iPhone 3G: Discover the Hidden Goodness
Apple’s iPhone is one of the most popular gadgets on the planet, and yet it doesn’t really come with an instruction booklet. Download this Internet.com eBook for iPhone tips, tricks, and basic troubleshooting, as well as information on dozens of applications.
Topics explored include:
iPhone 3G: What’s Not to Like?
Keyboard tips and tricks;
Access 160+ iPhone applications;
Troubleshooting Wi-Fi connection problems;
iPhone widgets, and more.
Sign up for your free Internet.com membership and download now!
You will learn how extremely easy it is to write an SMS messsage with your iPhone. It requires very little time on your part. What you will do is “e-mail” the photos to your recipient; however, the person you are “e-mailing” doesn’t have to have e-mail support on their phone in order to receive your message. The only requirement is your recipient must be able to receive MMS messages. What you will do is find the photo you want to send on your iPhone and tap the send photo link, which is located on the bottom left hand side of your iPhone
For more iPhone Help on Haitel
As for Ipod
For Help on iPod – they are specifically made to accommodate and answer the needs of iPod users owning iPods of different generations. If you are a new iPod owner, of a first to fifth generations or iPod nano, iPod mini, or iPod shuffle, you might wonder what are the things you could do with your iPod. Now that you have shouted help, we will bring you five top things that new iPod owner ask for and the iPod help and answers that correspond them.
Click here For iPod Help on Haitel
Microsoft adds iPhone, iPod sync to Office 2008
November 28, 2007 (Computerworld) — Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac will let users port PowerPoint presentations to iPhones and video-equipped iPods, Microsoft Corp. said yesterday as it unveiled the latest details of the suite scheduled to ship in January.
PowerPoint 2008, the presentation maker included in the bundle, can export creations as a series of pictures — but not video — to iPhoto ‘06 and later. Alternately, users can save the slides to the Mac’s Pictures folder.
“From there, sync pictures to your iPod or iPhone through iTunes as usual, then use the built-in photos or slide-show program on your iPod or iPhone to show your presentation,” said Blair Neumann, a program manager in Microsoft’s Mac development group, in a post to the team’s blog Tuesday. IPhones and iPods that boast video viewing — the iPod touch, the newest iPod nano and the iPod classic — can also connect to a larger screen television or a projector using Apple’s $49 component AV cable.
Apple Inc.’s own Keynote presentation maker, one of the three applications in the $99 iWorks ‘08 suite, can also export its slide shows to iTunes. From there, Keynote presentations can be synced to iPods or iPhones.
Microsoft will release Office 2008 for Mac on Jan. 15 at the Macworld Conference & Expo in San Francisco in several editions priced from $150 to $500


