Showing posts with label App Store. Show all posts
Showing posts with label App Store. Show all posts

What Do iOS 8 And The New iPhones Mean For You?

Well, Apple’s new operating system (iOS 8) and iPhones (6 and 6 Plus) are officially out. What does the OS update mean for you? Should you get one of the new phones? We’ll try to help you answer those questions throughout the course of this article.

What do you think of the new devices? The new OS? .


First things first. Here’s what iOS 8 looks like.
Just kidding. If you don’t want to, you don’t even have to keep the new U2 album in your iTunes library
If you found it, and were less than thrilled, just know that was Apple and the band being “punk rock” and “disruptive”.

Okay, let’s move along. iOS 8

Apple calls the new version the biggest iOS release ever. It features major updates to apps like Messages and Photos, new content sharing capabilities, and new connections between apps and devices.
“Quickly find and edit the photos you take,” Apple says of the release. “Add your voice right in a text message. Let your health and fitness apps communicate with each other, with your trainer, and even with your doctor. We’ve also provided developers with deeper access and more tools. You’ll have new keyboard options and even more ways to share your content. And you’ll be able to use iCloud and Touch ID in ways you never have before.”
The new Photos app has new search features and smart albums that take care of your photo organization, makes your shots look better, and has new editing tools.


Messages lets you tap to record and send voice or video message. You can also share your location easily.


The iOS 8 interface gives you a new way to respond to notifications as well as shortcuts for those you talk to most. There are also new Mail management features.


The virtual keyboard adds contextual word suggestions as you type, even recognizing who you’re typing to and whether you’re in Mail or Messages.


There’s a Family Sharing feature that lets up to six people in your household share each other’s purchases from iTunes, iBooks, and the App Store. It lets families keep up with each other’s photos, calendars, and locations, as well.


iCloud Drive lets you work on any file from any device, and the OS connects with Macs in a deeper way than was previously possible. You can start an email on one device, for example, and continue it on another. You can even answer phone calls from your iPhone on your Mac or iPad, and send SMS messages from any of these devices.



Also included is an activity tracker, heart rate monitor, and other health and fitness apps that communicate with each other.


For developers, the iOS 8 SDK has over 4,000 new APIs, and includes new sharing options, widgets, custom actions and document APIs.
iOS 8 became available on Wednesday, and is available for iPhone 4s, iPhone 5, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, iPod touch 5th generation, iPad 2, iPad with Retina display, iPad Air, iPad mini, and iPad mini with Retina display.
iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus
The iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus became available on Friday, but even before that, the the reviews from the tech blogs were overwhelmingly positive.


