When I text on my phone, I try to make sure that my texts make sense. They have proper spelling, punctuation, capitals, etc. because that's one of my pet peeves.
I was typing with a friend the other night, and I got burned by auto-correct!
A few friends of mine have already upgraded their phones to the new iOS7 from Apple. I've heard that it takes anywhere from 6 hours to 30 minutes to download the new operating system depending on your Wi-Fi connection. (I think the person who said it took 6 hours was trying to download it before it was really available so don't be discouraged...
Apple unveiled two new iPhones, the 5S and the 5C, on Tuesday afternoon, in addition updates to iTunes and its mobile operating system, iOS. Here's what's new (updated with pictures from the presentation below):
I love my aunt, but she is a one-woman phone destruction team. She doesn't MEAN to break the screen, drop her phone in the sink, break the keypad, etc., but she's now on her fourth phone that I know of in about a year.
People sure do love their iPhones, but they also can't seem to stop dropping them—good news for the booming iPhone-repair business. In fact, a recent accident survey by SquareTrade found that the American population has spent nearly $5.9 billion fixing their damaged phones since the first device hit the market in 2007.
Walmart, the world’s largest retail chain, is currently testing a “scan and go” iPhone application that would allow customers to scan items as they shop and pay more quickly and conveniently at a self-checkout counter.
Here goes the start to another season of iPhone chaos. The iPhone 5 will begin shipping next Friday, September 21, and with it will be millions of people crazy about the new device.
So Apple is releasing a new iPhone (again). It's thinner, lighter, bigger and faster. It comes with headphones that might actually fit your ears. It fits in your hand. It also possesses the ability to explode the Twitterverse. Here's what people are saying.
Internet connectivity on cell phones has improved by leaps and bounds over the last five years.
According to experts it’s about to take another huge leap with the introduction of the iPhone 5, which is expected to run on Apple’s 4G LTE network.
Apple's new iPhone will apparently drop the wide dock connector used in the company's gadgets for the best part of a decade for a smaller one, a boon for accessory makers, but a move that may annoy Apple customers.