November 15, 2024

Month: March 2019

Swift 5 Cheat Sheet: Quick Reference Guide with Examples

With Swift 5 almost here, you can get ready for it today by buying the "Swift 5 Cheat Sheet" booklet today from Amazon.com.

This book has covered the latest Swift 5. Using Xcode 10.2
•Use this book as a quick reference guide (like a cheat sheet) for Swift programming language. Access any topic inside a chapter in just one tap.
•For beginners and for dummies, this book is a step-by-step guide to understanding object-oriented programming with Swift.
•If you are an experienced developer who knows at least one modern programming language well, then this book is designed to teach you how to think and program in Swift Programming language.
•Each topic is covered with clear and concise examples for Swift programming language using Playground.

I hope you find this book to be a useful and worthy addition to your library. I've had a great time writing it. Hopefully you'll have a great time reading and learning the latest version of Swift 5. I will keep updating this book to make it much simpler and more productive. Thank you for purchasing a copy!
-Amit Chaudhary, 25th March 2019

Chapters Covered in this book:
1.Basics
2.Constants
3.Variables
4.Data Types
5.Operators
6.String and Characters
7.Control Flow
8.Collection Types (Arrays, Sets, and Dictionaries)
9.Functions
10.Closures
11.Enumerators
12.Structures
13.Classes
14.Properties
15.Subscripts
16.Methods
17.Inheritance
18.Initializers
19.De-Initializers/ Deallocation
20.Protocols
21.Extensions/ Categories
22.Automatic Reference Count
23.Type Casting/ Type Checking
24.Error Handling

This book is available for purchase from the Kindle store by clicking here.

Georgia man pleads Guilty to hacking Apple accounts of professional athletes and others

Kwamaine Jerell Ford has pleaded guilty to logging into Apple accounts belonging to high-profile professional athletes and musicians without authorization and stealing credit card information from several of those victims.

“Ford tricked his victims into providing their Apple account passwords and stole sensitive, personal information from the accounts,” said U.S. Attorney Byung J. ‘BJay’ Pak in a statement. “After stealing credit card numbers belonging to several professional athletes, he brazenly spent thousands of dollars on personal expenses charged to the athletes’ accounts.”

“The high profile victims in this case are an example that no matter who you are, hackers like Ford are trying to get your personal information,” said Chris Hacker, Special Agent in Charge of FBI Atlanta, in a statement. “This casedemonstrates the need to be careful in protecting personal information and passwords, especially in response to suspicious e-mails. Hopefully this is a lesson for everyone, not just the victims in this case.”

According to U.S. Attorney Pak, the charges and other information presented in court: Beginning in at least March 2015, Ford obtained login credentials for Apple accounts belonging to victims primarily through a phishing scheme, which is a scheme in which the perpetrator sends a message that purports to be from a legitimate source. Ford primarily targeted college and professional athletes, including NBA and NFL players, and rappers in his scheme. Ford sent thousands of phishing emails to his intended victims from email accounts he set up to spoof legitimate Apple customer service accounts. Ford, posing as an Apple customer support representative, requested that the victims send him their username and password or answers to security challenge questions, which Ford claimed was needed either to reset their Apple accounts or to access videos that individuals were purportedly trying to send the victims. Dozens of victims provided their login credentials based on the phishing scheme.

After obtaining the victims’ login credentials, Ford logged into their Apple accounts and attempted to take over the accounts. Specifically, he attempted to reset the account password, change the contact email account to an email address he controlled, and alter the security challenge questions. As a result, the victims could not log into their own accounts unless they contacted Apple by phone and proved their identity. Apple records showed hundreds of unauthorized logins to victim Apple accounts.

After gaining control of the victims’ accounts, Ford found credit card information belonging to several of the victims. Ford then used the stolen credit card numbers to pay for thousands of dollars in air travel, hotel stays, other travel expenses, furniture, and money transfers to online payment accounts under his control.

On April 17, 2018, Kwamaine Jerell Ford, 27, of Dacula, Georgia, was indicted on six counts each of wire fraud, computer fraud, access device fraud, and aggravated identity theft. He pleaded guilty to one count of computer fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. Sentencing is scheduled for June 24, 2019, at 10:30 before U.S. District Judge Timothy C. Batten Sr.

This case is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Nathan P. Kitchens, Deputy Chief of the Cyber and Intellectual Property Crimes Section, is prosecuting the case. Former Assistant U.S. Attorney Vivek Kothari investigated the case prior to the indictment.

Source: U.S. Department of Justice

TIME reviews Apple’s new AirPods / What do they think? Read on!

“From the Mac to the iPod to the iPhone, Apple is a master of making iconic products,” Patrick Lucas Austin writes for TIME Magazine. “That tradition of technological trendsetting has continued with the AirPods, which went from ridiculous to status symbol in a matter of memes.”

“Two years after the AirPods were introduced, Apple has released a new version with updated internals and a few pleasant creature comforts,” Austin writes. “Together, the tweaks make the AirPods easier to use without compromising their compact design and minimal aesthetics. In short, Apple’s wireless earbudsare a bit better than they were before.”

“A new H1 chip makes switching between your iOS, macOS, and Apple TVproducts quicker and more seamless. Where I’d have to wait upwards of 30 seconds for first-generation AirPods to switch between devices, the newer model typically slices that time by more than half,” Austin writes. “Saying ‘Hey, Siri’ works like a charm in noisy spaces, though the Apple-exclusive voice assistant could do with a speed bump in terms of response time… Whether or not you’ll use hands-free Siri depends on how you feel about voice assistant etiquette. If you’re like me, you may be reluctant to use the feature in public, and since you’re probably not wearing these at home, it might not be all that useful. It’s at least a handy way to change the AirPods’ volume without pulling out your phone, as there’s no way to tweak that setting by touching the buds themselves.”

“All these internal updates are well and good, helping the AirPods remain the best pair of truly wireless earbuds you can buy,” Austin writes. “But they are only incremental upgrades, meaning existing AirPod owners who make the switch may feel shortchanged.”

Read more in the full article here.

Key Apple Engineer who designed the A7 through A12X Chips has left the company

“One of Apple’s key semiconductor engineers has left the company, even as the iPhone giant tries to take more control over what goes inside its devices,” Shara Tibken reports for CNET. “Gerard Williams III, senior director in platform architecture, departed Apple last month after nine years, according to a person familiar with the matter.”

“While not well known outside of Apple, Williams led development of every Apple processor core from the A7 — the first 64-bit processor for mobile devices — to the A12X, the chip powering Apple’s latest iPad Pro devices,” Tibken reports. “In recent years, Williams’ responsibilities had grown beyond leading the design of the custom CPU cores for Apple’s chips to overseeing the layout of the various parts of the system-on-a-chip, or SoC, inside the company’s mobile devices.”

“Williams’ departure is a loss for Apple. His work likely will show up in future Apple processors, and he’s listed as an inventor on more than 60 Applepatents,” Tibken reports. “Williams isn’t the first notable Apple engineer to leave its chip business, which is led by Johny Srouji. Two years ago, Apple SoC architect Manu Gulati left for a similar role at Google. After Gulati left Apple, Williams took over his role overseeing SoC architecture.”

Read more in the full article here.

You may have Missed:

Verified by MonsterInsights