The iPhone 6 is a “thin, sexy phone with a killer camera,” says noted tech journalist David Pogue.
The device is “the best smartphone you can buy,” according to Walt Mossberg at Re/code.
“The iPhone 6 is a great upgrade for current iPhone owners, or for anyone, really. It manages to provide a much larger display in a phone that’s still small enough to handle easily,’ he writes.
The sentiments are echoed throughout the…echo chamber. Most have just about the same amount of praise for the iPhone 6 Plus, but some do find it to be just too big.
John Gruber, who is perhaps the most well-known blogger of all things Apple, says, “If you simply want a bigger iPhone, get the 4.7-inch iPhone 6. That’s what it feels like: a bigger iPhone. If you want something bigger than an iPhone, get the 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus. It feels more like a new device — a hybrid device class that is bigger than an iPhone but smaller than an iPad Mini — than it feels like a bigger iPhone.”
He adds, “If you don’t want a bigger iPhone — and in recent weeks I’ve heard from numerous readers who still pine for the 3.5-inch display iPhones — you might be disappointed by this year’s iPhone lineup, and should consider sticking with the iPhone 5-class models.”
Read Gruber’s take for probably the most comprehensive review of the devices out there so far.
But all of that was from the media. What do average people think about the devices? Well, here’s a real-time feed of the iPhone conversation on Twitter, so see for yourself:
In light of recent celebrity photo leaks, the security of Apple devices has come into question, which is probably why Tim Cook wrote a letter for the company’s website addressing security and privacy concerns. Here are a couple of excerpts from that:
Security and privacy are fundamental to the design of all our hardware, software, and services, including iCloud and new services like Apple Pay. And we continue to make improvements. Two-step verification, which we encourage all our customers to use, in addition to protecting your Apple ID account information, now also protects all of the data you store and keep up to date with iCloud.
We believe in telling you up front exactly what’s going to happen to your personal information and asking for your permission before you share it with us. And if you change your mind later, we make it easy to stop sharing with us. Every Apple product is designed around those principles. When we do ask to use your data, it’s to provide you with a better user experience.
Our business model is very straightforward: We sell great products. We don’t build a profile based on your email content or web browsing habits to sell to advertisers. We don’t “monetize” the information you store on your iPhone or in iCloud. And we don’t read your email or your messages to get information to market to you. Our software and services are designed to make our devices better. Plain and simple.
One very small part of our business does serve advertisers, and that’s iAd. We built an advertising network because some app developers depend on that business model, and we want to support them as well as a free iTunes Radio service. iAd sticks to the same privacy policy that applies to every other Apple product. It doesn’t get data from Health and HomeKit, Maps, Siri, iMessage, your call history, or any iCloud service like Contacts or Mail, and you can always just opt out altogether.
Cook also makes it a point to note that Apple has never worked with a government agency from any country to create a backdoor in any of its products or services, and has never allowed access to services (and “never will”).
The NFC feature of the new iPhone models only support Apple Pay, which is the company’s new payment mechanism for users to pay for good and services in the physical world (as well as online). Still, the company already has 220,000 retail locations on board for that.
In case you’re wondering how the phones stack up against their Android counterparts, here’s a comparison with the Samsung Galaxy S5.
Oh, and don’t forget, if you get an iPhone, you’ll be able to use that Apple Watch when it comes out.
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Google Maps Rapidly Seized App Store

App Store running on iPad version of iOS 4.3.5
App Store running on iPad version of iOS 4.3.5 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Google Maps for iOS, a lot of people have downloaded it.  Google released that the Google Maps software was downloaded more than 10 million times in the first two days on the App Store only.  Google’s application rapidly seized the first position of the most downloaded free applications.  The release of the software took everybody by surprise because the first news about its arrival appeared only a few hours before it went live. 


Jeff Hubber, the Senior Vice President of Google’s Commerce & Local, wrote that the company is very excited about the high number of people who downloaded the software, and also he’s grateful for the hard work that the Maps team poured into it.

The Google Maps application comes with some features that user no longer found in the standard maps software.   Apart from the classic public transit directions and the Street View technology, the applications also brings several new functions like the vector-based map tiles and spoken turn-by-turn driving directions.


Apple stated that over 200 million Apple customers were running iOS 6 in October to highlight the 10 million downloads so far, which represent about half of the iOS devices sold until that date. The users that have their devices running on iOS 5 and below still have the mapping software developed by Apple which uses data from Google.  Neither Google nor Apple have specified for how long that functionality will go on.

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Educational Apple iMac 21.5-Inch Model Revealed

Educational Apple iMac 21.5-Inch Model RevealedApple has unveiled a new version of its popular iMac series. The new Apple iMac is a 21.5 inch educational offering available to schools and universities.

The new model features all of the basic options available via consumer devices, however it scales down the processor to a dual-core Intel i3 option, rather than the quad-core i5 setup. Also changed is the GPU which now features an Intel HD 4000 integrated graphics card in place of a discrete card option.

The new 21.5-inch iMac is $100 more expensive than previous education models but it makes up for that pricing with double the storage capacity and double the RAM.
Educational iMac 21 5 inch


For comparison sake, the previous education iMac model features a 3.1 GHz dual-core i3 processor, 2GB RAM and a 250 hard drive. The new model features a 3.3GHz processor, 4GB RAM and a 500GB hard drive.

