>chaining together a dozen dilapidated second-generation iPhone SEs and harnessing Apple's Live Text optical character-recognition feature to find possible inventory tags<p>This is the second time I've read about an iPhone OCR rack <a href="https://findthatmeme.com/blog/2023/01/08/image-stacks-and-iphone-racks-building-an-internet-scale-meme-search-engine-Qzrz7V6T.html" rel="nofollow">https://findthatmeme.com/blog/2023/01/08/image-stacks-and-ip...</a><p>Is this still state of the art in terms of local OCR?
Some of these developer devices get 'destroyed' and sold as scrap. dosdude1 has restored some of these kinds of devices to working order. There's pretty neat video of the restorations:<p>ARM Apple Silicon Developer Transition Kit: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reQq8fx4D0Q" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reQq8fx4D0Q</a>
iPod Touch dev board: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLCt6oHPTQM" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLCt6oHPTQM</a><p>The PCB repair technique for the DTK is pretty cool on its own.
This is why solutions like Bitlocker with a good TPM or FileVault are so important.<p>They can essentially guarantee that the disk encryption key will only be released from the security module if the computer is running a fully-trusted and signed OS. Even if you take the drive out of the machine, the data on that drive is completely useless to you.<p>Incidentally, this is also what makes short PINs secure; the TPM contents are unreadable, even to a skilled attacker, so if the TPM is guaranteeed to wipe itself after 10 tries, even a 4-digit PIN is secure enough.
> After he evaluated the Time Capsule's contents, Bryant notified Apple about his findings, and the company's London security office eventually asked him to ship the Time Capsule back.<p>> Bryant again reported his findings to Apple and returned the Mac Mini to them.<p>Why the hell did he do that?! It's, like, the worst thing one can possibly do with these kinds of devices. Just publish stuff that doesn't have anyone's personal data in it. That'll make the world better in the end.
The ones I’m interested would be the ones donated to Berkeley. I hope one day they make it to a proper museum.<p>Or, at least, catalogued, scanned, and photographed.
Looks like the software was looking for labels like this: <a href="https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpreview.redd.it%2Fi-found-a-monitor-property-of-apple-computer-inc-expensed-v0-y8ebbqx6zy8c1.jpeg%3Fauto%3Dwebp%26s%3D7ebf4e2bd71e3515927f7a48460ef0df6cea8d7a" rel="nofollow">https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpreview.redd....</a>
Would you be willing to publish the iOS OCR server you made? It would be greatly useful in some of my products, as as you’ve noted other options have either low-quality results (tesseract, some cloud-based solutions) or are expensive in comparison for large amounts of images (most cloud-based solutions). That and it’d allow some of us to put our old phones to use.
The amount of corporate crap I find on eBay from e-recycling is abundant and fantastic. And cheap!<p>I've seen everything from Amazon's palm-scanners to a tactical LTE base station once used by NIST to all sorts of Zebras full of fun software.
the only things anyone ever wanted to know from apple is their aggressive business tactics... and most of that is already public thanks to the many processes they lost along the way. from labour salary fixing across industries to pushing obvious monopolies in the face of the publishing industry.<p>I think the only piece I'd pay to read is how they negotiated with spotify.