iPhone 5S'in parmak izi sensörünün telefonun çıkmasının günler ardından kandırılmasının ardından, şimdi de Galaxy S5'in parmak izi sensörü, aynı yöntemle şaşırtıldı. Galaxy S5'in home düğmesi üzerindeki sensör, bir lastik kalıp yardımıyla yanıltılabiliyor. Ancak bu iş için elbette telefonun sahibinin parmak izini önceden bu lastik üzerine bastırmış olması gerekiyor. Sensörün sunduğu güvenlik üst düzey olmasa da, herhangi birinin parmak izinizi kopyalamaya çalışacak kadar ileri gitmesi, daha endişe verici bir hareket olsa gerek. Bununla birlikte bir kere ele geçen parmak izini değiştirme imkanınızın olmaması (telefonunuzu farklı bir parmağınızla açmak dışında), bir dezavantaj.
#Galaxy S5"This opportunity should not be missed" is what we still hear and it is still valid. There has never been a better time to wipe out the PKK terror and progress in the Kurdish issue. For the first time those in Ankara holding the power and those in Çankaya are of the same opinion. They do not look in a different direction. No difference in opinion. And again for the first time is the command level in the TSK generally in line with the govenment, even if not in details. They believe that a step needs to be taken in order to wipe out the PKK terror.
U.S. President Barack Obama’s decision to come to Turkey at such an early stage in his administration has surprised many in Turkey. Apparently even those pundits who are watching both countries in Washington D.C. were also taken by surprise. In fact many thought that it was too much of a reward for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, especially after he has stormed out of the Davos panel following a harsh exchange of words with Israel’s President Shimon Peres.
The one who does the actual reading of the coffee grounds seems to matter little, since it is read with a vehemence that leaves little doubt that anyone else would see the same. It seems that a person’s ability to read the grounds lies more in the variety of detail, rather than the degree of veracity. This is reading a book, not telling a story.
At an Istanbul café last week among half-emptied bayram holiday streets I sat across from a Dutch friend living in Cyprus comparing notes on the social crisis that has been eating up Greece for nearly a week. It was just last weekend when the world saw Greece, one of the countries I call home, explode with unexpected and disproportionate violence. This week, in a pitiful downward spiral, my country unfortunately made it to Turkish front pages.