While the original education version featured a Firewire 800 connector, the new version offers Apple’s Thunderbolt port. The new educational iMac also brings with it USB 3.0 and Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity options.

The new educational suite also follows suite with older versions by ditching an optical drive.

Apple has also decided to go with a wired Apple Keyboard and a wired Apple Mouse in place of its preferred Magic Mouse and wireless keyboard setup.

Educational buyers can pick up the new iMac version for $1099, that’s nearly $200 cheaper than the consumer version of the 21.5-inch iMac. While the discount is welcomed the consumer version features a much faster processor, Nvidia GeForce GPU, 8GB RAM and a 1TB hard drive.

Individuals and families are barred from buying the new 21.5-inch iMac which is earmarked for institutional purchases only.


Educational Apple iMac 21.5-Inch Model Revealed

While Apple is listing most iMac models in the US with 24 hour shipping periods, the education version is showing a 5-7 day delay. Apple is also offering upgrades on the system which will likely delay the shipping process further.

Do you think the new educational Apple iMac is a good deal?

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This App Packages News and Social Streams Into Video




Guideapp2

So many blogs, so little time. For those who can't get enough of the news, but don't have hours to comb through sites and streams for the latest information, a new iPad app called Guide packages articles into video so you don't have to read.
The best part is you can pick an avatar of your liking to serve as your broadcaster — want a kitten to read you stories about animals? No problem. How about a British journalist to fill you in on breaking news about foreign policy? Coming right up.

Guide App

The concept — developed by founder and CEO Freddie Laker and COO Leslie Bradshaw, a co-founder of popular digital agency JESS3 — aims to make getting the news easier than ever.
"There are people who are passionate about news and web content, and don't have time to read it all," Laker told Mashable. "This allows you to consume that content while getting dressed in the morning or keeping a tablet next to the computer while you work. Because you can also see embedded videos, the app is essentially a visual news reader."
Similar to how you can leave the TV on for background noise, Guide can be left on and automatically pulls articles from the sites you love. It also integrates with Facebook and Twitter, so it will turn those stories into video reports based on what links have been shared in your social networking feeds.

The company said it is looking into partnerships with celebrities, so you could get your news from a Hollywood star as an in-app purchase.
"People will eventually be able to purchase celebrity avatars because wouldn't it be so fun to have Mr. T read you the news?" Laker added. "There is a lot of room for expression and brand partnerships too."
Although the app is only available for the iPad now (in alpha form), it will roll out to other platforms soon. Its beta public launch is scheduled for March.
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AR.Drone 2.0: An Awesome, High-Flying Father’s Day Gift

he Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 is expensive ($299) and can only fly for 15 minutes on a charge, but it’s still a leading contender for the best Father’s Day gift you might ever buy.
Getting Started
Flying
Soaring

