Bharat Solanki
Monday, June 9, 2014
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
For the first time in the history of the iPhone product line, Apple today unveiled two entirely new products: the iPhone 5s and iPhone 5c.
Naturally, they're pretty well differentiated, which may make the
decision to pick one up (or not) that much more challenging. So, we
leave it to you, dear reader: are you planning to equip yourself with
one of Apple's newest phones here in just a few weeks? If so, which one?
If not, why? Of course, those who've found little to love about iOS
have some fairly fantastic options
coming their way this holiday season as well. Leave your vote and note
below, won't you? And, please, keep it civil -- internet comments are
forever, after all.
View Poll
Follow our liveblog for all of the iPhone news as it happens.
View Poll
Follow our liveblog for all of the iPhone news as it happens.
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Champagne iPhone 5S poses with current model in leaked group shot
Champagne iPhone 5S poses with current model in leaked group shot
from Engadget / Thu Aug 22 10:03:00 UTC 2013
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Apple
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Via: Nowhereelse
Source: Weekly Ascii
How to stay secure on public Wi-Fi
How to stay secure on public Wi-Fi
from Gizmag / Thu Aug 22 03:05:28 UTC 2013
There's plenty of opportunities to connect to public Wi-Fi hotspots when you're on the go these days. Coffee shops, hotels, restaurants and airports are just some of the places where you can jump online, but often these networks are open and not secure. Whether you're using a laptop, tablet or smartphone, you'll want to connect your device securely to protect your data as much as possible. Here's some simple steps you can take to help make sure your data is safe on open public Wi-Fi. ..
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How to stay secure on public Wi-Fi
Outlook.com users can now rename an account to any email alias
After killing off linked accounts
in favor of aliases back in June, Microsoft is now simplifying its
approach to secondary email addresses on Outlook.com. The software maker
has long supported the ability to rename an Outlook.com primary email
address to a newly created alias, but existing aliases were always left
out. Microsoft is now rolling out a change to its alias support today
that lets Outlook.com users rename their primary email address to any
secondary existing alias.
Outlook.com already supports sign in with any alias linked
to an account, but the rename will set the new address as the primary
and alter the email address shown on the Windows 8 Start Screen and Xbox
dashboard. Microsoft previously revealed it's working on the...
Friday, August 23, 2013
Apple breaks Find My iPhone app by publishing developer-only update
Apple breaks Find My iPhone app by publishing developer-only update
from The Verge / Thu Aug 22 18:06:02 UTC 2013 by Chris Welch
It's rare to see Apple make this sort of mistake, but the company has just published an update to its Find My iPhone iOS app that's apparently intended only for developers. There's just one problem: the update is appearing for regular users, too. If you're a non-developer and you apply the update, you'll be unable to log into the important device recovery service. The new icon seen with the update suggests this build of Find My iPhone was intended for — or is at least inspired by — Apple's upcoming iOS 7 software update. We've reached out to the company for details on the mixup. But do yourself a favor and avoid the "update" button for now. Apple will presumably pull the update in short order, but it's not clear how it plans to fix...
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