Developer Patrick Collison has published a technique which tricks iPhone’s code signing mechanisms into giving third party iPhone developers access to dynamic launch images rather than being stuck with static ‘Default.png’ images.
Jason Kincaid of TechCrunch had initially believed that it was a serious security flaw as he felt developers could use it to bypass Apple’s App Store approval process to release an updated version of their iPhone app
by executing arbitrary code from within their own applications whenever they wish. Read the full story
Popularity: 4% [?]


Dead iPad battery? Never mind replacing it, Apple just sends another iPad for $99
TomTom iPhone app hits 1.3, gains real-time traffic and Google local search
Apple iPad — model A1337 — phreaks the FCC
FCC comes through with a Consumer Broadband Test app for iPhone
iPad mute switch magicked into a ’screen rotation lock’
Barnes & Noble promises B&N eReader app for iPad
Novothink rolls out Solar Surge iPhone / iPod touch charging case
DARPA looking to develop iPhone and Android apps, App Store
iDongle hardware iPhone jailbreak tool makes hacker life a little simpler