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iPhone Apps | Turn your iPhone into a virtual guitar

For you who like music expecialy a guitar instrument, now you can play it with your iPhone. The MooCowMusic recently announced the release of Guitarist, a homebrew application that allows you to handle your iPhone or iPod Touch like a real guitar.



It will be a …. Experience to play guitar on your iPhone. Guitarist features a selection of guitar interfaces that have been especially tailored to the iPhone to give, for the first time, the ability to play music written for a five foot mechanical device on a three inch touch screen.

Features:


  • The 'Manual Fret' Guitar, a complete emulation of a real guitar.
  • The 'Hammer On' Guitar that assists your playing by removing the concept of plucking the string, and allowing you to concentrate instead on fretting notes.
  • The 'Tab' Guitar will takes the opposite path from the Hammer-On Guitar and removes the concept of fretting strings, allowing you to concentrate on plucking notes.
  • The 'Scale' Guitar that will allows you to play runs through a large number of musical scales (from Blues to Chinese) in any key.
  • Guitarist also include some Guitar Patches and Effects. Each effect is designed to look like a real effects stomp box with dials and footswitches operating as you would expect.

    Included :
    • The Digital Delay effect that is allows you to mix a delayed signal into the output.
    • The WahWah effect that is allows you to add expression to your song.
    • The Fuzz effect that is allows you to add an extra layer of distortion to the guitar by setting a threshold limit on the signal.
  • Recording a Song
  • The Tab Guitar
    One of the more innovative aspects of Guitarist is the Tab Guitar. This allows you to program in entire songs of chords or solos, and then play back those songs merely by tapping your way through the notes. The two fundamental design goals for the Tab Guitar were to make it possible for experienced guitarists to play complex chords and solos on a 3.5 inch touch screen, and also to allow people with no guitar experience to be able to play all their favorite guitar songs live.


So, download this application and enjoy the new experience in turning your iPhone into a virtual guitar.

Download here
Source url : MowCow Music

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How to Grab Photos From iPhone Without Using iPhoto

iPhone user commonly grab photos using iPhoto. iPhoto becomes the first rate choice since your Mac already comes with it. However, if you have a lot of photos, you may not necessarily want to fire up iPhoto to import one or two pictures from your iPhone.

But there is an alternative way by using Image Capture, instead of iPhoto. It's light-weight, straight forward, and it's included on your Mac. Best of all, you can simply drag a photo out of Image Capture right onto your desktop. delete in an easy way photos in your iPhone without need to import them. Now that's handy!

To prevent from iPhoto auto load, you can tell your Mac to not auto-load an app when you plug in a camera.

  • Go to Image Capture preferences
  • choose to open no application when you plug in a camera or change it to Image Capture.

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How to Remove the iPhone SIM Card

Different from hand phone generally, where its SIM card slot is easy to reach, the SIM card in the iPhone is hidden. So you need a paper clip to remove the SIM card. May be this tips is rather risky but I think this procedure doesn't void the warranty. Actually, Apple has this trick (for removing the SIM card) in its website (http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=305746). But if you are concerned that it might, please don't perform this task.

  • If it is not a problem for you, then take a look to the top side of your iPhone.
  • You will see a little slot between the headphone jack and the power button.
  • To open the slot is simple, just take your paper clip and insert it into the little hole.
  • Then firmly push down until the slot pops up.
  • The SIM card is in a cradle. You can pop the card out of the cradle.


You can replace the SIM card by put the card back in the cradle. Don’t worry that you might flipped over the card because the cradle and card are notched in a way that forces you to replace the card on the proper side. Then just slide the card back into the iPhone.

Note, remember that the phone is STILL locked. You can take the SIM out but you can't put someone elses' SIM in. You CAN take your iPhone SIM card out and use it in another cellphone that is ATT/Cingular locked. You can not use it in any other cellphone company phone.

Just for reference, some one has tried to took his SIM card from an older Cingular Phone and inserted it into the iPhone and the iPhone didn't work as a telephone. but he could do all the other things with the iPhone, like sending and receiving mails, browse the web, take photos, etc. The older tlephone (a veteran silver Razor) accepted the iPhone’s card and worked well, as a respectable old gadget.

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How to sync the iPhone with two computers

iPhone has inability to synchronize media with two separate computers, containing two separate iTunes libraries. But how to sync the iPhone to a computers, when in the same time you already have iTunes media (music, video) synchronized from other computer? unfortunately it will only give you the option to overwrite all existing media with what's stored on that system.

If you stuck in this trouble, SwapTunes might become an alternative solution to resolve the problem. SwapTunes is a small binary that, when run, simply creates and switches to a new iTunes library on the iPhone itself. This new library can be synchronized with a different system.

Using SwapTunes, you can then run it again to switch back and forth between the two libraries. The process works like this:

  • Sync your iPhone with the first system, acquiring the appropriate media
  • Disconnect your iPhone
  • Run the SwapTunes application (from your iPhone)
  • Go check the iPod application on the iPhone, and notice that it displays "No Content"
  • Connect your iPhone to the second system and sync it, acquiring the second set of media.
  • Run the SwapTunes application again when you want to switch back to the media acquired from the first system.


If you want to try SwapTunes, you can simply download and install it through Installer.app (under Utilities).

For instruction on using Installer.app, see our guide.

The last version available is version 0.2, which apparently only works with firmware 1.1.2 or before, but hope there will be an update any time soon.

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Rearrange Apps Across Multiple Home Screens on iPhone

Hope you are agree that it is quite difficult to manage many apps across multiple home screens on iPhone. Although apps return to their previous spot after being updated, but new apps can still be a pain, especially when you want to stick a new one 3-4 home screens deep.

Some iPhone user try to arrange their 3rd party applications alphabetically, which means many new apps need to push their way past a barrage of other applications to get to their destination, leaving a mess of disorganized apps in its path. The problem is that, as they moves an app across pages that are full, a space is made the application you're moving, which pushes other apps down a page.

Yes this is become one of the most irritating problems of iPhone. Some times I just imagine that it will be enjoyable if I can manage those apps just like playing Freecell, by simple drag and drop.

Here is the tips from Leo Laporte, I took from www.iphonealley.com.

The way around this is simple.

  • Before you start moving applications around, move an icon or two out of your dock and drag it to its own temporary page.
  • Now drag your new application into the free spot in the dock, navigate to its destination page, and drag it in.
  • When you're done, put the original app back in the dock, and you've just avoided a giant mess and saved loads of time.


Just try it your self and realize how insanely useful this method was. Enjoy!

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How to Save Images From Safari & Mail on iPhone?

Just like when you browse website from PC browser, you can also save an image using Safari browser or email on your iPhone with software update 2.0. So it is easy now to search for beautiful image you like and use it as a wallpaper. Or maybe you just want to save an image to import it to your computer later.

Here's the tips:

  • open your safari browser, and surf to a webpage or email which contains an image that you want to save.
  • On the particular image, tap and hold for 2-3 second.
  • A dialogue will slide up asking if you'd like to save the image
  • Tap "Save Image" to confirm.
  • and then, the image immediately saved to your camera roll.


If you get an email containing more than one image, you'll also have the option to save all of them to your camera roll.

It so easy now, that's handy!

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How to Enable Street View On Your iPod touch

Here is a great work around that will get your first gen iPod touch rockin' the Street View. It does involve messing with property lists and permissions, but it has been confirmed to work. But to do this work you’ll need to jailbreak your iPod touch.

For you second gen iPod touch owners it won’t work for you cause the PwnageTool only works with the first gen iPod touch. Ready to start? follow along below:

  1. get this file via ssh: /System/Library/CoreServices/SpringBoard.app/N45AP.plist
  2. convert to xml at http://iappcat.com/plist/bin2xml
  3. add

    <key>telephony</key>
    <dict>
    <key>maximumGeneration</key>
    <real>2.5</real>
    </dict>

    underneath

    <key>standAloneContacts</key>
    <true/>

  4. save then using that website again reconvert to binary

  5. rename original file N45AP.old

  6. copy new N45AP.plist in (make sure permissions are 644)

  7. reboot ipod


Update: to get the proper preferences back:
/Applications/Preferences.app
  1. in this folder rename Settings-iPhone.plist, to Settings-iPhone.old
  2. copy out Settings-iPod.plist and rename to Settings-iPhone.plist then copy back in
  3. reboot

    all settings will be available as before (music prefs back)
    (make sure permissions are 0664)


If you were able to follow all of that without getting any trouble, congratulation, you now have Google Street View! For the rest of you, a patch via Cydia or Installer is sure to come around soon.

Source : gizmodo

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How to Install the Free iPhone 2.2 Software Update

Start to get the the free iPhone 2.2 Software Update. Get the newest features like Google Street View, public transit and walking directions, and more.

Here are the details on the features, or click here to go to installation tips.

Google Street View
Street View takes you on a virtual walking tour: Navigate street-level photographs of places you've located in Maps.

Public Transit and Walking Directions
Get walking directions, find public transit schedules, check fares, and estimate your travel time.

Share Location
Tap the Share Location button to send an email that includes a Google Maps URL.

Podcasts
Get access to thousands of free podcasts on the iTunes Store via Wi-Fi or your cellular network.

Safari Improvements
A new search-friendly user interface, better performance, and more stability make Safari even easier to use.

Home Screen Shortcut
Take a shortcut from any Home screen back to your first Home screen by pressing the Home button.

The other features are:

  • Decrease in call setup failures and dropped calls
  • Enhancements to Mail
    1. Resolved isolated issues with scheduled fetching of email
    2. Improved formatting of wide HTML email
  • Podcasts are now available for download in iTunes application (over Wi-Fi and cellular network)
  • Improved stability and performance of Safari
  • Improved sound quality of Visual Voicemail messages
  • Pressing Home button from any Home screen displays the first Home screen
  • Preference to turn on/off auto-correction in Keyboard Settings


Updating now also gives you the following features from iPhone 2.0 and 2.1:
  • Decrease in call set-up failures and dropped calls
  • Significantly better battery life for most users
  • Dramatically reduced time to backup to iTunes
  • Improved email reliability, notably fetching email from POP and Exchange accounts
  • Faster installation of 3rd party applications
  • Fixed bugs causing hangs and crashes for users with lots of third party applications
  • Improved performance in text messaging
  • Faster loading and searching of contacts
  • Improved accuracy of the 3G signal strength display
  • Repeat alert up to two additional times for incoming text messages
  • Option to wipe data after ten failed passcode attempts
  • Genius playlist creation
  • The App Store
  • Enterprise support
  • MobileMe support
  • Mass email move and delete
  • Contacts search
  • Updated keyboard and dictionary support
  • Support for more email attachments
  • Scientific calculator


Don’t be worry if this is this your first iPhone update, because the installing procedure is easy.

How to install

  • First, make sure you are using iTunes 8. Or you can download it here.
  • Connect your iPhone to your computer.
  • Wait until iTune is open.
  • select your iPhone under Devices in the Source List on the left.
  • In the iPhone Summary pane, click Check for Update.
  • Click Download and Install.


Do not disconnect your iPhone until the update has finished.

Enjoy your new update

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How to Turn Any MP3 into an iPhone Ringtone

iTunes charges 99 cents for ringtones even if you already own the song. That is the iPhone problem.

Don't worry, you still can "roll your own" iPhone ringtone, which turned out to be a fairly easy process.

