iPhone 4 Three Cool Tricks




It seems as if Apple dodged a bullet. Ever since the Steve Jobs press conference a couple of weeks ago, in which Apple offered free carrying-case bumpers (or full refunds) to anyone whose iPhone 4 exhibited the “signal drops when you hold the phone a certain way” problem, the jeering and mockery online seems to have gone into hib

Meanwhile, enough time has passed, and enough millions of people have been playing with their iPhones, that a critical mass of tricks and tips have started to pile up. Here’s a look at three cool iOS 4 features that nobody, including Apple, seems to be talking about.

* Unified Contacts.
The iPhone (and iPod Touch) can sync up with different accounts. The Contacts app might list three different sets of names and numbers: one stored on your phone, one from a MobileMe account and a third from your corporate Exchange server at work. In the old days, certain names might show up in the All Contacts list two or three times, which isn’t helpful.

In iOS 4, the iPhone displays each person’s name only once in the All Contacts list. If you tap that name, you open up a Unified Info screen for that person. It includes all the details from ALL of the underlying cards from that person. All of the phone numbers, for example, are tidily rounded up into a single list.

To see which cards the iPhone is combining, scroll to the bottom of the card. There, the Linked Cards section shows you which cards have been unified.

Here, you can tap a listing to open the corresponding card in the corresponding account. You can also unlink one of the cards. For that matter, you can manually link a card, too; Tap Edit, tap Link Contact, and then choose a contact to link to this unified card — even if the name isn’t a perfect match.

In general, the iPhone tries to do the right thing. For example, if you edit the information on the Unified card, you’re actually changing that information only on the card in the corresponding account. (Unless you add information to the Unified Info card. In that case, the new data tidbit is added to all of the underlying source-account cards.)

* FaceTime tricks. FaceTime is the feature that lets the iPhone 4 make free, high-quality video calls to other iPhone 4 owners, providing both of you are in a Wi-Fi hot spot with a good signal. Now Grandma can see the baby, or you can help someone shop from afar, or you can supervise brain surgery even from thousands of miles away. (If you’re a brain surgeon, of course.)

Once the chat has begun, here’s some of the fun you can have:

First, you can rotate the screen. FaceTime works in either portrait (upright) or landscape (wide-screen) view; just turn your phone 90 degrees. (Of course, if your calling partner doesn’t also turn her phone, she’ll see your picture all squished and tiny, with big black areas filling the rest of the screen.)

Second, you can show what’s in front of you. Sometimes, YOU are not the important thing; sometimes, you’ll want to show your friend what you’re looking at. That is, you’ll want to turn on the camera on the back of the iPhone, the one pointing away from you, to show off the baby, the artwork or the broken engine part.

That’s easy enough; just tap the camera-rotation icon on your screen. The iPhone switches from the front camera to the back camera. Now you and your callee can both see what you’re seeing. (It’s a lot less awkward than using a laptop for this purpose, because the laptop’s camera always faces away from you–so you can’t see what you’re showing.)

Third, you can mute the audio by tapping the little microphone icon. Great when you need to yell at the kids.

You can also “mute” the video — just switch into any other program (press the Home button, for example). Now the other guy’s screen goes black. He can’t see what you’re doing when you leave the FaceTime screen. He can still hear you, though.

This feature was created to let you check your calendar, look something up on the Web or whatever, while you’re still video-chatting. But it’s also a great trick when you need to adjust your clothing, pick your nose or otherwise shield your activity from whomever’s on the other end.

In the meantime, the call is, technically, still in progress — and a green banner at the top of the Home screen reminds you of that. Tap there, on the green bar, to return to the video call.

* Spoken books. The free iBooks app, which is Apple’s answer to the Amazon Kindle, can actually read your books and PDF documents out loud to you.

To make this work, turn on VoiceOver, the text-to-speech feature that makes the iPhone usable by blind people. That is, open Settings -> General -> Accessibility and turn on VoiceOver. (There you can read about some of the other changes in your lifestyle that are required when VoiceOver is turned on; for example, you double-tap things instead of single-tapping them, because single-tapping makes the phone speak the name of whatever you’re tapping.)

