFAIRUSE ANDROID#
There goes your theory that Android device owners are all too poor to afford an iPhone :rolleyes: Including this one!įTR I have two iPhone 4's, a Nexus S and a LYNX 3D (SH-03C). Take a look through the forums, and you'll find plenty of people 'behaving so pathetically' in plenty of threads. What are you trying to gain from this thread? The approval of other Apple fanboys? Or are you trying to make yourself feel better about your purchase?
#FORUM QTFAIRUSE SOFTWARE#
1) gaining access to the keys (DeCSS, playfair/hymn, JustePort) 2) Finding places in the software where the encryption is "off" or at least weaker than before (QTFairUse, and PyMusique).
These kind of hacks involve on of two things. Once you have the private key, you can portray yourself as the iTunes client and away you go. In the case of AirTunes/JustePort, it's actually quite simple (for Jon and those of his talents), because the iTunes client software was the one encrypting the content for the AirPort, so the private key for that encryption was on the PC or Mac that was sending the content to the AirPort Express.
#FORUM QTFAIRUSE CRACKED#
I don't know how or even if Jon has cracked FairPlay 2.0 encryption. In case you've missed it, decryption is (once again) hacked QTFairUse6 () Explain how Jon from Norway has now for the second time managed to crack Apple's _encryption_ and nobody has yet found any way to crack the _decryption_?
#FORUM QTFAIRUSE MP4#
During this process, it copies unencrypted data, frame-by-frame, into RAM and then inserts it into a new MP4 container that is free of any DRM.Ok. To accomplish this task it uses a rather uncommon approach: instead of removing the already present DRM, it waits for iTunes to play back the protected file and intercepts the unencrypted AAC data stream as it is sent to the sound card. QTFairUse is to convert protected audio files (.m4p extension) purchased from Apple's iTunes Store into M4a files, without DRM.
#FORUM QTFAIRUSE FULL#
These early versions of QTFairUse would save only the "raw" AAC (not contained in an MPEG-4 (MP4) container), but later incarnations properly supported full conversions. QTFairUse is a software application dumps the raw output of a QuickTime AAC stream to a file, which could bypass the digital rights management (DRM) algorithm called FairPlay used to encrypt music content of media files such as those distributed by the iTunes Store, Apple's online music store.Īlthough these resulting raw AAC files were unplayable by most media players at the time of release, they represented the first attempt at circumventing Apple's encryption.