Here the steps:

  • Start iTunes and find the song you want to convert. (It must be an MP3.)
  • Right-click the song and choose Get Info.
  • Click the Options tab.
  • Check the Start Time and Stop Time boxes, then enter times for each (no more than 30 seconds apart, the maximum length for a ringtone). I used 0:00 and 0:30, respectively, as "Spit It Out" has a perfect ascending lead-in.
  • Click OK, then right-click the song again and choose Create AAC Version. You should immediately see a new 30-second version of the song.
  • Drag that version out of iTunes and into the folder of your choice.
  • Delete the 30-second version from iTunes and undo the Start Time/Stop Time changes to the original.
  • Open the folder containing the 30-second AAC file you dragged out of iTunes, then change the file extension from .m4a to .m4r. Double-click it and it immediately gets added to iTunes' ringtone library.
  • Finally, sync your iPhone. When it's done, you can head into the settings and select your new ringtone.


Just enjoy the new change on your iPhone with this simple trick.

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Save your iPhone with recovery mode

Some times when you have trouble with your iPhone like hen iTunes doesn't see your iPhone's, you may need to invoke recovery mode that is an extremely helpful mode. Actually to activate recovery mode is not just hold the Home and Sleep/Wake button until the yellow triangle appears, like everyone else is saying.

As arcane as recovery mode sounds, it's actually very simple:

  • Start to turn off your iPhone. But If your iPhone is already off, there's no need to turn it on and then off again. You can turn off it by holding the "Sleep/Wake" button for about five seconds and then sliding the red slider.

  • Once it's turned off, press and hold the "Home" button and plug the iPhone into your Mac or PC.

  • Keep holding the "Home" button until you see a dock cable pointing to the iTunes icon. it will display a yellow triangle and text which says "Please Connect to iTunes" on iPhones running older software.

  • You can now release the Home button.

  • Open iTunes (if it's not already open) and you will be told that "iTunes has detected an iPhone in recovery mode".

  • Click "OK" and you will be taken to the iPhone pane.

  • Click restore and you're done


Easy or not is depending on the extent of your iPhone's trouble. Some times you have to do a full restore. Once you're done, you should again have a perfectly working iPhone. If this doesn't fix your problem, your iPhone may require a visit to the Genius Bar.

Source: www.iphonehacks.com

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Hack gives iPhone Developers Access to Dynamic Launch Images

Developer Patrick Collison has published a technique which tricks iPhone’s code signing mechanisms into giving third party iPhone developers access to dynamic launch images rather than being stuck with static ‘Default.png’ images.

Jason Kincaid of TechCrunch had initially believed that it was a serious security flaw as he felt developers could use it to bypass Apple's App Store approval process to release an updated version of their iPhone app by executing arbitrary code from within their own applications whenever they wish.

But has later clarified that it is not as serious as he had initially thought but it is a legitimate bug.

Whenever you launch an iPhone app, an image called ‘Default.png’ is briefly displayed (more or less as a title card for the app) while the app loads in the background.

As of now, the iPhone apps developed by Apple are able to use dynamic images while third party iPhone developers have been stuck with static ‘Default.png’ images.

The dynamic images gives Apple the flexibility to overwrite the default.png file with a screenshot of the iPhone app when you quit it. So when you launch that app again, you will immediately see the screenshot while the app loads in the background giving you a feeling that the app has launched instantly. As the third party developers don't have access to dynamic images the behavior of the their apps is not as smooth as the apps developed by Apple.

Developer Patrick Collison has published a technique which tricks iPhone’s code signing mechanisms into giving third party iPhone developers access to dynamic launch images rather than being stuck with static ‘Default.png’ images.

Jason Kincaid of TechCrunch had initially believed that it was a serious security flaw as he felt it could be used as an exploit to update and execute arbitrary code regardless of content whenever the developer chooses to do so. Some experienced iPhone developers also seemed to agree with Jason's analysis. However he has later clarified that "it not as serious an issue as we thought - while it is a legitimate bug".

Patrick also believes that his trick is possible because of a bug and is guessing that Apple will fix it in some future version of iPhone firmware.

If you are interested in checking out the technique posted by Patrick, you can download an Xcode Project demoing the trick and can also watch the video on Patrick's blog.

Source: www.iphonehacks.com

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Tricks to Teach your iPhone to Swear

You might have noticed that your iPhone doesn't know the swear words. So every time you try to use one, its auto-correct feature kicks in and gives you some weird alternatives.

With iPhone firmware 2.2, you have the option to disable the auto-correct feature but in my case the auto-correction feature makes the touchscreen usable and fast when it comes to writing an email or SMS.

So how do you get rid of those annoying prompts?

It would have been nice to add a word to iPhone's dictionary but that is currently not possible.

You can also tap on the little “x” to cancel the alternative provided by the auto-correction feature, and it will learn, but that learning seems to be short-lived as well.

TJ Luoma has figured out an easy workaround to this problem. The idea behind the trick is that the iPhone includes the names from the contact list as part of its dictionary.

So to workaround the problem all you need to do is add the swear words in your iPhone Contact app and your iPhone will stop prompting you with weird alternatives. You don't even need to have the swear word as a contact name, it should work even if the word is in say the job title of one of your contacts to get through the profanity.
Teach your iPhone to swear

Its a clever little trick but I prefer the trick which was suggested by one of the commentators to solve the problem which is to type the swear word two or three times and cancel the auto-correct pop-up each time. This seems to add the word to iPhone's dictionary and it doesn't corrupt your contact list.

Let us know if this helps solve the swearing problem of your iPhone at least until Apple introduces a way to add words to iPhone's dictionary. It goes without saying that you can use this trick to add any other word in your iPhone's dictionary.

Source: www.iphonehacks.com

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iPhone Trick | Disable the App Store Kill Switch

About disable the App Store Kill Switch this may or not be an issue, for lots of people, but it could be a valuable tool for some and a group that comes to mind would be those who paid for and downloaded the NetShare app.

However, it does require your iPhone to be jailbroken in order to work. So, assuming you have a jailbroken iPhone, or are prepared to jailbreak, just download the latest BossPrefs app located in Cydia. Once the BossPrefs apps is downloaded and installed, just run it and choose the option to “Disable Apple App Killswitch.” This will then save any questionable apps that you may have from an early departure.

Its also important to note that one of the nice parts about using BossPrefs to handle this is that you still have the option to easily turn it back on should you change your mind later.

By Gizmodo

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How To Disable Automatic iPhone Backups

Start from long backups problem were addressed in the 2.1 update. As we know, since version 1.0, the iPhone has automatically backed itself up every time an iTunes sync was started. But, with the iPhone 2.0 update, the backup feature has gotten arguably out of hand. Because of obnoxiously long backup times which can make extremely frustration in refreshig the iPhone's information.

So if you're tired of automatic backups that take forever, here is the trick how to disable automatic iPhone backups depend to PC Operating System you use.

For Windows Operating System:
To apply this hack, you'll be editing the iTunesPrefs.xml, which is generally found at
C:\Documents and Settings\USERNAME\Application Data\Apple Computer\iTunes.

If you don’t see the "Application Data" folder, you may need to enable hidden folders first.

The problem is that you can edit iTunesPrefs.xml file using the standard apps that come with Windows like Notepad. So you have to install another application like Notepad++ or else, to be used to edit it.

Here the next steps:

  1. Quit iTunes
  2. Make a backup of iTunesPrefs.xml. If you mess up, you'll wish you had a backup, so it's a good idea to make one.
  3. Open iTunesPrefs.xml using Notepad++
  4. Search for "User Preferences" without the quotes and you should find something like "<key>User Preferences</key>"
  5. Right below the first <dict> that comes after "<key>User Preferences</key>", paste the following:

    <key>AutomaticDeviceBackupsDisabled</key>
    <data>
    dHJ1ZQ==
    </data>

  6. Save the file and open iTunes. If all went well, your iPhone will sync, but it won't back up. To back up manually, right click your iPhone in the source list and choose "Back Up".


For Mac Operating System:

On Mac OS, is little easier,
  1. Quit iTunes

  2. Open Terminal (HD -> Applications -> Utilities)
  3. Paste in the following and hit return:
    defaults write com.apple.iTunes AutomaticDeviceBackupsDisabled -bool true
  4. That's it! Next time your iPhone syncs, it won't back up. To back up manually, right click your iPhone in the source list and choose "Back Up".


To re-enable automatic backups, follow the same steps only use this instead:
defaults write com.apple.iTunes AutomaticDeviceBackupsDisabled -bool false

This tips should be good for those who miss the ability to quickly sync before you run out the door. However we recommend you to do a regular backups of your iPhone anyway.

You can also simply click the (x) in the iTunes status windows once it says "backing up". Which quits backup and then continues with syncing.

Or try using Backup Disabler application you can find at:
http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id...ackup-disabler

Backup Disabler looks good, although it seems like the app totally disables backups instead of just killing the auto-backup. That means that you'd have to re-enable the backups to do a backup instead of just right clicking your iPhone.
Other alternative is using a small Windows program called "iPhone Backup Switch". The program will allow you to enable and disable the iPhone backup feature in iTunes. it will backup the iTunes configuration and let you restore a previous version, if something goes wrong. It has been tested in Windows XP and VISTA, and run well. Comes complete with installer and uninstaller.

Get it here:
http://www.microseconds.com/backupswitch.html

You can try that two application with your own risk, hope you finally did to disable Automatic iPhone Backup and solve your long backup times problem.

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iPhone Trick | Enable Japanese Emoji Icons on your iPhone (no Jailbreaking required)

iPhone users on Japan's SoftBank network, can create and view messages with Emoji icons using iPhone firmware 2.2. Actually, there are couple of ways to enable it use the hack that an iPhone developer had figured out or install Emoji app via Cydia. But both these solutions needed a jailbroken iPhone.

However,
if you are not in Japan and want to use emoji icons on your iPhone but vary about hacking your iPhone then don’t be worry, here is the alternative trick to achieve this without the need to hack your iPhone. I take it from www.iphonehacks.com

Using this technique you may import 27 address book contacts to your iPhone, and recall it using the Japanese keyboard just like the hack which teaches your iPhone to swear.

To enable emoji icons on your iPhone, follow these instructions:

Step 1. Download the vcard.vcf here.

Step 2. Import it to your address book program. If you are using Windows, you may want to do it on iPhone directly. Send the vcard.vcf file to yourself. Open in on iPhone’s Email.app, click the vcf file and import all the contacts.

Step 3. Go into “Settings” > “General” > “Keyboard” > “Japanese Keyboard”. Enable the QWERTY keyboard.

Step 4. In notes or any other program you want. Type “emojia”, “emojii” or “emojiu” to select those icons.

For now this is the only saved option available, if you are not in Japan and want to use emoji icons on your iPhone without jailbreaking required.

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How to Enable iPhone Wi-Fi While In Airplane Mode

iPhone 2.0 allow you to use Wi-Fi while in Airplane Mode. To do this, simply enable Airplane Mode and then switch on Wi-Fi. The orange airplane icon will stay in the status bar and Wi-Fi will be enabled.

Apple says that the feature is good for those on Wi-Fi enabled planes, but it may come in handy if you're in an area with no cell reception (such as basement or college building).

