Saturday, July 11, 2009

Macworld iPhone Superguide

As its name promises, the iPhone isn’t just a phone—it’s also an Internet communicator, offering Web browsing, e-mail, Google Maps, streaming YouTube videos, and Internet-updated weather and stock-market programs. To top it off, the iPhone is also an outstanding iPod. It’s sleeker than today’s trimmest full-size iPod, it offers a bigger and brighter screen than that iPod, and it is the first Apple device since the ill-fated Newton to offer touch-screen navigation. In short: This isn’t your parents’ cell phone.


But to unlock all that your iPhone can do, you’ll need to know your way around both the interface and the iPhone’s settings and preferences. In this chapter, we’ll help you familiarize yourself with your iPhone’s most important features and get you up and running as quickly as possible.

How to Stay in Touch with Calls, E-mails, and Text Messages The iPhone packs a lot of features into its slim frame. But first and foremost, it’s a phone. The iPhone includes most of the features you’d expect from a modern mobile phone, plus a few features you wouldn’t—including a new way of interacting with your voice mail. But the iPhone doesn’t limit the concept of communication to just calls. You can also use it to send e-mail or text messages to others.

Source : macworld.com

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