With few exceptions, your iPhone can do
everything your desktop PC can do. Here are 10 easy ways to unlock your
iPhone's full potential.
Your iPhone came loaded with great software that lets you get driving directions, listen to music, watch YouTube, surf the Web, keep your appointments, and of course make phone calls. But the iPhone can do far more than that—it truly is a full-fledged computer that fits in your pocket. With few exceptions, your iPhone can do everything your desktop can do, often at no cost. Here are ten things you might not have thought of, all of which you can do without spending a dime.
Apple iPhone Tips 1-5
1. Send free SMS messages, or "fake" MMS messages.
If you find yourself running over your text message limit on your cellular plan, don't despair! As long as you know your friends' cell-phone company, you can send them text messages free using e-mail via their carriers' e-mail-to-SMS gateway. In most cases, you send an e-mail to your contact's phone number @[their carrier's URL]. We've compiled a list of the proper format for each carrier's SMS gateway. For example, to send a text to the AT&T phone number (555-595-5244), you'd e-mail 5555955244@txt.att.net. It takes a bit longer than traditional texting, but it will get there, and you won't have to pay the standard text-message rate. Using these gateways lets you get around one of the biggest limitations of the iPhone—the lack of multimedia messaging. Since you're sending e-mails, you can attach a photo, and your image will be delivered as an MMS message. Just add the e-mail-to-SMS address to your contacts as a second e-mail address so that you can access it easily, and you can stop worrying about whether iPhone 3.0 will support MMS or not.
2. Sync your iPhone's calendar with Google Calendar.
3. Make your own ringtones.
The iPhone has everything you need to keep a visual diary online. Many blogging platforms, such as Blogger, allow you to e-mail photos directly to the site. In fact, you can create a "moblog" on the fly by e-mailing go@blogger.com from your phone (they'll e-mail you back with log-in details so you can edit your blog later on, when you're at a computer). Posterous is another service that will let you set up a blog directly from your phone—e-mail post@posterous.com to set up a new blog or to add an existing one.
If you already have a blog and it doesn't accept posts by e-mail directly, you can e-mail images to your Flickr account and use the "Share This" link to post to most blogging platforms. Just set up a post-by-e-mail address at flickr.com/account/uploadbyemail and add the address to your iPhone's address book.
5. Find open Wi-Fi networks.
6. Give great speeches.
Your presentation is in 10 minutes and you just realized that you forgot to print out your presentation notes. Don't want your laptop obscuring your face while you speak? Save your document with a large typeface in Word, e-mail it to your iPhone, and open the attachment on your phone. You can easily scroll through your presentation with a touch while you're talking.
7. Scan documents.
The iPhone is no Canon Mark III, but it's pretty sweet for taking pictures of your friends or some cool scenery. Trouble is, its lack of a focus control makes it impossible to get clear close-up shots. Which is a shame considering there are services like Evernote and scanR that let you use the camera on your mobile phone as a scanner, even converting images into text or sending images as faxes.
What to do? Just put a magnifying glass or one of those credit-card-size magnifying sheets in front of the lens when taking close-up pictures. The improvement in the quality and clarity of your image will be stunning.
8. Take screenshots.
Capturing screenshots from any application or from the home screen is easy on the iPhone. Hold down the Home key and click the lock/off button on the top of the unit and you're done. The screen will flash white, and your iPhone will make the same shutter snap sound you get when you take a photo. Your screenshot will be added to the Camera Roll under the Photos app.
9. Slim down your wallet.
If you're like most people, your wallet contains far more cards than you use every day: grocery club cards, insurance cards, frequent flier cards, auto club cards, and who knows what else? Here's a cool idea: Scan or photograph these cards and store them on your iPhone instead. The screen is large and crisp enough that you can even scan barcodes from it—so if you scan, say, a grocery store customer loyalty card, you can simply hold the image of the barcode up to the barcode reader and get your sweet discounts. You might get some odd looks now and again, but your wallet—and your buttocks—will thank you for it.
10. Make it louder!
If you forgot your headphones or want to share your discoveries with your friends, try this neat trick: Lay your iPhone across the top of a cup to boost the sound. Since the speaker is at the bottom of the iPhone, you need to lay it off-center so the speaker projects into the cup. You'll get a nice boost to the iPhone's normally tinny sound. For more casual sound-boosting that's still guaranteed to make you look like a schmo, try cupping your hand around the speaker-end to direct the sound toward your ears.
Become a Tapping Master
Learn these special taps and button clicks to bring your iPhone to heel:
- Tap the Status bar at the top of the screen (where the clock usually is) to return instantly to the top of long pages.
- Hold a finger on a link in Safari to get a pop-up saying where the link goes.
- Tap the bottom left or right corner to scroll left or right.
- Tap with two fingers to zoom out in Maps.
- Drag inside text boxes with two fingers to scroll without scrolling the whole page.
- Double-click the Power/Lock button to send incoming calls straight to voice mail.
- Double-click the Home button in any app to bring up the iPod controls.
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