In some country like Germany, data roaming is so expensive, so you couldn’t use 3G anyway unless money is not a big problem for you :). So effectively turned your iPhone into an iPod Touch by enabling Airport Mode and then turning on WiFi. This was important to avoid extra charges for receiving SMS internationally, but in case of an emergency you could still turn off airplane mode to make an incredibly expensive call.

Also as a note for those travelling abroad from the USA, don't expect your iPhone to work when you arrive in a foreign country. You have to call AT&T first to activate it and then answer some questions from their fraud department before it will work!

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How to Joining iPhone Wi-Fi Networks With Non-Typable Passwords

It can be a problem for those who need to enter the backtick for a Wi-Fi password on iPhone.Because the iPhone's virtual keyboard can't do is type a grave accent mark without a letter (a ` or backtick to all you programmers out there).

Don’t be frustrated, there is a tips to get around non-typable passwords using your iPhone Configuration Utility.

Here the steps:

  • First, download the iPhone Configuration Utility from Apple's enterprise support site. Using the utility, head straight to the "Configuration Profiles" section and navigate to the Wi-Fi tab.
  • Enter your network's SSID and leave the security type as "Any".
  • Before you export the profile, you'll need to enter an identifier under the "General" tab. This can be something as simple as "com.YOURNAME.profile". You'll also need to enter a name for your profile, such as "Profile" or "Wi-Fi".
  • After you're done, hit export and save it to your desktop.
  • Open the mobileconfig file using an app such as TextEdit, and search for

    <key>SSID_STR</key>
    <string>YOUR_SSID</string>


    The text YOUR_SSID will be the SSID that you specified in the configuration utility.

    Right underneath it, you'll want to add:

    <key>Password</key>
    <string>THE_WPA_PASSWORD</string>
  • Replace THE_WPA_PASSWORD with your network's password.
  • Save the file and email it to yourself.


Note : not all characters can be directly written in XML. If you have any of these five characters, you will need to translate them to their Predeclared Entity:

CharacterPredeclared Entity
&
&
<
<
>
>
"
"
'
'


So for example, if the password is :

u(P&5/`@$Mf":Ba96@G>Osf'< wn


It may changed to :

u(P&5/`@$Mf":Ba96@G>Osf'<wn


If you having problems, xmllint might help.

To install the profile, simply:

open the email on your iPhone and tap on the attachment.

After it asks you to confirm the installation, your iPhone will now join to Wi-Fi Networks with the right non-typable passwords.

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How to Jump To Your First iPhone Home Screen With the Home Button

If you already have the latest iPhone software update (v2.2), you will find a new shortcut to the Home button added by Apple.

This button has functionality to bring you right back to your first home screen from any Home screen where you pressing this button.

This shortcut is great for those of you who just can't stop downloading apps. For this one to work, you must already be at the Home screen.

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iPhone Tricks | How to Redeem Application Promo Codes From Your iPhone

According to Apple that now allows developers to give away promotional copies of their apps, now you can redeem the code with iTunes on your computer which will then download the app for syncing to your iPhone.

It is nice so far, but how can you do that if you’re on situation without a computer handy? This may not be convenient if you're on the road.

To redeem an app promo code, first you do need WiFi hotspot. If you tried it over EDGE, it won’t work. The iTunes App wouldn't accept the code, even it didn't say it was a bad code either.

Okay, if you have prepared. Open the iTunes app on your iPhone, tap "Downloads" and then "Redeem". Enter your code and iTunes will tell you that the iPhone must be synced in order to download the app. However, if you exit the iTunes app and open the App Store, your app will immediately begin downloading in the background. After a few seconds, you can exit the App Store and watch as the new app is downloaded to your phone. It's that easy! Now if only the iPhone had copy/paste, Redeem Application Promo Codes From Your iPhone would be really easy.

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iPhone Tricks | How to Type Capitalized Letter on iPhone

When you type a letter using iPhone, caps lock is rarely used on it, whereas sometimes you just need the next couple of letters to be capitalized.

But don be worry, there are two method you can try.
first iPhone's multi-touch is smart enough to allow you use the shift key just like you can on a computer. So if you need to type something like “HALLO” or “OK”. Simply hold down the shift key while you type on the iPhone's keyboard and every letter will be capitalized.

Second, you can combine it with Caps Lock feature included in iPhone. So try to finding it so you can turn it on.

Here's how:
Tap Settings > Tap General > Tap Keyboard > Tap the Enable Caps Lock slider

The Caps Lock slider is like a toggle switch. Tapping it once enables the feature, tapping it a second time shuts it back off.

Now you can use the Caps Lock just in simple way by quickly tap the Shift key twice. Instead of the usual glowing arrow that tells you your next letter will be upper case, the whole Shift key turns blue. Tapping the Shift key again turns Caps Lock back off.
That's sure to save you a few taps every now and then! Looks so simple but its very nice.

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iPhone Trick | How to restore your iPhone home screen icons

This trick is prepared for those who have re-arranged your iPhone icons and wanted to easily bring them back to their first boot placement, you can do so with just a few taps on the screen.

To restore your home screen icons to their default placement, simply:

  • Go to Settings > General, Reset.
  • Once you get to Reset you will see “Reset Home Screen Layout” just click and they will magically re-arrange back.


In addition, once in the Reset section, you will also have a few more that may be a little more useful such as the “Reset Location Warnings” option.

Of course, what I would find more useful, is a little trick that would allow me to quickly re-arrange my home screen icons to my preferred placement after I update or install any apps.

By TUAW

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iPhone Tricks | How to update to iPhone 2.2

Get the latest update and get the newest features. By installing the free iPhone 2.2 Software Update you will get Google Street View, public transit and walking directions, and more. Don't be worry if this is your first iPhone update, because installing proccess is easy.

Here are the installing steps:

  • Make sure you are using iTunes 8. If you don't have it yet, you can Download iTunes 8 first.
  • Connect your iPhone to your computer.
  • When iTunes opens, select your iPhone under Devices in the Source List on the left.
  • In the iPhone Summary pane, click Check for Update.
  • Click Download and Install. Do not disconnect your iPhone until the update has finished.


What’s in this update:

  • Enhancements to Maps

  • Google Street View*

  • Public transit and walking directions

  • Display address of dropped pins

  • Share location via email

  • Decrease in call setup failures and dropped calls

  • Enhancements to Mail

  • Resolved isolated issues with scheduled fetching of email

  • Improved formatting of wide HTML email

  • Podcasts are now available for download in iTunes application (over Wi-Fi and cellular network)

  • Improved stability and performance of Safari

  • Improved sound quality of Visual Voicemail messages

  • Pressing Home button from any Home screen displays the first Home screen

  • Preference to turn on/off auto-correction in Keyboard Settings


  • Updating now also gives you the following features from iPhone 2.0 and 2.1:

    • Decrease in call set-up failures and dropped calls

    • Significantly better battery life for most users

    • Dramatically reduced time to backup to iTunes

    • Improved email reliability, notably fetching email from POP and Exchange accounts

    • Faster installation of 3rd party applications

    • Fixed bugs causing hangs and crashes for users with lots of third party applications

    • Improved performance in text messaging

    • Faster loading and searching of contacts

    • Improved accuracy of the 3G signal strength display

    • Repeat alert up to two additional times for incoming text messages

    • Option to wipe data after ten failed passcode attempts

    • Genius playlist creation

    • The App Store

    • Enterprise support

    • MobileMe support

    • Mass email move and delete

    • Contacts search

    • Updated keyboard and dictionary support

    • Support for more email attachments

    • Scientific calculator


    Details on the features



    Google Street View

    Street View takes you on a virtual walking tour: Navigate street-level photographs of places you've located in Maps.

    Public Transit and Walking Directions

    Get walking directions, find public transit schedules, check fares, and estimate your travel time.
    Share Location

    Tap the Share Location button to send an email that includes a Google Maps URL.

    Podcasts

    Get access to thousands of free podcasts on the iTunes Store via Wi-Fi or your cellular network.

    Safari Improvements

    A new search-friendly user interface, better performance, and more stability make Safari even easier to use.

    Home Screen Shortcut

    Take a shortcut from any Home screen back to your first Home screen by pressing the Home button.

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    iPhone Tricks | General more Productive Uses Tips

    Whether you're an iPhone rookie or a weathered pro, take a look at these quick-and-easy iPhone tips and tricks which not only save you time, but ease your overall iPhone experience. These tips will not only increase your iPhone IQ, but improve your overall iPhone experience. For more iPhone tips and tricks. Generally these will give you more productive uses.

    Index



    Be sure to share your new found knowledge (or atleast inform people that their iPhone's headphones have a button).

    Scroll to Top of Page

    In any application, Safari included, you can automatically scroll to the top of the page by tapping on the "top bar", which has the time, service bars, and battery. In Safari, this not only brings you to the top of the page, but also brings up the URL bar.

    Domain Resolution

    When typing a URL in Safari, you don't have to type the "www" or the ".com".For instance, for www.cnn.com just type "cnn" in the URL box. Note: Your search engine must be set to Google, not Yahoo.

    Domain Suffix - [On firmware 2.0 only]

    Hold down the ".com" key for ".net, .edu, .org" keys. Note: Slide your finger from .com to .net/.edu/.org, rather than lifting and pressing.

    Press & Hold For Alternate Characters

    Hold a letter for a popup of various versions of the character (i.e. to type España with the "ñ" simply hold "n" and simply slide/release to the appropriate character).

    Click & Hold URL's

    In Safari, hold a link to see the URL and site name.

    Soft Reset

    Press and hold the Home button and the Sleep button to restart your iPhone. A white light will flash, the screen will shut off and then turn back on. Keep holding until the screen turns back on.

    Take a Screenshot

    To take a screenshot, hold the home button and click the sleep button. The screen will flash white and the screenshot will be stored in your camera roll.

    Set Parental Controls

    You can enable certain restrictions or parental controls on your iPhone. You can block explicit lyrics, Safari, YouTube, iTunes, or the App Store. Just go to Settings, General, Restrictions.

    Save Any Image from Safari

    To save any image from the web to your camera roll, simply press and hold the image. A menu will appear asking "Save Image" or "Cancel". Once the image is in your camera roll, you can set it as your wallpaper.

    Fast Forward/Rewind Music & Video

    Press and hold the skip forward/back arrows to fast forward or rewind rather than skip tracks. Also, press on the album art to manually FF/rewind.

    Delete Emails

    You can do both "bulk deletes" and "individual deletes" when browsing email. To do a bulk delete, simply click Edit, check off the desired emails, and then choose delete or move. To delete a single email, simply "cross it out" by swiping your finger across the email, then press delete.

    Double Tap Home Button

    Double tapping the home button has several useful functions, which are described here.

    Double tap space bar for a period

    When typing on your iPhone, double tapping the space bar at the end of a sentence automatically enters a period followed by a space. No need to press "123" to get to the numbers and symbols page where the period typically resides. I use this trick daily and it heavily increases my typing speed (especially when texting).

    Tap the bottom corner to navigate home screens

    When on your home screen, try tapping the bottom right/left corner to switch between pages instead of swiping your finger accross the screen.

    Take out your SIM card during backup and sync

    We've all experienced it. You're backing up and syncing your iPhone, and the hour long back up is nearly complete. Then all of a sudden you get a phone call, and the whole back up/sync is null and void.

    To avoid this happening, simply start the backup/sync, then pull out your SIM card. Do not worry, this does not damage your phone at all. Put it back in once everything is complete. This way, your backup won't get interrupted.

