Sunday, January 8, 2012

Hackers get iOS apps to run full-screen on Apple TV


YouTube is among the iOS apps Dublin-based hacker Steven Troughton-Smith got working this weekend in full screen on a jailbroken Apple TV.
(Credit: Steve Troughton-Smith)

While you were buying the New Years bubbly and party horns, hackers were busy this weekend figuring out how to run iOS apps natively on Apple TV--and in full screen.


Dublin-based hacker and iOS developer Steven Troughton-Smith--known for getting Siri to work on an iPhone 4 and iPod Touch and even somewhat on an iPhone 3GS--says over the past couple days he and a fellow hacker have managed to get a jailbroken second-generation Apple TV to run iOS apps in full screen at 720p.

The hack, first reported by 9to5Mac, isn't publically available and is considered more of a proof of concept at this time. He says it was done using a custom springboard written by Nick@TheMudKip on a jailbroken Apple TV.

"Nick had written this amazing window manager for the iPad that replaced the entire homescreen, allowing you to run multiple apps side by side, and I realized this could enable iOS apps on the AppleTV for the first time," Troughten-Smith told CNET, adding that he hasn't heard a thing from Apple. "We've spent the past 2 days modifying everything to work really well on the AppleTV screen size, etc, and getting apps to run."

The video at the end of this post tells all. But it's all very preliminary. And there are bugs too--consider this shot Troughton-Smith posted of Angry Birds running sideways:



But it could be the start of custom apps built for Apple TV, as Troughton-Smith alludes in a tweet: "Remember how the unofficial iPhone apps back in '07 forced Apple's hand in creating an App Store? I'd like AppleTV to get the same treatment."



At the start of the 21st century, there's no tech outfit more influential than Apple. CNET News' Josh Lowensohn and other reporters will attempt to make sense of the rumors, hype, products, and people that will shape the future of the company. But Apple's not the only game in town, as the established cell phone companies and others strike back against the iPhone and iPad. E-mail Josh at josh.lowensohn@cnet.com.

View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment