MANILA,
Philippines -- It is increasingly getting difficult to do.
But we have
to keep trusting our fellowmen; otherwise what is the point in having
neighbors.
Yes, TV
news nightly bombard us with reports about some humans' inhumanity against
other people, but this should not frighten us into closing our eyes and our
hearts to everybody else's potential to do good.
We have to
keep believing that people are by nature good beings who care about what happen
to those who live near and far. We need to hold on to that ideal that people
are bound by logic, and put the interest of others before their own.
People can
and do rise above the evil that seems to permeate everything else. We need to
keep trusting each other, try to do good to each other at all times.
Otherwise,
what is the point?
Android,
Well-Loved
Well,
Google is again rediscovering some of the headaches that come with being the
800-pound gorilla in a room full of china.
Although it
must have been quite used to being the largest online search engine and its
collateral costs, the never-be-evil company must be finding it hard to turn the
other cheek or at least play it cool with the way mobile malware developers are
concentrating their energies on Android devices.
IT security
firm McAfee's latest quarterly report says that Google's Android has overtaken
Java Micro Edition as the top recipient of security attacks among all the
mobile platforms. About 60 percent of the 1,200 mobile malware examined by
McAfee were specifically designed for Android devices.
Mobile
malware still accounts for minuscule share of the overall malware
"market." Nevertheless, signs indicate that Google's mobile platform
is by far the digital criminals' favorite target, with Android malware
increasing 76 percent during the period covered by the report.
I guess,
owning Android smartphones and tablets in the new millennium must be
reminiscent of owning a Windows PC since the 1990s until now.
Rumors True
So, the
rumors seem to have been right after all.
Apple,
plenty of media reports say, is preparing a cheaper version of the iPhone 4.
Reuters says the coolest tech company on Earth must really be eyeing the lower
end of the smartphone market.
I see
hordes of people, those who have always wanted to own an iPhone but are
socio-economically challenged, raising the roof and overjoyed, their dream
finally getting closer to turning into reality.
I also see
a bunch of handset makers, those who have made lower-cost smartphones their
bread and butter, weeping and gnashing their teeth.
That's all
for the meantime, folks. Join me again next time as we keep on watching IT.

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