When I tried out the new AR.Drone earlier this year, I sensed its entertainment value, but it wasn’t until I brought it home and took it for a bunch of real test flights that I discovered the compelling nature of this remote-control flying and HD video-recording entertainment device. It’s best described as your own personal spy drone. The AR.Drone 2.0 is the follow-up to the widely discussed AR.Drone 1, which made a splash a couple of years ago as a unique iPhone-controlled quadropcopter. The best part of it? You could see what the AR.Drone’s standard definition camera saw. The copter responded to the on-screen flight controls.
Today’s AR.Drone sports two cameras: a standard-definition camera in its belly that points at the ground and a 720p HD camera. That camera not only shows you what the copter sees, but also lets you capture HD video files on your smart phone or tablet (iOS and Android devices).
Setting up the AR.Drone 2.0 is easy enough. It comes with two bodies; one with protective foam rings for indoor flights (they’ll protect your plants, furniture, small children and pets from the largish rotor blades), and a leaner body for outdoor flights. Under the hull (which is held in place by a strong magnet) is the rechargeable battery and a USB port (more on that later). There’s a wall-wart battery charger — you need to charge the battery for about an hour and a half. The flyer ships with a quick-start guide, but the full manual can only be found online. That guide was far more helpful than the thick quick-start guide that devotes 80% of its pages to other languages. The software you’ll need to control AR.Drone, AR.FreeFlight 2.0, is freely available for download via the App Store and Google Play.
You can’t fly the AR.Drone until you connect it to your smartphone or tablet via Wi-Fi (802.11A/B G and N). This, too, is easy. The AR Drone shows up as a Wi-Fi hotspot. Unfortunately, once you’re connected to the AR.Drone, your Wi-Fi is not connected to anything else (your smartphone and tablet’s 3G or 4G will be working just fine, though).
Once the connection is set up, you can open the AR.Freeflight 2 application and start to fly. AR.Drone is equipped with a fair amount on intelligence to make this less daunting than it appears. The Drone knows its altitude, its position relative to your phone or tablet, and speed (up to 1000 millimeters per second). Plus, the Freeflight 2 app makes it pretty easy to control the AR.Drone 2.0’s precise movements.
I tapped the large green “Take off” button on the screen and the AR.Drone 2.0 lifted about three meters off the ground. Indoors, I quickly found that there really wasn’t enough room to fly the quadrocopter.
I changed out the hull and took it outside, but I have to admit that it was always a struggle to see my iPad screen and on-screen controls in the sunlight. Eventually, though, I made it work. (Turning up the brightness on my iPad helped.)
The AR.Drone will hover patiently in one spot until you take control. The right thumb stick controls which direction the drone points and its altitude. It’s the easier of the two controls — a move of your thumb to the right, for example, and the AR.Drone smartly turns 90 degrees to the right. Once you’ve spent enough time flying the drone, you get used to turning it slowly in any direction, all by shifting your thumb.
AR.Freeflight 2.0’s left-side control takes more, well, finesse. As soon as you place your thumb on that circle, the accelerometer in your phone or tablet is controlling the movement of the AR.Drone. The sharper your moves (tilting forward and back and left and right), the faster the copter moves. If you tip hard, the copter tips and its four blades send it whizzing forward. You have two ways of controlling the copter in this manner: through your device’s accelerometer or in Joystick mode. The latter replaces the accelerometer with an on-screen virtual joystick, makes the control relative to your position and actually makes the drone ten times easier to control.
Getting good at flying in any mode takes practice. I’d say that by my fourth flight, I felt like I had the knack of it.
But good flying is not the best part.
Yes, sending the AR.Drone 2.0 up to 100 meters in the air (the default is just three meters) is exhilarating, but also terrifying because a good wind could take the quadrocopter away and out of your control. (Keep in mind that you’re connected to it via Wi-Fi, which is good for about 300 ft.) However, it’s what the drone can do when it’s up in the air that’s impressive. It can record everything in sharp, wide-angle 720 P video. That MPEG 4 video will either stream directly to your phone or tablet (provided they have the on-board room) or to an under-the-hull USB key (which plugs into the USB port I mentioned earlier) that can fly with the AR.Drone.
While the AR.Drone is way up there you can fly around, turn it 360 degrees and even perform a flip maneuver. I did all this and recorded everything. The video looks great. Video recorded with the SD base camera was just so-so however, and I rarely used it.
You get just 15 minutes of flying time before the AR.Drone runs out of juice. As you fly, AR.FreeFlight 2.0 beeps to warn you that you’re running out of power (you can also see the percentage remaining on the screen). When you get close to 0% remaining, the AR.Drone will take over and land the quadrocopter before it runs out of power and crashes. You can also simply hit the large, green “Land” button and the AR.Drone will gently lower to the ground. Ultrasonic sensors tell it how far it is from the ground so it’s almost never a hard landing.
Is the foam, metal and plastic Drone tough? You betcha. On one of my first flights, I sent it careening into the top portion of a very tall tree. AR.Drone 2.0 has an emergency cut-off so the rotors stop spinning as soon as they hit an obstruction. This is useful for avoiding injury and damaging other objects, but it also means that when I crashed into that tree, the flyer stopped flying and plummeted to the ground with a significant thud that I heard from 150 yards away. The AR.Drone 2.0 was undamaged and flew again and again after that. (See the video above for proof.)
Like I said, the AR.Drone is not cheap. I wish it cost $99, but a sub-$100 flyer would not have the number of sensors, intelligence and companion software found in the AR.Drone. Should the battery life be longer? Maybe, but the flyer likely couldn’t carry a much larger battery and fly the way it does. That battery, by the way, gets very, very hot by the end of a full flight. I wonder what would happen if it could fly longer. There is also the question of what that fast drain will do to the battery life. It would not be great if the battery was done after only a few months.
And yet, I love the thing. I had so much fun flying it, capturing video and even posting it on YouTube. There are games to play, too. They come in the software, but half of them require someone else also own an AR.Drone 2.0. As much fun as those games are, (a couple incorporate Augmented Reality), I prefer simply flying the AR.Drone in a big open space and capturing the true bird’s eye view. It’s a total rush and, I promise, dads will love it.unTra lai em niem vui khi duoc gan ben em, tra lai em loi yeu thuong em dem, tra lai em niem tin thang nam qua ta dap xay. Gio day chi la nhung ky niem buon... http://nhatquanglan.xlphp.net/