    This tip is also useful if you need to make a phone call while your iPhone is backing up/syncing. Since unlocking your phone cancels the process, just take out your SIM card, pop it in your old cell phone, and call away.

    Move "dock" icons

    You'd be surprised how often this tip is overlooked. The 4 icons located on the grey bar at the bottom of your iPhone - Phone, Mail, iPod, Safari - are movable, just like the rest of the icons. Just press and hold the icons, then drag them while they are shaking. Press the home button when you're done. You can put any 4 icons on your dock.

    In the screenshots, note the difference between pic 1 and 2

    Automatically capitalize and add apostrophes

    The iPhone automatically capitalizes certain words ("I" when you type "i"). It also automatically adds apostrophes ("I'm" when you type "Im").

    Double tap a column on Safari to fit-to-page

    When browsing the Internet on your iPhone's Safari browser, double tap any column, word, or picture to fit it's width to your iPhone's screen. This is extremely useful for reading blogs.

    The first screenshot is the page when it firsts load. The second screenshot is the page once the main text was double tapped.

    Manually select the icon image for a bookmarked webpage

    This one's a little more confusing. When you are browsing a website on your iPhone's Safari browser and want to add its icon to your home screen, press the plus sign and select "Add to Home Screen".

    The image in the icon, however, is a screenshot of the page you were on. So if you want the icon to look a specific way, zoom in on a particular item on the page. Whether you want the website's logo, or some picture on the page, simply zoom in on that part of the page before you press "Add to Home Screen".

    Note: This doesn't work with all websites. Popular sites like Google have special icons for the iPhone's home screen.

    • Go to your website of choice.
    • Zoom in on your favorite part.
    • Press the + sign and choose Add to Home Screen.
    • Name the bookmark appropriately (Digg - Apple).
    • Now that exact part of the webpage is displayed in your icon.


    Your iPhone's headphones have a multi-function button

    You'd be surprised how many people don't know that the iPhone's native headphones have a button on the microphone.

    Just squeeze the microphone together, and the button gets pressed.

    The buttons functions:

    In call...
    • Press once to answer a call
    • Press twice to send the call to voicemail
    • Press once to hang up a call


    In call while second call coming in... [thank you silver0fox]
    • click once to hold current call and switch to new call
    • hold for 2 secs and release to ignore new call


    Out of call...
    • Press once to activate iPod and play song
    • Press once to pause song
    • Press twice to skip to next song


    Although some of these tricks seem elementary to some iPhone users, I'm willing to bet there's atleast one item on this list you weren't aware of. And if that's not the case, then congratulations iPhone Pro - you have graduated from iPhone 101.

    Enjoy the more productive and enhanced iPhone experience these tricks will provide you!

    Source :www.ismashphone.com

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    iPhone Tricks : Use Two Thumbs on iPhone to Type A Period

    Apple has added an agile shortcut for adding a period at the end of a sentence, on the iPhone Software Update 1.1.1. The shortcut, which is still available today, involves tapping the space bar twice which automatically places a period and a space for quick text entry.

    Now we can make things even quicker, by just tapping the space bar with two thumbs. It will produce the same effect as tapping the space bar twice. More simple always made people happy, don’t they?

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    iPhone Accessories | DLO 004-0026 Slim Case Leather Case with Screen Protector


    If you're looking for the ultimate in iPhone protection and accessibility, look no further than the DLO SlimCase. Strong and refined, SlimCase complements and protects your iPhone without getting in the way. Removable leather wrist strap and bouns DLO Surface Shield also included.

    Stay protected + in control

    SlimCase's impact-resistant shell is wrapped in fine leather and lined with soft, sueded fabric, and has openings in all the right places for unrestricted access to your iPhone – including volume control, silence button and headset jack. SlimCase also features discreet openings for the camera lens as well as the dock connector, giving you complete iPhone functionality while protected.

    The total package

    While SlimCase surrounds your iPhone in streamlined protection, the included DLO Surface Shield provides invisible protection that's custom made for your iPhone's multi-touch display. For added convenience, a removable leather wrist strap ensures that your iPhone will always be close at hand. With its clean lines and solid construction, plus leather wrist strap and DLO Surface Shield, the SlimCase provides complete iPhone protection – and access – in one sleek package.

    Key Specifications/Special Features:

    • Fits Apple iPhone 4Gb & 8Gb
    • Protect iPhone in a strong leather shell with soft interior lining
    • Access iPhone side controls, camera lens, headset jack and dock connector
    • DLO Surface Shield included for screen protection against scratches and fingerprints
    • Removable leather wrist strap included
    • DLO Part number: 004-0026


    Model Compatible -Apple iPhone 4GB / 8GB / 16Gb

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    iPhone Games | Killer Pool


    Even there are quite a few pool games (also called Pocket billiards) on the App Store, but Killer Pool is "the most realistic pool experience" available for the iPhone.

    Killer Pool is developed by SD Games, the games development wing of Sauce Digital.

    This game offers 5 different types of pool games such as the 8 balls, the 9 balls, the UK Black Ball (8 balls), Killer which is the classic multi-player game for up to 10 players and OctoKiller which is a customized version of Killer played on an octagonal table, where players eliminate each other by sinking their balls, with the last remaining player victorious.

    In Killer Pool, you can play a single player that has a single match, a local competition or a world championship options, or 2 player game that you can choose the number of racks you want to play with your friend.

    With the online multi-player capability that is offered by free iPhone game Adrenaline Pool Lite (iTunes link), Killer Pool become perfectly. The graphics are quite good. You can play the game in portrait as well as landscape mode, with the in-play sound of the game adds to the realistic experience of the game.

    iPhone's multi-touch capabilities make possible to the user interface bcome quite intuitive and easy to use. You can set the direction in which you want to play a shot by moving the virtual cue with your fingers to the left or to the right across iPhone's touch screen.

    With the simple up or down moving with your fingers, you can also change the view of the pool table. You can then use finger swipe or the power meter to hit the shot with the virtual cue. I was more comfortable with the second option. You also have options to hit spin shots or swerve. but they can get a lot sharper.

    You can watch the demo video of the iPhone game in action to get an overview:

    Killer Pool costs $2.99.

    You can download it using this direct iTunes link.

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    iPhone Accessories | Luxury Series Black Leather Case and Screen Protector


    Crafted from finest-grade leather exterior with an impact resistant molded shell, the Luxury Series Leather Case is designed to give you ease while accessing your Apple iPhone.

    Its protective, flip-style design protects the iPhone from all angles yet makes accessing the iPhone’s features a breeze.

    Bonus: also includes a FREE Crystal Clear Screen Protector/Film for Apple iPhone

    Features:

    • Premium grade leather with soft suede lined interior
    • Innovative design with luxury style
    • Slim yet strong and holds your iPhone securely
    • Flip-style magnetic closure
    • Full access to controls
    • Camera lens opening
    • Color: Black
    • Apple iPhone is not included


    This item includes the following accessories:
    • Luxury Series Black Leather Case
    • Crystal Clear Screen Protector


    This accessory is compatible with the following:
    • iPhone 4GB, 8GB, 16GB
    • iPhone3G 8GB, 16GB

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    Partners

    My O2 XDA Atom

    It talk about O2 XDA product review. Get various tips and tricks in optimizing pocket PC, games, freeware and more.
    url: http://myo2atom.blogspot.com

    GPS for MobilePhone

    A GPS tracker, map and product reference for mobilephone.
    url: http://gps4mobilephone.blogspot.com


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    iPhone Review | iPhone3G


    Introducing iPhone 3G. This 3G technology gives iPhone fast access to the Internet and email over cellular networks around the world. iPhone 3G puts even more features at your fingertips. With fast 3G wireless technology, GPS mapping, support for enterprise features like Microsoft Exchange, and the new App Store, mean everything in your hand. It also makes it possible to do more in more places but it only need less space. So you can surf the web, get directions, watch video, download email even while you’re on a call.

    And like the original iPhone, it combines three products in one — a revolutionary phone, a widescreen iPod, and a breakthrough Internet device with rich HTML email and a desktop-class web browser.

    iPhone 3G, It redefines what a mobile phone can do again




    Talk and browse at the same time



    Phone - Make a call by tapping a name or send a text with the intelligent keyboard.

    iPhone with 3G technology gives you mobile multitasking in more places. You can do it without connecting via Wi-Fi. Since 3G networks enable simultaneous data and voice, you can talk on the phone while surfing the web, using Maps or checking email. All from your 3G cellular network.

    iPhone in Enterprise - Get push email, calendar, and contacts with Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync.

    Go anywhere



    3G Speed - Surf the web and download email over fast 3G cellular networks.

    Internet - Browse the web, get HTML email, and find yourself with GPS maps.

    iPhone 3G meets worldwide standards for cellular communications, so you can make calls and surf the web from practically anywhere on the planet. And if you’re in an area without a 3G network, iPhone connects you via GSM for calls and EDGE for data.

    Maps with GPS - Find your location, get directions, and track progress along your route.

    More wireless need less space



    iPhone 3G delivers UMTS, HSDPA, GSM, Wi-Fi, EDGE, GPS, and Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR in one compact device — using only two antennas. Clever iPhone engineering integrates those antennas into a few unexpected places: the metal ring around the camera, the audio jack, the metal screen bezel, and the iPhone circuitry itself. And intelligent iPhone power management technology gives you up to 5 hours of talk time over 3G networks.2 That’s some of the best in the business.

    For downloading data over UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) networks, iPhone 3G uses a technology protocol called HSDPA (High-Speed Downlink Packet Access). So you can download data, email attachments and web pages faster. IT load twice as fast on 3G networks as on 2G EDGE networks.1 And since iPhone 3G seamlessly switches between EDGE, faster 3G, and even faster Wi-Fi, you always get the best speeds possible.

    More fun



    iPod - Enjoy music and video on a widescreen display and shop for music with a tap.

    App Store - Browse games and applications, then download and install them directly onto your iPhone.

    More Features

    Take a look at additional iPhone features including:
    • Better email management

    • Contacts search

    • View more attachments

    • Scientific calculator


    More Languages

    For its worldwide release, iPhone 3G adds more language support.

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    iPhone review | Phone, Mail, Safari, iPod

    By Ryan Block and Chris Ziegler

    Phone and contacts



    Apple broke rank during its ubiquitous iPhone advertising campaign in the last few weeks -- typically the company doesn't go out of the way to highlight the specific functionality of its devices, instead choosing to sell products with iconography and emotion. But the bottom line Apple made is that the iPhone must live up to it's name: before anything else, it's a phone. And it has to be, because if it's an awful phone, no one's going to use it as their phone, get it? Well, Apple obviously succeeded here. We found nearly everything about making and receiving calls on the iPhone to be dead simple -- scratch that, pleasurable, even. It's almost enough to make us call home every weekend. (Almost.)

    While finding contacts might have been improved, calling contacts is as far from a chore as we've seen on a mobile. What the iPhone contact app most needs is use of the keyboard to hone in on names, like Windows Mobile's excellent Smartdial feature -- even the device's own SMS app has a keyboard-based contact finder. Instead, you're given just two options for finding your pals' contact cards: flicking up and down the list, or using the alphabet column on the right side, which makes short work of scrolling through hundreds of names.

