Unlocked Firefox OS ZTE Open Is Now Available On eBay For For $80 122
SmartAboutThings writes "We've been hearing quite a lot lately about the Firefox OS, but there are actually only a few Firefox OS phones launched on the market. ZTE Open is one of them and is actually the first Firefox OS phone for consumers. Even if Firefox OS has support from carriers all over the world, it's pretty hard to sell devices in more locations across the world. To remedy that, ZTE is going to sell the Firefox OS Open phone on eBay for eighty dollars, which is actually ten dollars less than the launch price. A real great thing is that the handset will be off-contract and unlocked which means you will be able to use it on all mobile networks. ZTE didn't mention when exactly the device will go on sale on eBay, the company just mentioning 'soon.'"
Re:"All" Mobile Networks? (Score:5, Informative)
2 degrees of separation, here's the latest list of carriers, dated 7/29/13:
América Móvil - Jamaica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay, Puerto Rico, Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil
China Unicom – China
Deutsche Telekom – Germany
Etisalat – Middle-East
Hutchison Three Group – United Kingdom
KDDI – Japan
KT – South Korea
MegaFon – Russia, Tajikistan
Qtel – Qatar
SingTel – Singapore
Smart - Philippines
Sprint – United States
Telecom Italia Group – Italy
Telefónica – Spain
Telenor – Norway
TMN – Portugal
VimpelCom – Russia, Ukraine, Canada, Algeria, Bangladesh
Re:Horrible specs (Score:5, Informative)
Then they can go buy it on Ebay for $80 just like everyone else.
Re:I'll hold out (Score:5, Informative)
Even if it's fully open, with 0 binary blobs. How many qualified specialists, with serious math background, do you think are out there looking through complex encryption functions checking through flaws in math? Ever heard of Obfuscated C Code Contests? Openness of the code does not guarantee absence of backdoors even if the code does get a lot of eyeballs looking at it.
Firstly; if the Obfuscated C Code scares you then I guess you should look up the underhanded C contest. Notice especially the bits where malware is disguised as small programming bugs. When you say "Openness of the code does not guarantee.." you are 100% right. However, don't forget, "the perfect is the enemy of the good". We don't always need a guarantee; sometimes improvement is enough:
1) Given that there have been plenty of discoveries of problems (e.g. just today a flaw in Android's RNG was reported) there must be quite a few people who are checking.
2) All it takes is one person. You don't need to do anything to benefit if I check it for you.
3) There is a vast increase in the risk for the attacker if it's open source;
4) Security problems tend to happen in generally insecure code. If code is open source you can avoid this:
Several of the things I mentioned are things that most people won't do most of the time. Having them as options means that they will be available when you actually really need them.
defenders can spot the hole and