Tra lai em niem vui khi duoc gan ben em, tra lai em loi yeu thuong em dem, tra lai em niem tin thang nam qua ta dap xay. Gio day chi la nhung ky niem buon... http://nhatquanglan.xlphp.net/
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Top 10 Settings to Change on Your iPhone 4S


Change Email Notifications


Auto App Download Settings

The iPhone 4S is ready to go right out of the box, but if you want an optimal experience, there are a number of steps you should take shortly after getting your new iPhone.

I already showed you the First 5 Things to Do When you Get your iPhone 4S for Setup and Security, but now I want to share 10 iPhone 4S settings you should change right away.

If you change these settings will give you a better experience, and a few of them will keep you from annoying those around you as you use your iPhone 4S.

Read our iPhone 4S reviewfor everything else you need to know about your new phone.

Change your iPhone Ringtone
1. Change Your Default Ringtone

Do yourself and every other iPhone owner around you a favor and change your default ringtone as soon as possible. It’s not that the Marimba isn’t a beautiful ringtone, it’s just that you’ll think your phone is ringing more often than it really is.

To change your ringtone, follow these steps. 
Tap Settings 
Choose Sounds 
Tap on Ringtone 
Choose a standard ringtone or tap on Buy More Tones to purchase a ringtone. 

You can also add your own ringtones in iTunes, if you don’t want to pay for ringtones included with the iPhone 4S.
2. Turn on % in Battery Meter


Turn Battery Percentage On.

Instead of guessing how much battery life is really left on your iPhone, you can turn on the percentage indicator. This small toggle will add the percent of battery life left to your iPhone 4S’ top bar.

I prefer this over the default battery information, because you get a more accurate reading. One downside is that you may think your battery is draining quicker, but that’s just your mind playing tricks on you.

To switch battery % on, follow these steps. 
Tap Settings 
Choose General 
Tap Usage 
Scroll down and flip the Battery Percentage toggle On. 

From now on, you’ll know when your battery is getting low, without waiting for a popup notification or the icon to turn red.
3. Passcode Lock


Protect Your iPhone 4S

If you didn’t already do this, you should add a Passcode to your iPhone 4S. This will prevent others form accessing your data and using your iPhone without permission.

Setting up a 4 digit pass code takes a few seconds, and is worth doing. Just don’t pick an easy Passcode like ’1111′ or ’1234′.

To set up a Passcode, follow these steps. 
Tap Settings 
Choose General 
Scroll down to Passcode Lock 
Tap on Passcode Lock 
Choose to Turn Passcode On at the top. 
Enter a 4 digit code you can remember. 


That’s it, now your iPhone 4S is password protected.

Choose a New Passcode Lockout
4. Change Passcode Lockout Time

If you use your iPhone often, you will want to adjust the Passcode lockout time so that you don’t have to enter the iPhone Passcode every time you pickup your iPhone 4S.

While you are in the Passcode lock settings, Tap on Require Passcode.

Choose a longer time frame. I would suggest moving it up to at least 5 minutes.

I settled on 15 minutes after finding out that I rarely go 15 minutes without picking up my iPhone 4S for the first few days of use.

You can change your lock settings at any time, but you will need to remember your Passcode to do so.
5. Auto Download Apps When Purchased on Computer

WiFi sync is great and all, but if you want to have your apps arrive as you purchase them, instead of when you sync, you can enable app auto downloads.

This setting needs turned on in two places to make it work. You also need to be signed in with your Apple ID on the computer you are purchasing from and on your iPhone 4S.

To turn on App auto downloads on your iPhone, follow these steps. 
Choose Settings 
Tap on Store 
Switch the Automatic Download toggles for Books, Apps and Music 
If you have a limited data plan, make sure that Use Cellular Data is set to off 

Ensure that you have the correct Apple ID listed at the bottom of the page.


Turn on App Auto Downloads in iTunes

To turn on app automatic downloads on your computer, follow these steps 
Open iTunes 
Open iTunes Preferences 
Click on Store in the middle of the preference icons 
Check the Automatic Downloads check boxes 
Click OK 

From now on, you can purchase and browse the App store from iTunes on your computer, and have what you buy automatically downloaded to your iPhone. This also works on the iPad and other iOS 5 devices.
6. Turn on WiFi Sync

While Automatic Downloads are a great way to send apps and music to your iPhone 4S, you will still want to turn on WiFi Sync to keep playlists and more in sync across all of your devices.

We have a full guide to Setting Up iTunes WiFi Sync, which should take just a minute to enable.

Keep in mind, you will need to be connected to the same network and your iPhone 4S needs power to perform a WiFi Sync. This will typically happen every night when you plug in to charge up.
7. Email Notifications

Email notifications are a very personal thing, but if you get a lot of email I suggest turning off the email notification sound effect. You might even want to turn off email notifications all together, and just check your email when you want to know.

To change your email notification sound, or turn off the sound all together, follow these steps. 
Choose Settings 
Tap on Sounds 
Scroll down to New Email and tap it. 
To turn it off, tap on Choose None 
To pick a new tone, choose from the list below or click Buy More Tones 
This is a good time to look at the rest of your notifications. 

If you want to turn off the notification on your lock screen, or customize email notifications, learn how to use Notification Center in iOS 5.
8. Turn Home Sharing On

Home Sharing allows you to access your iTunes music while you are on the same network. Think of this as a local version of iCloud and iTunes Match that is free. Instead of paying $24.95 a year, you can have your entire catalog of music available when your iPhone and computer are on the same network.


Home Sharing Settings

You’ll need to turn on Home Sharing on your computer and on your iPhone 4S to make this work.

On your iPhone 4S, follow these instructions. 
Tap on Settings 
Choose Music 
Enter your Apple ID and Password in the boxes at the bottom of the settings menu. 

On your computer, follow these directions. 
Open iTunes 
Open iTunes Preferences 
Click on the Sharing icon at the top of the Preferences. 
Check, Share my library on my local network 

If you are on a college campus or workplace, you may want to add a password so that others cannot see your music selection or access it.
9. Turn Off Keyboard Clicking



Keyboard Click Settings

For the sanity of everyone you use your iPhone around, turn off keyboard clicking. At the very least, you should know where this setting is, so that you can disable it when you are in a crowd. 
Head back into Settings 
Tap on Sounds 
Scroll to the bottom and toggle Keyboard Clicks to Off 

If you need to turn off sounds like this when you enter a meeting, you can just flip the mute switch at the top right of your iPhone, but if you don’t need clicks all the time, this is a nice setting to change.
10. Turn Off Ping


No Ping = Better Battery Life

If you don’t use Ping, and you want better battery life on your iPhone 4S, here’s how to turn Ping off.