    However, the pleasure of the elastic scroll-drag motion isn't to be underestimated. Despite the fact that the iPhone has no haptic feedback, traversing lists of emails, text, and songs has a nearly tactile feel due to the interface's "rubber band" effect. You can swing through about 60 contacts with a quick swipe -- traversing long lists without a scroll wheel is feasible, but if you've got a few hundred people in your address book, you'll probably soon be jonesing for keyboard-based contact search.

    Call functions are organized into five categories

    • Favorites - Apple's take on speed dial. A simple list of your favorite contacts. Adding favorites is very simple -- every non-favorite contact has a huge button allowing you to add them to the list. The list can be re-ordered by tapping edit, then using an icon on the right to drag each entry around.
    • Recents - Shows a list of all or missed calls, and the call time / date. Incoming and outgoing calls are not differentiated, annoyingly. Missed calls are highlighted in red. Like some phones, unknown numbers have the region of call origin displayed (i.e. if you missed a call from a 415 area code number, beneath the digits it says "San Francisco, California" -- very handy!).
    • Contacts - Your contact list, with your phone number listed at the top. (Having your number listed at the top is deceptively clever -- how many times have you needed to show someone your phone number in a loud area? For us, often.) Users can select to show all their synced contacts, or just select groups. (Creating contacts on the iPhone easily syncs back to the desktop.) Pushing against the final contact does not return the user to the top of the list, as is the typical expected behavior.
    • Dialpad - The usual 12-key. You aren't presented with contact list-assisted dialing, but if you punch in a known number the device will give you a small prompt confirming who it is you're dialing (i.e. "Ryan Block, mobile"). From this pane users can add a dialed-in number to a new or existing contact -- users can also add numbers from the contacts pane, with the added option of plus and pause dialing. Note: numbers dialed in during calls are lost -- so prepare to take down proper notes in your phone, you can't just dial them in and save them for later, like some phones.
    • Voicemail - Visual voicemail pane. Visual voicemail allows for email-like voicemail interaction, using caller ID and small voicemail files (transmitted to the phone automagically in the background). Visual voicemail quality leaves a lot to be desired, but we'd argue the functionality itself supersedes the audio fidelity, poor though it may be. Also in the VV pane: a speakerphone toggle and voicemail greeting option pane where you can select and locally record a new VM greeting (and transmit it back to AT&T for playback). Sorry, you can only set a single outgoing message; you can't record multiple and swap them out for various occasions (i.e. on vacation, or whatever).


    Dialing a number is extremely simple: in a contact card (or in an email, or anywhere else) tap the number you want to call and it dials. That's it. In-call functions are also very simple: users are presented with just a few common options: mute, keypad, speakerphone on / off, add call (which brings up the contact list), pause, and contacts (presumably for finding someone's contact info to read into phone). Incoming calls present obvious prompts: ignore, hold call & answer, and (in a huge red button) end call & answer. Users can conference up to five calls on a single line -- the sixth call gets put on hold.

    Using a Bluetooth headset is also super easy. If it's paired and powered up you'll be prompted with an audio source button instead of the speakerphone button. Tap that and you can choose which audio source you'd like to use. Note: even with a Bluetooth headset active on your phone, visual voicemail will only play into the iPhone.

    Call quality

    As GSM handsets go, the iPhone's voice quality can only be described as "unremarkable." Not bad, but not particularly stellar, either. Anyone stepping down from a UMTS handset will likely notice a slightly more "compressed" sound than they're used to, but the call clarity is good -- we noticed virtually no static hiss in the background. We were able to get decent volume out of the speakerphone's bottom-facing grill (particularly when set on a hard surface) but even at full volume the earpiece was a little soft for our liking. Realistically, we could've used a couple more notches -- the ability to turn it up to 11, if you will -- for use in loud environments.

    Likewise, folks on the other end of the call reported decent, if not good, sound quality from us. Background noise was within acceptable limits -- something that's more often a problem for candybar devices than for clamshells -- and we were coming through with plenty of volume. If anything, the most chintzy aspect of the iPhone's voice is its inability to use data while talking, and vice versa (no Class A EDGE or 3G, hint hint), but we digress.

    Ringtones and vibration

    We're still kind of bummed you can't (yet) add custom ringtones or even use MP3 ringtones with the massive library of tracks your iPhone is walking around with, but the default sounds are all pretty good. In fact, as far as ringtones go, they're definitely above average. (We have a feeling we're going to be hearing a LOT of "Marimba" in the coming years.) When you turn the ringer off with the side switch, the device enters vibration mode (duh); we found the iPhone's vibration totally suitable for pocket use -- both standing up, moving, and sitting down. But in-bag use is a whole 'nother game, and few phones (including this one) could rattle enough to catch our attention from inside a sack.

    Mail



    There's no other way than to come out and say it: we are extremely disappointed in the iPhone's email app. So much so, in fact, that despite the keyboard and the rest of the things the iPhone lacks in the features department, its mail support may be the largest factor in killing its status as a productivity device. Don't get us wrong, the application is just fine for anyone who wants to do light email, but it lacks the power and convenience that frequent-emailers require.

    For starters, if you've ever been out for an hour or two and checked your mail from your phone only to find a good 50 messages waiting for you, your iPhone nightmare has just begun. Scrolling through messages is just as easy as in other lists, but opening even a small, simple message has a noticeable delay -- the same kind of delay you get moving from one message to the next (with the up / down arrows), or deleting each message with the trash can button (which only appears with the message open).

    One may take it for granted, but mobile email deletion can be a serious problem. The only other methods of message deletion is a swipe over the message to be deleted, then tapping the delete button; or tapping the edit button, then tapping the minus button, then tapping the delete button for each message to be erased. Maybe this doesn't sound too extrarodinary, but using the swipe-delete or edit-minus-button-delete on even a dozen or so messages is incredibly tedious.

    We suspect even a moderate email user won't be able to delete 20 emails on their phone without fantasizing about throwing their iPhone across the room. If you can delete 50 emails in one sitting, you deserve to be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Oh, and you have to manually delete all these messages again from the trash, there's no empty trash button (only an auto-delete option buried deep within settings, which removes deleted emails never, or after a day, a week, or a month). We kid you not.

    Which brings us to our next serious email matter: the iPhone's complete lack of integration with Mail.app, OS X's powerful-enough mail client. We expected that if you're an email user, when you plug in your iPhone and iTunes says it's "syncing your mail accounts," that means it's actually comparing and moving messages between the device and Mail.app. Not so. In fact, the iPhone does not interact in any meaningful way with Mail.app, other than to simplify the setup on the iPhone by copying account settings over from the desktop client's settings.

    Specifically:

    • The POP mail you read on your iPhone does not show up as read in Mail.app after sync.
    • Sent messages on your iPhone are not synced to Mail.app's sent folder (you can automatically CC, but not BCC, yourself on every outgoing iPhone message, though).
    • Filters in Mail.app are not applied to incoming mail on the iPhone.
    • The iPhone keeps its own set of non-contact addresses you manually enter -- these are not copied over from Mail.app.


    What's more, the iPhone mail application has a number of other harsh shortcomings:

    • There is no BCC.
    • Messages on IMAP cannot even be marked as read.
    • No ability "mark all / selected" as read.
    • No empty trash option.
    • There is a save to draft, but there is no spellcheck. (We suppose that's because Apple thinks spellcheck should be inline with auto-correction as you type.)


    Users can only download and view the latest 200 messages from their server -- there is no "retrieve all" messages option. This is a very bad thing when you just got off a trans-continental flight and it's time to triage some serious email.

    If we haven't already driven the point home, for heavy email users such as ourselves, the iPhone didn't even come close to cutting the mustard. Email is, in fact, the weakest aspect of the whole device. While the Yahoo push-IMAP worked beautifully (and we do mean flawlessly -- push mail was delivered instantaneously), the Gmail integration requires POP access, and basically has similar issues with fetching messages, magnified by the different organizational requirements the web mail service has. One Engadget editor called the Gmail integration "a crime against humanity" -- and let's be frank, it's not "years ahead of everything else," it's actually years behind even the simple Java Gmail app Google released a while ago.

    To us, a productivity device is anything that helps us Get Things Done while we're out and about, and email, web, and SMS are the holy trinity on a smartphone device. If any part of that trifecta is crap, the whole device may as well be crap. And unfortunately for us, even if you can put up with the keyboard, the Mail client is so awful it actually makes us wish Apple made a Foleo for the iPhone. An iFoleo, if you will. Anyway, if you're anything like us, this is a major, major dealbreaker.

    Safari



    Ease of use aside, there's no question that the iPhone's build of Safari serves up the most true-to-PC web browsing experience available for a phone today. Opera Mini and S60's native browser (which happens to be based on the same core as Safari, coincidentally) do commendable jobs, but the iPhone has taken it to the next level. Anyone who has used the Nokia 770 or N800 internet tablets will be roughly familiar with what the iPhone is trying to do here: render a page faithfully without trying to work any fit-to-screen magic, and give the user convenient options for zooming in on text.

    Of course, it could be argued that the iPhone shouldn't even be trying to present a PC-like rendering of pages because it necessitates zooming. Emphasis on "necessitates" here -- you really can't go to any mainstream site on the iPhone and expect to glean useful information from it without dragging, double tapping, pinching, and unpinching your way around. Zooming in on a page produces an interesting transient display artifact: everything looks really fuzzy for just a moment, as though you've overzoomed on a low-resolution picture. (Microsoft's new Deepfish browser has a similar effect on zoom-in.) Granted, after a while the browsing motions become a little more natural, and we'd always prefer to have the option of seeing and interacting with sites that don't have dedicated mobile versions. WAP is supported, but Safari isn't detected as a mobile browser, so you need to specifically navigate to the WAP version if the site you're trying to visit has automatic browser detection.

    Bookmarks are supported and automatically synchronized with Safari on the host computer; adding a new bookmark is a simple matter of hitting the "+" button in the address bar, naming the bookmark, selecting a destination folder, and hitting Save. Mobile Safari's meager four-button toolbar along the bottom edge dedicates a button for this, along with forward, backward, and tabs. The tab implementation is pretty clever -- all you see on the tab button is a count of the number of tabs currently open (or nothing if your current page is the only tab). Tapping the button takes you to a Cover Flow-esque display that shows a small view of each tab; flicking left and right changes tabs and tapping opens a tab. A red X in the upper left and corner of each tab's display allows you to close it.

    Of all the iPhone's wares, Safari most thoroughly implements rotation detection, which makes sense considering that most sites are designed with a landscape display in mind. The phone can be held vertically, 90 degrees clockwise, or 90 degrees counterclockwise, and the currently displayed page will be rotated (complete with a nifty animation, naturally) to fill up the screen. Safari is also the only iPhone app to implement the horizontal keyboard, which some will find far easier to use than its more ubiquitous vertical counterpart. One small complaint we have here is that if you have the keyboard up and rotate the phone, the page and keyboard won't reorient -- you have to manually close the keyboard with the Done button, at which point the page will do its thing and you can bring up the keyboard again in the correct orientation.

    On the iPhone, Safari is boiled down to the very most basic set of features necessary to do its thing, but the rendering engine is true to the original, for better or for worse. Take Gmail, for example; just like Safari on the desktop, there's a screwy looking little box immediately to the left of the subject line of each email in the inbox if you have personal level indicators enabled. It works, but it's a very Safari-esque experience -- Safari users will feel right at home, but folks coming from other browsers might run into the occasional surprise when hitting up sites optimized for Internet Explorer or Firefox.

