Monthly Archive for June, 2009

My Guide To The iPhone

If you have an iPhone and don’t know how to use it or have questions about how to do something check out Apple’s How-To.

This guide assumes you know how to use the iPhone and are looking to learn some handy tricks.

Adding addresses to contacts:
The easiest way I have found to add addresses to contacts is to search for and find them through the maps app first, then view the details of the location (the little blue arrow icon on the right) and click ‘Add to Contacts’.
This saves an accurately formatted address that the iPhone can easily read as opposed to having to try and figure out the gibberish you might be typing.

Airplane Mode:
Most people probably won’t have a use for this feature, but there are ways to make it handy if you need it. If you’re out in the middle of nowhere with no cell reception and don’t plan on going anywhere for a while, turn on airplane mode to conserve battery life.
Also if you happen to live in the middle of nowhere with no cell reception but you have wi-fi, it will work with airplane mode on, and still conserve your battery life.
Also if you want to make it seem like your phone is off but still be able to use it, airplane mode will send calls straight to voicemail.
Airplane mode will stop your cell phone from making or receiving calls and text messages, but since you have an iPhone with wi-fi, you should be able to keep in contact with most people anyway.

Sound Etiquette:
Everyone likes having their own ringtone when people call, that’s fine. There are however sounds that are unnecessary, like the ‘Sent Mail’ sound. Do you really need to know what it sounds like to send a mail? Other annoying sounds are the ‘Lock Sounds’ and ‘Keyboard Clicks’. If you press the button on the top of the phone, the screen will go black. You dont need a noise to let you know that you did it. Pretty much the same goes for keyboard clicks. Do you really like the sound it makes when you type? Does everyone need to know you’re typing? I don’t know about you but I like my privacy.

Turning off 3G:
Saves battery life. If you’re near wi-fi all the time you wont need it anyway.

Turning off Bluetooth:
Saves battery life. What are you using bluetooth for anyway? My opinion on this might change once more multiplayer apps come out since 3.0 allows better use of the bluetooth api.

1 minute Auto-Lock:
Saves battery life. This will turn off your screen after 1 minute of you not doing anything with it.

4 hour Passcode Lock:
Relieves irritation. Your phone will require a passcode 4 hours from the last time you used it. If you use your phone more than twice a day, you will only have to type your passcode in once when you wake up (because it will probably only lock while you’re asleep).

Erase Data:
Is BAD if for any reason you have trouble remembering your passcode. It’s a wonderfully security feature once you get used to typing your passcode all the time though.

Calendar & Contact Sync:
Google offers a free service to anyone with a Gmail account. Details and full instructions can be found at Google’s Mobile website.
I dont feel like going into a ton of detail for this but if you have any questions about it feel free to contact me for help.

Fetch New Data:
My best recommendation for this would be 15 minute fetch and push turned on.

Show 25 Recent Messages & Preview 1 Line:
Download less data at a time, don’t make the phone work harder than it needs to. Can you really read 50 two line previews in the blink of an eye? I cant even read 25 one line previews that fast. Use the load more buttons, they are nice.

Turn off the Equalizer:
Listen to the audio the way it was meant to be heard. Not filtered. Running the equalizer actually requires the iPhone to process the song before playing it. Processing takes power. The phone will perform slower and drain it’s battery faster.

“There’s an app for that”
If you normally do anything at all on the internet, from twitter to myspace, from games to boredum, from monitoring your bank account or bills to online shopping. “There’s an app for that”.

My app recommendations:
Tweetie – the perfect twitter app.
Fandango – great app for movie showtimes and purchasing tickets.
Hey Where Are You (HeyWAY) – tell your friends where you are and ask them where they are, with a map.
Instant Messenger & Social Network apps – whatever you prefer.

As mentioned above, if you have any questions feel free to ask me.

Tweetie FTW

The iPhone TweetDeck app [App Store, Free] is lovely for replicating it’s own desktop functionality, but Tweetie [App Store, $2.99] makes the Twitter experience feel comfortable and feel more native to the iPhone.

TweetDeck Pros:

  • The iPhone app seems to do everything that the desktop app does.
  • It has functionality for groups.
  • It’s speed is impressive.
  • It shows a little API usage counter for those interested.
  • I’ts free.