Ping is Apple’s music social network, which hasn’t gained much traction and doesn’t do much on most iPhones other than eat away at battery life.

Turning off Ping reportedly helps battery life. Without scientific tests, I can’t tell you how much yet, but I do know that it does offer some improvement.

To Turn off Ping, follow these directions. 
Tap on Settings 
Choose General 
Scroll down and pick Restrictions 
You will need to Enable Restrictions 
Create a 4 digit Passcode 
Change Ping from On to Off 
Exit the settings. 

Enjoy better iPhone 4S battery life.
Learn More about iOS 5 and the iPhone 4S

For more on the iPhone 4S and iOS 5, check out the following How to Guides. 

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Throughout the iPhone’s evolution there has been much discussion about the design and the late Steve Jobs’ desire for a clean piece of hardware that had few buttons, no indicator lights and such. In fact there was some speculation that the iPhone’s home button would disappear on the still to be seen iPhone 5 or whatever that will be.

One of the things that some Blackberry users (and even one Pre user) have mentioned to me is that they miss indicator lights when they move to the iPhone. Well, there is a way to get an indicator light of sorts if you want one. Here’s how.

First got to the Accessibility section of Settings. (Settings, General, Accessibility.)

Then scroll down until you find LED Flash for Alerts and turn it on.

What this does is it causes the LED flash normally used for the camera to flash when you have an Alert come in. Of course the LED flash is on the back of the phone so if it is sitting on your desk or any other surface you won’t see it. It also only flashes for a few seconds when and Alert comes in and doesn’t keep flashing to remind you that you haven’t paid attention to the Alert yet. So, I won’t say this is a great solution if you’re missing your indicator light, but it will light up your shirt pocket in a pinch.

I don’t have an iPhone 4 anymore so I don’t know if this works on that device with iOS 5 or not, but it does work with the iPhone 4S. 
When you pick up your new iPhone 4S, Siri will be one of the coolest features, but right out of the box, you can’t tweet with Siri.
Siri is still in beta and doesn’t connect up to all of iOS 5 yet, let alone third party apps like Twitter or Tweetdeck. You don’t have to wait for Siri to gain access to your Twitter app, to start tweeting with Siri as soon as you get your iPhone 4S.
Siri is a personal assistant that can respond to many requests, using Artificial Intelligence to try to place your questions in context. from what we have seen, Siri isn’t perfect, but it offers many advancements over the voice control and simple dictation services offered on other devices. For more, read: What is Siri?
How to use Siri to Tweet
The great news is that Siri can send text messages, which means you just need to do a little prep to start sending tweets with Siri.
1. Open your Twitter Settings page.
2. Click on the Mobile tab




Set up Twitter to Tweet By Text to use Siri.
3. Make sure you have the phone number of your iPhone entered. If you haven’t done this, follow the prompts to link up your iPhone 4S phone number.
4. Add Twitter to your contacts with the phone number 40404. 
Sending messages may cost you money based on your plan, so make sure you know how many texts you can send to avoid a large bill. 

5. Hold the Home button on your iPhone 4S for 2 seconds to start Siri.

6. When Siri is ready, just say, Text Twitter, and then your tweet.

7. Keep in mind that your tweet will need to stay under 140 characters.

8. Siri will confirm that you want to send the message, if you do, confirm and you will send a Tweet.

These tweets will appear in your timeline just like normal. While it will be much harder to reply to someone or to @ includes someone in a message, you can still use Siri to tweet complaints about traffic or share with all of your followers.
Do More with Siri on Twitter



Send a Text Message to Twitter with Siri

If you want Siri to read you Tweets, you will need to turn on message notifications in the Mobile tab.