    On the subject of Gmail, Ajax-enabled sites are hit or miss. One gotcha is that there's no gesture to simulate a double-click, so it's impossible to open up a new IM window in Meebo by double-tapping a contact, for example (though we were able to initiate one using the IM Buddy button on the buddy list). Google Documents worked okay for reading text and spreadsheets, but we weren't able to edit anything. A good rule of thumb here: if it's not designed specifically for the iPhone, keep your expectations to a minimum until you try it out yourself.

    Unfortunately, Safari seems to share more than just a rendering engine with its distant S60-based cousin. Specifically, we've had some problems with stability -- the browser will often unceremoniously disappear from time to time. We have no problem opening it back up (and the offending page works the second time more often than not), but it's still a pain in the ass. It seems like the number of open tabs (and hence, memory consumption) might be at least one of the culprits, but we've yet to find any reproducible scenarios. Mobile browsers aren't typically the most stable pieces of software around, so we've gotta say we're not terribly surprised. Here's hoping future firmware updates shore up the goods just a little bit.

    iPod / media functionality



    Historically, we haven't been huge fans of the iPod. We've found its interface generally simple, but irritating to navigate; its lack of numerous basic features other devices have long since had, like the ability to create multiple playlists on the go, has persisted as the iPod has undergone very conservative functionality additions through the years. Whereas our biggest complaint about the iPod -- its dire lack of codec support -- hasn't been addressed in the iPhone, its user interface definitely has.

    Playing back music, movies, TV shows, podcasts, etc. has never been easier on an iPod, or more more seamlessly integrated into a phone. Most of the iPod interface has been revised to take advantage of the iPhone's massive touchscreen, so navigating artists and albums in lists is simple, where before it was a tedious, thumb-joint-popping experience. Tilting the device horizontally allows you to browse your music in Cover Flow mode, a novelty of breakthrough proportions. Tapping an album in Cover Flow mode lets you select which track to play.

    When browsing in list mode, you get the same alphabet column on the right as you do with contacts. Again, keyboard search would have been nice here, but it's still far more livable than the click wheel. If you put your iPhone in sleep while listening to music, when waking it up instead of your usual background on the unlock screen you'll see the cover art of the album you're listening to, and the name of the track beneath the current time -- an extremely useful bit of glanceable information, saving you from having to dig through your mobile to see what's playing.

    The media integration with the rest of the device is obviously far better than on any mobile we've seen to date -- but it's not without its issues. It's wonderful seeing SMS messages pop up while watching movies, for instance, but if you load up a YouTube video while listening to music, the audio automatically fades out when the video starts, but doesn't come back when the video ends. This is counter to the phone experience, where an incoming call pauses your music and brings it back when the call is over. We also noticed that even while under heavy load multitasking, the music would never skip or falter, just crash.

    We managed to continuously crash the iPod app while listening to music and doing other things, namely browsing. We wouldn't call it incredibly unstable, but we wouldn't say it's rock solid, either. Movie playback did seem very stable though, even when skipping around and playing video for long periods of time. (It may also be of note that even when playing video for hours on end the device hardly ever even got warm to the touch.) The biggest upshot we found on the media playback, though, was the iPhone's Herculean battery life. We've seen other reviews' media playback results vary, but ours seemed to jump far ahead of even Apple's lofty expectations.

    Playing relatively high bitrate VGA H.264 videos, our iPhone lasted almost exactly 9 freaking hours of continuous playback with cell and WiFi on (but Bluetooth off). Yeah, we had to pick our jaws up off the floor, too. So by our tests, you could watch a two hour movie and drain off a little more than 22% of the battery -- totally acceptable for trip-taking and the like.

    Our music testing showed similarly outstanding results. Playing back 160-192Kbps MP3s, our iPhone pushed about 29 hours and 30 minutes music playback. To put that in perspective, the Apple claims the iPod nano gets about 24 hours playback on a full charge, and the iPod a scant 14 - 20 hours.

    To do a little simple math, you could watch two hours of video, listen to 8 straight hours of music, and still have only drained off less than half your device's capacity -- that is, if your iPhone's battery works as well as ours. (Read: your battery life may differ.) Still, if that's a good estimate of what users can expect from their device's power drain, you should have little issue making the iPhone your music and video player, in addition to your cellphone.

    Source : http://www.engadget.com

    o2 atom ppc tips and trick

    iPhone review | Apps and settings, camera, iTunes, wrap-up

    By Ryan Block and Chris Ziegler

    SMS



    Sporting a bubbly, iChat-like interface, the SMS app mercifully threads messages, an idea Palm hatched for its Treo devices many moons ago. Users of the threaded setup became immediately addicted to it, making it difficult to move back to plain old flat SMS (darn you, Palm!) and leaving us wondering why other manufacturers didn't follow suit. Granted, the inherent 160-character limit and sometimes exorbitant per-text rates have always left traditional SMS with a paper disadvantage against data-based instant messaging, but ultimately the Short Message Service's worldwide ubiquity has crowned it the "killer app" for mobile textual communication anyway. So why not make it all purty?

    Indeed, if we had to boil the iPhone's SMS down to a one-word description, "purty" would certainly be a finalist. The app's simple enough; messages from numbers that don't already have a "conversation" going get added as a new entry in the main grid. Swiping to the right on a line item here presents an option to delete the conversation entirely, while tapping it opens the bubbly goodness. At the very top, call and contact info buttons appear for contacts already in your address book; contact info is replaced with add to contacts for numbers that aren't. Below the conversation, a text field and send button do exactly what they imply. Hitting send brings up a progress bar that prevents you from doing anything else in the SMS app until the current message has been successfully sent, although you can still hit the home button and use other apps.

    When a message is received, you get a popup with the contact name (or number) and the message text, regardless of whether you're on a call. If you're anywhere but the standby screen, you also get ignore and view buttons; ignore will return you to your previously scheduled programming, while view sends you straight to the conversation. Like Mail, SMS shows a red circle near its icon when there are unread texts.

    The cutesy, drop dead simple interface doesn't come without a price, though. First of all, the SMS app is about as configurable as a DynaTAC 8000 (yep, that's pre-Zack Morris for you young'uns in the audience). Don't like your messages threaded? Sorry. Want red bubbles instead of green? Tough luck! We guess SMS alerts from our bank warning us that our checking account balance is under $50 are somehow less bothersome when presented in a shiny, rounded bubble, but we'd at least like the option of going old-school if we're so inclined.

    Secondly, there's no rhyme or reason to when timestamps appear. That's fine -- we get the idea, they appear when there's been a significant lapse in communication -- but we want to be able to hold down on a specific bubble to get that level of detail then. And finally, SMS offers no character counter or multi-message warning, features available on virtually every other handset on the market. The phone seems pretty smart about reassembling multiple messages into a single bubble, but that's still no reason to lull us into the false sense that this is a true IM service, especially when AT&T's default package for the iPhone only has 200 messages. And believe it or not, some of us still don't have devices that can reassemble multi-text messages anyway.

    Calendar



    The iPhone's calendar may possibly be the most usable we've ever seen on a cellphone -- but most of the credit there may be due to the device's massive screen. Most cellphone calendars are difficult to use, but not for lack of effort, it's for lack of screen real estate. The iPhone's huge, high res display makes it possible to get a month-view while also having enough room to show each day's events below. Dragging your finger around the days of the month instantly loads those appointments; all in all the calendar is very snappy, far more so than the mail client.

    Too bad we still had major problems syncing appointments made on the iPhone back to our our desktop iCal calendar. It just wouldn't happen. Appointments we created on the iPhone refused to show up on the desktop, and about half the time during sync our iPhone-created appointments would actually get deleted entirely from the device. (This may be something screwy with our phone, so we'll assume it's not expected behavior.) Appointments created on the desktop sync over fine, however, and we had no issues there -- so just be sure that you never need to make an appointment in your iPhone calendar when you're on the go. Kidding!

    Another issue we had with the calendar is its refusal to inherit color coding from desktop calendars, or in any way display in which calendar an appointment was made. If you're anything like us, you have a few calendars, like one for personal, work, birthdays, spouse, etc. Well, if that's the case then it sucks to be you, because all those calendars' appointments look exactly the same in the iPhone (and unlike desktop iCal, you can't set a time zone for an appointment). The iPhone calendar also lacks a week-view mode, but supplants a pretty useful appointment list instead. We wish we could take a short appointment list summary and drop it in our unlock screen -- the day's appointments is some incredibly valuable information that you shouldn't have to start, unlock, and then hit calendar to retrieve.

    Photos and camera



    So here's how we're picturing that this went down inside Apple HQ: there's like a couple months left before the iPhone's release, and suddenly the team realizes that they haven't created the software for the camera. They then proceed to spend five weeks on cute animations and one week on actual functionality. Yes, yes, we're quite sure that's a gross exaggeration, but we just can't remember the last time we've used a phone camera with this little functionality. Then again, maybe that's a good thing for some.

    When the Camera app is opened, you get a giant viewfinder and two buttons along the bottom. The large button in the middle snaps the picture and the smaller button to the left moves you to the camera roll, which is simply a special photo album within the Photos app. We understand that packing a larger sensor or a decent flash would've sacrificed more thickness and battery life than Apple was willing, but that's still no excuse to leave us without even a single configurable parameter for the camera. No scene selection, no digital zoom, no destination album, nothing.

    Pressing the shutter button causes a shutter animation to collapse momentarily over the viewfinder; a moment later, the just-taken picture becomes translucent and collapses down into the camera roll icon. Both animations are kinda cool but totally unnecessary. The viewfinder's refresh rate is decent -- but not even close to real realtime -- and it's far from the best we've seen. We'd estimate it's humming along at 7 or 10fps.

    Enough grousing, though; on to picture quality. For two megapixels, no autofocus, and no flash, we're about as impressed as we can be. Compared to the Nokia N76 -- another 2 megapixel cameraphone we've recently spent some time with -- the iPhone's pictures consistently came out clearer and with far less pixel noise. That said, it's still a lousy sensor by even ultra low-end dedicated camera standards, so we'd recommend this not be used in the field for anything but the occasional candid shot.

    As we mentioned, snapped photos hightail themselves over to the Photos app. The iPhone appears as a digital camera to the computer, so it'll bust open iPhoto on the Mac while PCs can configure it to import to a folder. Photo albums already on your computer (in iPhoto, Aperture, or a particular folder) can be configured to be automatically synced to Photos as well.

    When Photos first opens, the user is asked which album to browse; the name of the album is shown along with the number of pictures in the album. Tapping an album brings up a flickable thumbnail view of all photos within it. Here you can either tap a particular picture to bring it full screen or tap the play button at the bottom of the display to kick off a slide show. Slide show options are configured in the iPhone's settings: duration to show each photo, transition effect, repeat, and shuffle. The transitions are, for lack of better verbiage, freaking awesome ("Ripple" is our favorite).

    Calling up an individual photo brings up a view that is navigationally very similar to Notes, an app that we'll be taking a look at shortly. The photo dominates the screen, while buttons at the bottom allow you to export the photo (to wallpaper, email, but only in VGA, or a contact), move to the previous / next photos, kick off a slide show, or delete the pic you're looking at. Unlike Notes, however, the interface disappears after a moment to allow you to see the entire picture unobstructed by the user interface; pinching and unpinching here will cause the displayed picture to zoom in and out.