Then open a book. Tap the first line (to get the highlighting off the buttons at top).

Now swipe down the page with two fingers to make the iPhone start reading the book to you, out loud, with a synthesized voice. It even turns the pages automatically and keeps going until you tap with two fingers to stop it.


iphone os 3.0


As I already said upgrading the iphone OS is not a tough nut to crack, its very simple and can be done by following the steps given below. But if by chance you want to downgrade then it can become real problem. But it does not mean it cannot be done but its better you read properly what iphone os 3.0 is all about before upgrading, read about it here.

Procedure:

• Connect your iphone to the computer and download the latest itunes version 8 if you don’t have it already. You can download it from here

• Once you have connected your phone you will see it under the devices tag in the itunes, select it from there.

• At the bottom you will see a check update button. Click on it to start download the latest updates for your iphone.

• You will the donlwoad progress. Make sure that you do not disconnect the phone until the download is complete.

• Once it’s complete, you are done. Isn’t that simple as I already said.

If you have an ipod touch, the procedure followed will still remain the same but the ipod touch users need to shell out $9.95 for the latest update.

HTC Hero - Specifications and Features


The new phone Hero runs on Qualcomm MSM7200A 528 MHz processor. It has 288MB RAM and 512MB ROM. It has a 3.2-inch 320×480 touch screen LCD display. This TFT screen will use capacitive technology and will support multi-touch. The 5MP camera comes with auto focus feature. It has a trackball with enter button and a GPS receiver.

The Hero includes the new HTC Sense widget-based interface. This will show information right up front on the home screen where it belongs. This phone allows you to view your contacts with the latest interactions you have had with that contact through social networking sites like Facebook, Flickr, YouTube, and Twitter.

This phone comes with 900/2100MHz HSPA and Quad-band GSM, trackball, GPS, 802.11b/g Wi-Fi, 3.5mm audio jack, G-sensor, compass, and 5 megapixel auto-focus cam with microSD expansion. The mobile will be available in Europe from july of this month and comes in white color with Teflon coating. This coating helps to keep things clean and dirt free. It has a Multi-touch and anti-fingerprint coating too.

Hero’s media player supports MP3, AAC (AAC, AAC+, and AAC-LC), AMR-NB, WAV, MIDI and WMA9 audio files and MPEG-4, H.263, H.264, WMV9 video formats. If has a 3.5mm headphone jack. This phone has a digital compass too. The phone will be available in Asia and North America later this year.

The specifications of the phone are:

* Processor: Qualcomm® MSM7200A™, 528 MHz
* Display: 3.2-inch TFT-LCD display with a 320 x 480 resolution
* Dimensions: 112 x 56.2 x 14.35 mm ( 4.41 x 2.21 x 0.57 inches)
* Weight: 135 grams ( 4.76 ounces) with battery
* Trackball
* 900/2100MHz HSPA and Quad-band GSM
* Internal GPS
* Bluetooth 2.0 with EDR and A2DP support
* 5 megapixel auto-focus camera
* G-sensor
* 802.11b/g Wi-Fi



Dashwire - Backups Pictures, Songs, Videos and Contacts Of Your Mobile Phone


Dashwire is a website that can easily integrate with your phone and provide you with the backup solution and much more. The best part is that Dashwire is free and you can try it by clicking on this link. However you will have to sign up for the first time. If you want to take a quick tour before you actually decide to sign up, you can do that also by clicking on this link .

Basic Features:

• Backup your phone

• Share your experiences

• Simplify your phone

Sometimes what happens is that we cannot take the backup because there is no data cable but if you use Dashwire, there is no need of the cables. Just sign up and your phone will connect to your Dashwire account and you can upload each and everything from your mobile phone to your password protected account. Now that was the basic functionality but if you are looking for a service that can enable you to share you mobile content, then you can do that also with ease.

You can share the uploaded content with your friends over almost all the social networking sites may it be flickr, facebook, twitter. You can organize your contents in folders and share them with friends at the same time make them private for some. Another good thing is that it takes minimal time to get connected, almost no configuration required. There is much more to Dashwire which you will know once you try it out.