TweetDeck Cons:

  • The interface does not feel native to the iPhone.
  • It is difficult to navigate around certain aspects of Twitter (some may argue but I dislike how it handles profiles).
  • By default it is missing the ‘nearby’ feature that many other Twitter apps are sporting already (I know it can be added via search query, but I would imagine the average user would not know how to do it).
  • In order to search you have to add a column (Which I find rather irritating).
  • There does not seem to be a way to view trends.
  • Shake to Refresh is for morons.

Tweetie Pros:

  • The iPhone app has an nearly identical desktop app for the Mac.
  • The speed makes most other Twitter apps look bad.
  • The interface was made to work perfectly on the iPhone.
  • All the features you would expect from a mobile Twitter app (and more) are included (nearby, trends, search).
  • Searching for tweets or users is a breeze.
  • Profiles are extremely comfortable to view and follow/unfollow.

Tweetie Cons:

  • It does not have groups (I personally dont understand the need for groups, but it guess it counts as a missing feature).
  • If you’re a massive tweeter/tweet-checker you will have no idea when you’re close to the hourly API limit.
  • Version 1.3.1 of the app on firmware 3.0 seems to only display one nearby or search entry at a time (have to press load more to get one more each time – never had a problem before). [EDIT]This was caused by the Twitpocalypse and has been fixed in version 1.3.2[/EDIT]
  • There is a one time $3 fee to purchase the app (which I think is fair asking for this app).

In the end this is just my opinion, and some of my statements above may be untrue based on lack of knowledge on my part, but that’s how I see it.

I’ll stick with Tweetie.

Everyone Has iPhones Now

I feel much less lonely in a way. Greg got an iPhone earlier this year, and got the new 3GS yesterday. Mike has had the 1st Gen for a while. Now Lindsey, Alex and Kim all have a 3G.

I’ve done so much setup in the past two days it’s ridiculous.

On the up side nobody can yell at me for always playing with my iPhone now because I play with mine less than they play with theirs at this point.

Also everyone now has twitter (names are linked). Most had it a while ago, Alex actually had it before me (everyone else after me though)

The SIM Card Is The Problem?

I just called AT&T (4:30 pm pst) asking about MMS. I am fully aware of the post about AT&T reps not being allowed to activate MMS, I just wanted to try and see if I got lucky.

The conversation was actually pretty interesting. I told the rep I had pulled my SIM card from my iPhone to use it in my old RAZR (I actually did have a RAZR before I got my first iPhone) and that on the RAZR I could not send MMS. He did some research and said that the SIM card I have was made for the iPhone and wouldnt allow me to send MMS through another phone. He also said I could go to an AT&T store and get a SIM card that would work with BOTH my iPhone and my RAZR and it would allow me to send MMS on the RAZR, and that the card swap would be FREE.

I am yet to do this (I might) but if anyone else wants to try please let me know how it goes. If you do swap your SIM card, does it still work in your iPhone? Can you now send MMS on a different phone (RAZR in my case)? Can you now send MMS on your iPhone (assuming you did the little ‘hack’ that is supposed to let you)? Or is all of what the rep said BS and you already have MMS working on your iPhone?

I did the hack and tethering works fine, and I have the icon to send pictures, and my iPhone attempts to do so, but fails at the last second and gives me a little red (!) icon.

EDIT:
Just so people stop asking, the sim card is NOT the problem. An AT&T representative was naive enough to tell me that while I was trying to enable MMS on my iPhone. Think about it, if the sim card is the problem, that means anyone with an iPhone has to go into AT&T to have their sim card exchanged to make MMS work once AT&T is ready to allow it. That would be a large irritation and waste of time and resources for AT&T (they would be throwing away a lot of old sim cards).

A Better MMS/Tethering Method

My other post about early MMS & Tethering for AT&T didnt seem to show working results for me (some of my friends said it worked for them) so here is a new method I am trying.

http://www.krillr.com/blog/3DPQHBZ3/i-have-tethering-and-mms-on-my-iphone-and-yes-im-on-att

I’ll report back soon if it works.

[edit]
Tethering works fine, MMS seems to still be an issue.

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