    Photos also offers a couple extra goodies here that Notes does not. First, the iPhone can be rotated here as it can in Safari -- but interestingly, it can be rotated in all four orientations versus Safari's three. Second, swiping left and right moves from photo to photo. If you tap and hold, the movement will stop even if you're halfway between two photos (think of it like a roll of film), but flicking fast will not spin through multiple photos like with textual lists (iPod, Contacts, etc.). Why the left and right swipes weren't implemented in Notes, we don't know, but we're pretty bummed about it.

    YouTube



    Having rolled out YouTube support for Apple TV recently and given the service its very own icon on the iPhone's home screen, it seems Apple has suddenly decided that the mother of all video sites is a key part of its entertainment portfolio. Though it's a fairly impressive and particularly feature-rich component of the handset, it's not a perfect reproduction of the desktop YouTube experience (not to suggest we won't still be capable of wasting hundreds of hours on it, of course).

    Opening YouTube presents an interface whose flexibility and searchability is really rivaled by nothing else on the iPhone -- not even the iPod app. Along the bottom is a toolbar with five buttons: Featured, Most Viewed, Bookmarks, Search, and More. More is really a catch-all for three other buttons that wouldn't fit on the toolbar: Most Recent, Top Rated, and History (though the toolbar can be reconfigured using the edit button, like the iPod). Lets walk through these one at a time.

    Featured, Most Viewed, Most Recent, and Top Rated all roughly equate to their equivalent lists on the YouTube page, though not exactly one-to-one. We're guessing the differences are thanks to YouTube's and Apple's inability to re-encode every single video into an iPhone-friendly format in a timely fashion. Most Viewed is further divided into All, Today, and This Week with toggle buttons at the top.

    The grid view used in both of these views is fabulous, featuring a thumbnail of the video, the name, rating, number of views, length, and the uploading user's name. Tapping the blue arrow to the right of the video brings up yet more information in a new screen, including the full description, date added, category, tags, and a list of related videos. You also have Bookmark and Share buttons here; the former adds this video to your Bookmarks view, while the latter creates a template email with the video's URL embedded.

    Bookmarks contains a list of all videos that have been bookmarked on the device. Note that this is not the same favorites list found in your YouTube login -- in fact, it's not even possible to log in to one's YouTube account on the iPhone (unlike the Apple TV). The grid view here is the same one found in Featured and Most Viewed with the addition of an edit button at the top right; tapping it allows videos to be removed from the list. Inexplicably, the wipe gesture used in SMS and email isn't used here either, but rather the red circle that makes a few appearances throughout the phone.

    Search is, well, a search function. Tapping on the field at the top calls up the keyboard and search results appear in the grid underneath. It appears to use essentially the same logic as that on YouTube's website, though just like Featured and Most Viewed, you'll get fewer videos here since not everything has been re-encoded to the iPhone's liking just yet. History simply shows a chronological list of the most recently played videos on the device -- and rest easy, it can be cleared with a Clear button in the upper right.

    Moving on to playback, this is where we're struggling a bit. We want to like this app over EDGE, we really do, but as we mentioned before, it's just a little too flaky to be much fun. Load times are long -- 15 seconds or longer, with an occasional spike as high as one minute in our testing -- and we'd sometimes get mysterious error messages saying that videos can't be played. Add in the fact that the playback resolution and bitrate is automatically "optimized" (read: scaled way down) for EDGE, and frankly, it's just more trouble than it's worth.

    Over WiFi, though, it's a different story altogether. Videos load quickly and the resolution seems perfectly suited for the iPhone's glorious display. During playback, controls include a scrubber, done button for returning to the video list, and a toggle switch for moving between a letterbox and stretched view (this bearing in mind that the iPhone's aspect ratio is wider than YouTube's) all along the top. At the bottom you get a volume control, bookmark button, previous and next buttons for moving to different videos in the grid, play / pause, and an envelope icon that fires up a template email the same as the share button found when viewing a video's details. For some reason, the YouTube app forces video lists to be shown in portrait and playback to be landscape -- the rotation sensor has no bearing here whatsoever, same as in iPod playing video.

    Stocks

    Stocks bears some striking resemblances to its cousin, the Dashboard widget of the same name. The main displays are virtually indistinguishable, though the iPhone version trades its Mac equivalent's blue background for black. Like Weather, Stocks loses its Dashboard data provider (Quote.com in this case) and adds a "Y!" logo in the lower left that, when tapped, takes the user to a Yahoo! Mobile page with a variety of information for the highlighted stock. The performance graphs at the bottom take several seconds to load, and like everything else, take longer over EDGE -- a little more than twice as long in our informal testing. Interestingly, the longer time spans took longer to load, which means they seem to actually be loading more data in the background instead of aggregating it at a lower resolution on the back end. Over EDGE, 2-year stock graphs took on average around 7 seconds to load, while on the other end of the spectrum, 1-day graphs took about 2.5 seconds. Averages -- DJIA, for example -- seem to take marginally longer. Data never appears to be cached here, so every time you tap on a different time span, you've got to wait for the data to load again.

    Configuring Stocks is a simple affair; the only options are adding / removing stocks and selecting whether price changes should be displayed by value or percentage.In both cases, positive changes are shown as a green box and negative are in red. Companies can be added by symbol, full, or partial name; a results grid shows symbols that match your entered term. Annoyingly, there's no way to change the order in which stocks are listed, except but to re-enter them in the desired order.


    Google maps

    Using Google maps on most smartphones is an absolute pleasure. The Windows Mobile and Palm OS Gmaps apps are just fantastic -- and the iPhone ranks among them. Apple supposedly spent a lot of time working on this one (Google has historically released all its own mobile apps), and it shows. Map loads are reasonable even over EDGE (and expectedly snappy on WiFi), and being able to easily search Google local, pull up a number and address in a contact card, then call that location and route directions to it, that is an amazing mobile maps experience. Too bad the iPhone can't make use of a Bluetooth GPS receiver (wink, wink Apple!).

    We wish the maps app recognized a search for "home" so we could return to a default location at or near our residence (without typing it in), but users can set map bookmarks for repeat use. The traffic alerts system is also pretty impressive, but it doesn't work for all roads and freeways, so your mileage may vary (har) on that. Pulling up the satellite view on the iPhone is a thing to behold -- the crisp display shows an extraordinary amount of detail for such a small device.

    Our biggest complaint about the maps app, though, is something we mentioned earlier: inconsistent gesture input. Gmaps is the only app in the iPhone where two-finger single tap zooms out. This is something one can get used to, but it's still pretty disorienting, and we've found ourselves inadvertently trying the Gmaps two-finger zoom out in other apps, obviously with little result.

    Weather

    Anyone familiar with Mac OS X's preinstalled weather widget will feel right at home here (right down to the static Sunny / 73° icon, which we would've much preferred be updated regularly for our home city). Naturally, the layout is more vertical on the iPhone to accommodate the taller screen (and coincidentally, it seems you can't hold the phone sideways to get a landscape version of the widget). While the Dashboard widget uses AccuWeather as its data provider, the iPhone has made the jump to Yahoo! with a new "Y!" logo appearing in the lower left -- an homage to Apple's newfound relationship with the company to launch that push-IMAP email, perhaps. Pressing the logo pulls up Safari and directs you to a Yahoo! Mobile page with weather, news, events, and Flickr photos for the selected city.

    Configuration for the widget is about as basic as it could possibly get: hit the ubiquitous "i" icon in the lower right, select your cities and your preferred unit of temperature, and you're done. In light of the simplicity and overall lack of configurability of the phone, we're a little surprised they even bothered to offer a unit selection since the device is currently only offered in the US, but we know not everyone grew up here, and we're certainly not complaining. After you've selected your cities and hit done, you're returned to the widget's primary display. Multiple cities are indicated as small dots at the bottom of the screen, while flicking left and right changes cities. Notably, the order you enter cities is the order they'll appear -- there's no way to change that without deleting and reentering, like stocks.

    Clock



    Jet setters and chefs should appreciate the Clock widget, one of the better implementations of a world clock and timer (among other things) we've seen on a phone. Clock bears little resemblance to its Dashboard cousin (but that's not a bad thing). It also shares a rather unfortunate trait with Weather in that its icon doesn't reflect reality -- the time is permanently fixed at 10:15. We suppose the decision to keep it static was made because you can clearly see the time at the top of the home screen anyway, but it would've been a nice touch anyway considering that the Calendar icon reflects the actual date.

    At the bottom of Clock there are four buttons: World Clock, Alarm, Stopwatch, and Timer. All four function pretty much the way you'd expect. The World Clock function is great in that each selected city shows its name and an analog clock followed by a digital clock and an indication of whether the locale is yesterday, today, or tomorrow (crazy International Date Line antics!). Unlike Weather and Stocks, cities can be reordered here by dragging on the "ribbed" area at the right while in Edit mode.

    The Alarm page lets you add pretty much as many alarms as you like (we had ten going). The functionality here is great; for each alarm you can select what days it's active, what sound should be played, whether Snooze is available, and the alarm's name when viewed in the grid of all alarms. The time is selected with a slot machine-style series of rollers, one each for hour, minute, and AM / PM. Once options are set up and you return to the grid, each alarm can individually be turned on and off with a switch. Having any of them set to active causes a clock icon to appear in the status bar at the top of the screen.

    Stopwatch and Timer are both extraordinarily simple goodies, but even so, it's still possible to make them extraordinarily unintuitive. Thankfully, the iPhone's aren't. Stopwatch simply gives the time broken down in minutes, seconds, and tenths (plus hours on the far left when you get that far) with a start and reset button; when the time is all zeroes, Reset is grayed out. Hitting start turns the left button to stop and the right button to lap. Pressing lap will add the split time to the grid directly below the buttons along with an indicator of the lap number. Hit stop, and the start and reset buttons return. Hitting Rreset will clear split times as well. The sleep behavior of the phone seems a little indeterminate while the stopwatch is running -- sometimes the screen dims, sometimes it sleeps, sometimes it stays wide awake. We couldn't nail down what (if anything) determined the phone's behavior here. Happily, you can leave the Clock app and go about your business and the stopwatch will continue running -- you can even use other parts of the Clock app itself.

    As for Timer, you're presented with two slot machine-style dials, one for hour and one for minute. Below, a button asks you which sound should play when the timer expires, followed by the start button (which changes to cancel once the timer has been kicked off). Unfortunately, you cannot run multiple timers simultaneously.

    Calculator



    There's very little to be said about the Calculator widget -- and let's be honest, that's exactly how a simple calculator should be. You enter your digits, you do your arithmetic, and you get on with life. This particular widget has undergone a full redesign from the calculator found in Mac OS, taking on darker colors for the buttons and the background and a blue, 3D-look display. Gone are the segmented digits, replaced by a traditional smooth font (in other words, Apple wasn't too concerned about making this thing look exactly like a physical four-function calculator).

    Missing from the iPhone, though, are dedicated scientific / graphing calculators, or, perhaps more usefully, a tip calculator. We think any would be nice to have, and this device definitely has the necessary screen real estate to make them functional and visually appealing. In fact, the iPhone's screen is so big that a simple four-function calculator looks just a little too sparse, although it certainly makes the buttons easy to press.

