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News

  • AppWatch: Four apps for keeping fit

    At last count, over 500,000 Australians are considered obese, two to three per cent of whom have Body Mass Indexes (BMIs) of over 50, weight that far outclasses the clinical classification of "morbidly obese" and strolls into the territory of "super obese". Well, if you're looking to shed a few of those Autumn/Winter pounds or perhaps to slim up that management gut, here's a few apps that you can use to help you along the way.

  • AppWatch: Money-handling apps for your personal budget

    There's less than a month to the end of the financial year, which means it's time to start getting your loans, expenses and other money concerns in order. This week, <i>Computerworld Australia</i> brings to you four apps that will help you keep track of your expenditure.

  • AppWatch: Four free apps for the World Cup

    FIFA's World Cup fever has hit and many devotees will travel to South Africa to watch the games. For those of us stranded in Australia, <I>Computerworld</I> presents four free mobile phone apps in the first of our weekly series, that will help you keep track events.

  • RIM exec on mobile malware, future of BlackBerry security

    Scott Totzke knows mobile security. Currently VP of BlackBerry security at Research In Motion (RIM) and a RIM staffer for as long as the company has made smartphones, Totzke remembers when the BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES), RIM's main BlackBerry infrastructure component for corporations, had less than 50 IT policies for BlackBerry administrators to secure their organizations' smartphone deployments.

  • Your BlackBerry's dirty little security secret

    Tyler Shields, senior member of the Veracode Research Lab, spends a lot of time <a href="http://www.csoonline.com/podcast/533263">picking apart those BlackBerry devices</a> that are ubiquitous across the enterprise. What he's found may disappoint those who thought they were secure.

  • Twitter app for BlackBerry released

    Twitter and Research In Motion have released an official application for BlackBerry users to interact with the popular microblogging and social networking site.

  • RIM intros new BlackBerry browser to rival iPhone Safari

    BlackBerry maker Research In Motion on Tuesday introduced a new browser for its devices, which runs on WebKit, the rendering engine behind Apple's Safari browser. The New BlackBerry browser is touted as easier and faster to use, and will be available later this year.

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