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iPhone 7 is Now the World's Fastest Phone (By a Lot)

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The benchmarks are skewed in favor of the iPhone.
Android is basically an emulation and therefore slower, while iOS runs native code.

What I would love to see is the SoCs running those tests ruling out effect of OS. That's where we'll see more accurate results.
 
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^^ The latest Samsung flagship would certainly outpace iPhone 7. Samsung is renowned for its hardware specs.
 
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The reason what makes iOS and iPhone stand out is the integration of their hardware and software. I have often use android but boy it has so many features which are sometimes even not required by me (somewhat of an advanced user). Using iPhone is a pretty smooth experience, yes they are overpriced and that is what makes them lucrative. I like iPhones despite all the Data snooping scandals.
 
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What good is the fastest processor when the data on the phone isn't secure? A phone which has been hacked by the authorities and yet claimed to have the best encryption. iOS is as leak as a sieve.
No smartphone is secure. I dont see the point of this.

All of your activity is recorded in the relevant databases and security agencies can tap them when necessary.
 
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Superior OS is the key of iPhone even the spec may not be as good as other android phone.
Android is also having a superior OS (Linux), (whose benefits are stolen by both the Windows and OS X folks from the Open Source community) but crippled by Google's Virtualization (Dalvik) which means need for more memory and processing power.
 
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No smartphone is secure. I dont see the point of this.

All of your activity is recorded in the relevant databases and security agencies can tap them when necessary.

Android never claimed to have fool proof encryption unlike Apple. Such hefty claims were made by Apple who got red faced when their OS got hacked by an Israeli firm in cooperation with US security agencies.

At Least Android hasn't been hacked. Even if they got hacked no one would question it.
 
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Android never claimed to have fool proof encryption unlike Apple. Such hefty claims were made by Apple who got red faced when their OS got hacked by an Israeli firm in cooperation with US security agencies.

At Least Android hasn't been hacked.
Bro,

If CIA or NSA want to get you or gain access to your data, nothing can stop them.
 
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Bro,

If CIA or NSA want to get you or gain access to your data, nothing can stop them.

I've never denied that. You're not understanding my point. I already know they can get access to our data. I also work in the IT sector. Apple's claims were bogus though. They don't deserve the acclamations they ask for. That is all I'm trying to say. Had this hack been done against any other brand it would have been non-existent by now.
 
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All is good but shape bits very badly, especially in case of iphone 7 plus. I wanna get, could tolerate display. As using Galaxy 7edge, hardest to bite is the shape with hefty weight. Using macbook12 so eventually wanna switch to iphone 7 plus...but...but..shape...weight..
 
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I've never denied that. You're not understanding my point. I already know they can get access to our data. I also work in the IT sector. Apple's claims were bogus though. They don't deserve the acclamations they ask for. That is all I'm trying to say. Had this hack been done against any other brand it would have been non-existent by now.
A company might need to highlight security arrangements of its products as a marketing strategy. Customers, in a tech-savvy environment, are likely to buy products that contain decent security arrangements. You need to look at this matter from marketing point-of-view. Though Apple might have gone too far.

Regardless, Apple has issued a software update for all of its smartphones that addresses the recent hacking attempt.
 
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Hardware hack defeats iPhone passcode security

IPhone passcodes can be bypassed using just £75 ($100) of electronic components, research suggests.

A Cambridge computer scientist cloned iPhone memory chips, allowing him an unlimited number of attempts to guess a passcode.

The work contradicts a claim made by the FBI earlier this year that this approach would not work.

The FBI made the claim as it sought access to San Bernardino gunman Syed Rizwan Farook's iPhone.

Cheap trick
Farook and his wife killed 14 people in the California city last December before police fatally shot them.

The FBI believed his iPhone 5C contained information about collaborators, but its security system prevented easy access.

The agency pressured Apple to give it a software backdoor into the phone, and, when it refused, reportedly paid $1m to a security company to retrieve data from the phone.

Now, Dr Sergei Skorobogatov, from the University of Cambridge computer laboratory, has spent four months building a testing rig to bypass iPhone 5C pin codes.

In a YouTube video, Dr Skorobogatov showed how he had removed a Nand chip from an iPhone 5C - the main memory storage system used on many Apple devices.

He then worked out how the memory system communicated with the phone so he could clone the chip.

And the target phone was modified so its Nand chip sat on an external board and copied versions could be easily plugged in or removed.

In the video, Dr Skorobogatov demonstrated locking an iPhone 5C by trying too many incorrect combinations.

He then removed the Nand chip and substituted a fresh clone, which had its pin attempt counter set at zero, to allow him to keep trying different codes.

"Because I can create as many clones as I want, I can repeat the process many many times until the passcode is found," he said.

Known as Nand mirroring, the technique is one FBI director James Comey said would not work on Farook's phone.

Finding a four-digit code took about 40 hours of work, Dr Skorobogatov said.

And finding a six-digit code could potentially take hundreds of hours

Using a slightly more sophisticated set-up should make it possible to clone memory chips from other iPhones, including more recent models such as the iPhone 6.

However, Dr Skorobogatov said, more information was needed about the way Apple stored data in memory on more recent phones.

The different techniques could make it "more challenging to analyse and copy", he added.

Apple has not responded to a request for comment on Dr Skorobogatov's research.

Susan Landau, on the Lawfare news blog, said the work showed law enforcement agencies should not look for software backdoors to help their investigations but should develop or cultivate hardware and computer security skills.

"Skorobogatov was able to do what the FBI said was impossible," she said.

Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-37407047
 
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America rulez ! Burn ! :devil:
I have been using iPhone since iPhone 3G and still I like iPhone despite the competition has got much fierce and great Android phones packed with features have come along but still they cannot beat iPhone in performance in long term.
 
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