    Notes

    Font look familiar? It should -- the iPhone Notes app ganks the Marker Felt font, perhaps best known as the default font in Stickies. Frankly, we could do without it, or at the very least we'd like an option to change it to something a little simpler and less Comic Sans-like (the iPhone's systemwide font would've been just fine, thanks). Adding a note is accomplished by clicking the "+" button found in several iPhone apps; the new note is automatically timestamped and titled based on the first line of text that you write. While editing, two buttons appear in the title bar directly above the yellow pad -- both save the note, but the Notes button kicks you back out to the list of all notes, while the done button keeps you in a read-only view of the current note. We really would've liked a cancel button here, too.

    In the read-only view, four icons appear at the bottom of the screen in the same casual, fun style as the font. The far left and right icons move from note to note (seems like there should be a swipe gesture here that'll accomplish the same function), the envelope creates an email with the note as the body and the first line as the subject, and the trash can predictably deletes the note. Strangely, there is no other way we can find to delete a note -- you must be looking at it to trash it. Also, we found ourselves instinctively rotating the phone from time to time in Notes, but sadly, you won't find any landscape mode here. And why no drawing capability? We're not asking for handwriting recognition or anything fancy like that, just the ability to doodle would've been a fabulous feature.

    Settings



    It's no secret, our favorite part of any cellphone and device is the settings area. We often find ourselves running to the settings before even making a call on a new phone or playing back some video on a new media device. When it comes to settings, by and large the iPhone doesn't disappoint. We won't go over every nook and cranny (we could do a feature on just the menus and submenus and subsubmenus... in this thing), but here are some highlights:

    Airplane mode - Super easy toggle, works instantaneously.
    Usage - Doesn't show percentage of battery remaining (lame), but does show all of your current usage stats, like standby time since last charge, etc.

    Sound - Comprehensive yet simple sound behavior settings, lots of toggles.
    Date & Time - Has a setting for time zone support on / off in calendar, convenient if you do / don't travel a lot.
    Network - VPN settings (supports L2TP and PPTP); WiFi settings allow you to select DHCP, BootP, or static IP address, as well as no, manual, or auto HTTP proxy.

    Bluetooth - Extremely straightforward and usable interface for Bluetooth; discoverable is switched off by default, but turned on only for the duration of time you're in the Bluetooth menu. Pairing is very simple, although we kind of hoped it would use the Sidekick system of attempting common Bluetooth PINs so you don't have to remember which your headset uses, 1111, 0000, etc. Oh, and you can pair your iPhone with most anything, but don't expect it to actually do something once paired -- almost all Bluetooth profiles are disabled.

    Keyboard - Allows you to enable / disable auto-capitalization and caps lock.
    Mail - Add, delete accounts (types include POP3, IMAP, Gmail, AOL, Yahoo, .mac, and Exchange IMAP, but not Exchange EAS), auto-check messages (manual, 15, 30, or 60 minutes), message preview (0 - 5 lines), CC myself on / off, signature, etc.
    Phone - Contact sort / display order, call fwding, call waiting, caller ID (no option to only show ID to known contacts), and way at the bottom, the awesome AT&T services menu that remembers the codes for things like checking bill balance, viewing minutes, etc.

    Safari - Set your search engine (Google, Yahoo), on / off switches for JavaScript, plug-ins (what plug ins?), pop-ups. There's also a cookies menu, and clear history / cookies / cache buttons.
    iPod - Audiobook speed, EQ, volume limiter, etc.

    iTunes, activation, and sync



    As with the iPod, setting up and syncing the iPhone in iTunes is meant to be an incredibly easy experience, and for the most part it is. You're (obviously) required to have iTunes 7.3 to get it going, bet starting the guided activation setup is as easy as plugging in your phone. Although a huge number of people had understandably maddening issues during launch that caused them to be unable to use their new phones for up to a couple of days, we were able to burn through a number of different types of activations (new AT&T customer, existing AT&T customer, non-ported number, ported number, etc.) on about a half dozen phones, each in under 10 minutes -- none had any issues. It stands to reason that as the initial sales glut for the iPhone fades, this process will only become more stable.

    Once your device is recognized by iTunes, you can select which contacts groups, calendars, music, movies, podcasts, etc. you want to drop onto the iPhone. It took us under a minute to sync a couple hundred contacts, and not much more to do a few hundred calendar appointments. We moved about 1.5GB of music and movies over to the device in about 10 minutes -- that's a little more than 2.5MB per second. Not unbelievably fast, but if you wanted to completely refresh the entire capacity of your iPhone, that process would take under 50 minutes, which is reasonable enough. Syncing photos with your desktop is less automated than we would have liked. On a Mac, users are expected to pop open iPhoto and import manually. iTunes also backs up your iPhone's non-synced settings, such as SMS conversations, notes, call history, contact faves, sound settings, and so on. We tried it out, and sure enough, it worked well enough -- even saved our browser history. WiFi passwords? Naw, not so much.

    Not surprisingly, syncing to a PC is a different experience than syncing to a Mac. PC users shouldn't expect to have the iPhone take advantage of all of Vista's new iLife-like lifestyle software suite (Windows Mail, Calendar, Address Book, etc.), users can only use Outlook (not Outlook Express) to sync content. On a PC sync worked perfectly, strangely enough (considering it worked less than perfectly on a Mac). Outlook was kind enough to copy contacts and calendar appointments back and forth with ease. It was almost eerie watching an iPhone interact better with a PC and Microsoft software than with a Mac and Apple software, but kudos to Cupertino for not leaving Windows users out in the cold on this one.

    Data performance

    Apple and AT&T are banking that a two-line attack of WiFi plus a recently-enhanced EDGE network is going to quell the call for 3G in the iPhone -- in its first iteration, anyway. We see at least three problems with that approach. First, UMTS employs a more advanced vocoder than 2G does, so we're losing out on the opportunity for moderately improved voice quality. Second, on its best day, EDGE is sill an order of magnitude slower than HSDPA on its worst day (we're talking about both throughput and latency here, with the latter often being a better indicator of perceived speed). Third -- and perhaps most importantly -- AT&T's EDGE network can't support simultaneous voice and data. Read: if you're moving data to or from your iPhone, calls will go straight to voicemail. Big time bummer. The thought of browsing with Safari on the iPhone's magnificent display while chatting on Bluetooth is a seductive one, but it ain't gonna happen.

    That being said, is EDGE bearable for the iPhone's core services? We'd sorta expected that Apple would've fine-tuned all of the iPhone's first-party apps to behave reasonably well regardless of what kind of data network you were feeding on, but we found that wasn't necessarily the case. Browsing in Safari was a generally satisfying experience (thanks partly to the fact that typically-large embedded Flash objects don't load), ditto for Mail, Weather, and Stocks, but YouTube really tried our patience.

    For a couple hours after activating the phone, we couldn't play videos period -- possibly because YouTube's and Apple's servers were being hit so hard by new owners putting their handsets through their paces -- but once we could finally get things going, we were left disappointed by load times, buffering issues, and errors. To put things in perspective, videos consistently started playing within four seconds on WiFi, whereas YouTube frequently ran over fifteen seconds. Our high was a staggering 58.1 seconds!

    We guess we could live with an average of fifteen seconds, though, if they always ended up playing. They didn't. When on EDGE, we'd estimate that 10 to 15 percent of the videos we try to play churn for a few seconds then bring up a message simply (and unhelpfully) informing us that the movie can't be played. Maybe the oddest bit of all this YouTube drama is that the videos run at a much lower resolution on EDGE than they do on WiFi, obviously in an attempt to make load times reasonable and streaming possible. Perhaps that sitch will improve over time with better encoding, better EDGE, and firmware upgrades -- but for now, we're declaring YouTube a WiFi-only app.

    On that note, WiFi is a breath of fresh air that turns the iPhone into a data-munching powerhouse. Annoyances like slow load times in YouTube and Maps melt away, generally giving the device a very different feel. The iPhone's WiFi implementation is seamless but moderately annoying out of the box; by default, the phone regularly prompts you if you want to connect to the strongest available network, which gets old really fast, especially when walking down the street. This can be turned off from the WiFi settings, which is prominently placed near the top of the settings app -- second item, in fact, right after the Airplane Mode toggle.

    Other WiFi settings include a switch for the WiFi radio (not to be confused with Airplane Mode, which'll also disable the cell radio and Bluetooth) and a list of nearby SSIDs which is automatically populated when you enter the screen and refreshed about every eight seconds. Next to each network's SSID is an icon indicating whether encryption is being used, a three-bar signal strength indicator, and a blue arrow that you tap for advanced configuration (more on that in a moment). Simply tapping the SSID will connect you to the network, or if a WEP key or WPA password is necessary, you'll be prompted.

    After the connection is successful, the "E" icon in the status bar is replaced with a signal strength indicator -- not the most obvious way of showing that you're connected to WiFi, but sure, we get the point. If a particular network requires advanced configuration, you can tap the blue arrow at the far right which displays the IP address, subnet mask, gateway, and so on (if you're already connected), allows you to choose a method of IP address acquisition (DHCP, BootIP, or static), and set an HTTP proxy if necessary. If the network is already "remembered" for the phone, a "Forget this Network" button appears at the top to kill it from your preferred list.

    Wrap-up

    We're not huge fans of "conclusions" in reviews -- or number systems, or one liner pros / cons / bottom-lines for that matter. Devices have become so feature-rich over the years that potential buyers' decisions can be made or broken on the support, quality, or integration of just one or two features. For us that's exactly the case with the iPhone -- although the list of things it doesn't do is as long as the list of things it does, it's only a few small, but severe, issues about the device that truly galvanizes our opinion of it.

    It's easy to see the device is extraordinarily simple to use for such a full-featured phone and media player. Apple makes creating the spartan, simplified UI look oh so easy -- but we know it's not, and the devil's always in the details when it comes to portables. To date no one's made a phone that does so much with so little, and despite the numerous foibles of the iPhone's gesture-based touchscreen interface, the learning curve is surprisingly low. It's totally clear that with the iPhone, Apple raised the bar not only for the cellphone, but for portable media players and multifunction convergence devices in general.

    But getting things done with the iPhone isn't easy, and anyone looking for a productivity device will probably need to look on. Its browser falls pretty short of the "internet in your pocket" claims Apple's made, and even though it's still easily the most advanced mobile browser on the market, its constant crashing doesn't exactly seal the deal. The iPhone's Mail app -- from its myriad missing features to its un-integrated POP mail experience to its obsolete method of accessing your Gmail -- makes email on the iPhone a huge chore at best.

    For us, the most interesting thing about the iPhone is its genesis and position in the market. Apple somehow managed to convince one of the most conservative wireless carriers in the world, AT&T (then Cingular), not only to buy into its device sight-unseen, but to readjust its whole philosophy of how a device and carrier should work together (as evidenced by the radically modernized and personalized activation process). Only a few days after launch it's easy to see June 29th as a watershed moment that crystalized the fact that consumers will pay more for a device that does more -- and treats them like a human being, not a cellphone engineer. Imagine that.

    But is the iPhone worth the two year contract with the oft-maligned AT&T and its steep price of admission? Hopefully we gave you enough information about the iPhone's every detail to make an informed decision -- despite the iPhone's many shortcomings, we suspect the answer for countless consumers will be a resounding yes.

    Source : http://www.engadget.com