You can have text message alerts for users you have activated mobile notifications, direct messages or replies. These will arrive as basic text messages. Personally this is too much for me, but if you only subscribe to replies or DMs, you might be OK with this. Because it is a text message, Siri can read it to you.

In addition to reading select tweets by text, you can ask Siri to do more. These commands may not work out real well, based on how good Siri is at understanding the usernames you are trying to include, but you can give it a shot. 
FOLLOW username - Start following a user 
UNFOLLOW username - Stop following a user 
ON/OFF Turn all Tweet notifications on or off 
ON/OFF username - Set Tweet notifications for a user on or off (you’ll still be following them even if you set it to off) 
GET username - Shows you the latest tweet from any user 
RETWEET username - Retweet a user’s latest tweet 
FAVORITE username - Favorite a user’s latest tweet 
DM username your – message - Send a direct message to a user 

Until we see official support for the Twitter app in Siri, this is one way you can tweet with Apple’s new intelligent personal assistant.

You can see a demo of how you send a text message in this video of Siri below. Check out 22 seconds in and just over a minute to see examples of texting with Siri. 







If you turn your iPhone to vibrate often while you’re in meetings then you know that feeling of feeling your iPhone vibrate but you can’t distinguish if it’s that important call or not.

In another catch up move, Apple now allows iOS 5 users to set up custom vibrations that are assigned to your various contacts in the same way you can set up a ringtone for a contact. These Customized Vibrations come with a few that are pre-defined and you can make your own.

It’s actually pretty simple to set up. 
Go to Settings, General, Accessibility 
Turn on Customized Vibrations 
Then head over to you Contacts and pick a Contact. 
Choose Edit 
Then Choose Vibration. It is right below Ringtone 
Once there you can choose one of the Standard Vibrations 
Or, you can choose Create New Vibration 
This brings you to the screen where you can tap away until your heart’s content to create whatever rhythm you want for the vibration. Hit Stop when done. 
Save it and that’s the Vibration for your Contact. 

Now when your contact calls and you have the phone set to vibrate you’ll feel all personal like with their dedicated buzz in your pocket. 




Depending how long it has been since you synced your iPhone, you might need to sync up to a new computer to get the new iOS 5 software update.

If you have your old computer, the process is a bit easier because you can transfer your music files over with an external hard drive.

If the only copy of your music files is on your iPhone or iPad, you will need to use a special tool to manually move them over to your new computer.

This guide is also helpful if you are switching from a Mac to a PC and want to change which computer your iPhone will wirelessly sync with.

You can manually move some of your files and information to a new Mac or PC, but the easiest way to start using your iPhone or iPad with a new computer is to get an app like iExplorer or PhoneView.

Be sure that you use one of these tools and follow the steps outlined below before you sync with iTunes on your new computer.
iPhone to New Mac

If you have a Mac, or are switching to a mac, PhoneView is your best bet. This app is $19.99 with a free 7-day demo to let you try things out.


With this app, you can copy all of your important files from your iPhone to your new Mac. PhoneView backs up the following items to your Mac; 
SMS and iMessages 
Photos 
Phone Voicemail 
Call History 
Third Party Data 
Full Contact List 
Mobile Safari Bookmarks 
Copy Movies and Photos to Your New Computer 


There’s no need to jailbreak your iPhone to make this work. After you use this tool to move items to your new computer, you should be able to use it to send them back.
iPhone to New PC


On the Windows Side, iExplorer is a great option. When you plug in your iPhone, iPhone Explorer will give you access to many of your important files such as; 
Photos 
Music 
Video 
SMS and Address Book With Jailbreak 
Third Party App Data 
And more 
Backup Contacts on iPhone

If you just want to backup your contacts from your iPhone, and restore them to a new iPhone, you can use iDrive Lite, a free iPhone app.
Additional Steps

In addition to using these tools, you need to make sure that you have the information backed up.

You can follow the directions in this video to transfer the apps and other purchased from your iPhone to your new computer. 

keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I'll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the

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