Does Version 7.0.4 work with Xcode 6.3.1?

Richard Gaskin ambassador at fourthworld.com
Sat Apr 25 13:12:27 EDT 2015


Richmond wrote:
 > Microsoft Windows is flaky round the edges; hence viruses. Apple is
 > bound round with steel; hence next to no viruses, and extremely
 > difficult to "talk to" from anywhere else.

In all fairness to both sides there, the deep kernel revisions in recent 
Windows versions have greatly improved security there.  The UI is 
another story, but I find Nadella interesting and so for now it's hard 
to tell where it'll go but seems likely to be radically improved over 
the next year or two.

And as for Apple, there's a reason Ahrendts is apparently being groomed 
as Schiller's replacement:  Schiller seems to have run out of positive 
things to say about Apple's platforms in recent years, focusing instead 
on perceived security risks with competing OSes.  But as this brief 
sampling of news findable in this morning's Google News, no OS is ever 
without risk and it can be dangerously counterproductive to mislead 
one's users into believing they don't need to be mindful of security:

http://money.cnn.com/2015/04/22/technology/mac-security-flaw/
http://bgr.com/2015/04/22/os-x-yosemite-rootpipe-security-vulnerability/
http://www.zdnet.com/article/apple-os-x-security-features-easily-bypassed-says-researcher/
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/04/22/apple_no_ios_zone_bug/

It may be safe to say iOS has fewer *potential* exposures than Android, 
but that number is far from zero and despite the number of *attempts* 
that keep getting headlines the actual number of affected Android 
devices is very small and almost exclusively limited to users who alter 
the default protections provided by the system to download apps from 
strange unknown sources - the same sorts of things that tend to affect 
iOS users, often requiring jailbreaking.

With its seven layers of security that extend back to 2.3, Android as 
ships is not much more dangerous than iOS, and far more secure than any 
Mac, but if you're trying to pay the bills at a news site you're less 
likely to garner ad impressions with "Billions of People Used Their 
Phones Without Incident Today" than "OMG the Sky is Falling!", so the 
press tends to focus on attempts alone and generally completely 
overlooks the small number of devices actually affected.   We do, after 
all, sometimes see disproportionate press for iOS security exposures as 
well, and only when you read down into the details of the article do you 
find that, like most Android exploits, you need to alter something in 
the OS to become vulnerable.

With a 75/25% market share split between Android and iOS it's accurate 
to say there are fewer compromised iOS devices, but not zero.  Just ask 
any celebrity trying to keep their pics private. :)


 > Of course . . . one could develop LiveCode standalones for iOS to be
 > loaded through Cydia on Jail-broken iPhones and iPads, and
 > one wouldn't have to "share one's spit" with Apple . . . but I guess
 > that that is just too wild for most would-be iOS developers: don't
 > know why.

Most developers go where the audience is. Both Android and iOS are much 
safer to use when not jailbroken, so most folks leave 'em alone and 
enjoy a reasonably safe experience.

-- 
  Richard Gaskin
  Fourth World Systems
  Software Design and Development for the Desktop, Mobile, and the Web
  ____________________________________________________________________
  Ambassador at FourthWorld.com                http://www.FourthWorld.com




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