AT&T’s iPhone MMS Displaying Incorrect Sender Number

Posted on October 15, 2009 by Jeremy Sikora.
Categories: Uncategorized.

iphone-mms-screw-up-rm-eng-3

Ross Miller of Engadget is giving more credibility to some of the reports of iPhone MMS on AT&T’s network being a little wonky. It seems as if some users sending MMS messages are having their pictures delivered, but with the message on the recipients end displaying an incorrect phone number for the sender.

We’ve done some research on the issue and at the moment there is no viable explanation from AT&T, and no resolution (including the recently released AT&T 5.6 carrier file). Have any of our readers experienced this MMS behavior?

Sound off in the comments!

[Via Engadget]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

AT&T’s iPhone MMS Displaying Incorrect Sender Number


PhoneView Desktop Companion for iPhone on Mac OS X

Posted on by Jeremy Sikora.
Categories: Uncategorized.

phoneview

PhoneView is a desktop companion that fills in the holes left by iTunes for any iPhone user on the Mac (sorry Microsoft faithful). Some of PhoneView’s features are as follows:

  • Use your iPhone as a disk
  • Play and export music
  • Create, edit and save notes
  • Search and save SMS/MMS messages
  • Download camera photos
  • Save voicemails
  • View and export call history
  • Play and save voice memos
  • Export synced photos
  • Export Contacts

We often see folks in TiPb’s forums looking for more syncing functionality than what iTunes provides. Could this be for you? PhoneView is available to demo for free and $19.95 to purchase a license. Be sure to check out this video for a quick tour of PhoneView’s features and functionality.

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

PhoneView Desktop Companion for iPhone on Mac OS X


Microsoft recovers most Sidekick data

Posted on by Ian Paul.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Microsoft has good news for most Sidekick users: the company says it has recovered most of the data for T-Mobile Sidekick users who saw personal information...

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PhoneView gives you an inside look at your iPhone data

Posted on by TJ Luoma.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Filed under: ,

Some time ago, I looked around for a way to access my iPhone to use it as a portable hard drive, almost like a generic USB device, for copying files back and forth between computers. I decided on PhoneView. At the time I didn't even care too much about the other features it offered. As time has passed, I've liked it even better and better.

The application has been polished with each release and now includes a very substantial feature list. In no particular order, here is what the just-released PhoneView 2.3 brings to the table:

  1. View pictures on the iPhone. This was a lifesaver to me when iPhoto suddenly refused to import any of the pictures I had taken on my iPhone. It includes a thumbnail of the pictures (and videos) as well the time-stamp. You can even import them directly into iPhoto.
  2. Displays Safari's history, bookmarks, and open windows (ever visit a site on your iPhone and then wish you could remember where it was?). It also includes the ability to search the browsing history (URLs and Titles).
  3. View/Play/Export Visual Voicemail. Got a message you want to save? You can copy it as an .mp4 (or add it to iTunes, although I can't imagine anyone wanting to do that). The filenames include the date, time, and name (if known).
  4. Shows you a list of music, ringtones, videos, podcasts, and audiobooks on your iPhone, and allows you to copy them off the iPhone if you need to (preserving metadata)
  5. Use iPhone (or iPod touch) as a portable drive
  6. Access the full "Media" folder on non-jailbroken devices (jailbroken devices will have the full file structure displayed)
  7. Allows you to view/export SMS and MMS messages (MMS support is new in 2.3)
  8. View, Edit, and Create Notes
  9. View call log, including whether the call was incoming or outgoing, completed, missed, or cancelled (it also integrates with your address book, so you will see who those calls came from
  10. Play/Export/Delete Voice memos

The best part of PhoneView is that it does not require you to jailbreak your iPhone, and it is quickly updated to support each new version of the iPhone OS. I've never found myself unable to access my iPhone through PhoneView.

PhoneView can only be used over USB. I wish they would come up with a way to access the iPhone over Wi-Fi, but my guess is that is not possible because they would have to have an iPhone app to serve the phone's data, and I have a hard time believing that Apple would approve such a thing. Fortunately, I have an iPhone cable around most of the time.

The application costs $19.95, but that includes free upgrades for life. If you ever find yourself wanting more access to your iPhone, PhoneView provides the easiest way to just about every corner of your iPhone.

PhoneView gives you an inside look at your iPhone data originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)PhoneView gives you an inside look at your iPhone data originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How-to guide details PS/2 keyboard-to-iPhone mod, just for you

Posted on by Darren Murph.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Oh sure, we've seen hacker after hacker brag about their success in connecting some sort of keyboard to Apple's iPhone, but have any of them bothered to take the time to explain the process behind the magic? Exactly. The man behind AwghBlog, however, is a kinder, gentler soul, and he's found the time to detail in quite specific terms how he connected a legacy PS/2 keyboard (you know, the one you're not using any longer) to Apple's cash-cow of a smartphone. Best of all, the guide actually explains how to build a PS/2 keyboard-to-iPhone converter, so you're not necessarily tied to a certain board. Hit the read link if you're down for a weekend project.

[Via MAKE]

Filed under: ,

How-to guide details PS/2 keyboard-to-iPhone mod, just for you originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 10:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PhoneView 2.3 can retrieve iPhone MMS, Visual Voicemail

Posted on by Dan Moren.
Categories: Uncategorized.
The latest version of Ecamm Network's PhoneView lets you easily archive MMS messages and Visual Voicemail messages from your iPhone onto your Mac.

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iPhone “Exposé” Shown Off for Jailbreak!

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

It seems like just the other day TiPb linked to a concept rendering of what Apple’s Mac Exposé might look like for the iPhone, and now Steve Troughton-Smith, creator of Stacks for iPhone, has gone and brought it to Jailbreak.

It’s not publicly available yet, not via Cydia much less via Apple. But do we want?

[Slashgear via Engadget Mobile]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

iPhone “Exposé” Shown Off for Jailbreak!


Apple to Begin Advertising Push Targeting Windows 7 Launch?

BusinessWeek reports that Apple is expected to begin an advertising push in the near future designed to lure Windows customers considering purchasing new computers due to the launch of Windows 7 on October 22nd. In an interview, Apple senior vice pr...

Jailbroken iPhone gets Expose-like view, you retail users just keep on scrollin’ (video)

Posted on by Tim Stevens.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Jailbroken iPhone gets Expose-like view, you retail users just keep on scrollin' (video)
How many apps do you have on your iPhone? Yeah, we figured it was a lot. Being able to re-arrange items now is mighty helpful, but not so helpful as this little hack from Steve Troughton-Smith that adds Exposé-like functionality to the mix. Just press the Home button and up pops a view of all the application pages; tap one and you're taken straight there, as shown in the video after the break. Nice and simple -- and at this point not available even to jailbroken handsets. We're sure that'll change soon, but it's anybody's guess if or when Apple will add something like this to the official OS. Yet another reason to go ahead and roll your own.

Continue reading Jailbroken iPhone gets Expose-like view, you retail users just keep on scrollin' (video)

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Jailbroken iPhone gets Expose-like view, you retail users just keep on scrollin' (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Oct 2009 08:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Thursday Fun Video: iDriver iPhone Remote Controlled Car

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

iDriver, an iPhone remote-controlled car by the Artificial Intelligence Group at Freie Universitaet in Berlin scares us off the roads. But we wants it.

[via 9to5mac]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Thursday Fun Video: iDriver iPhone Remote Controlled Car


Acceleroto on Developing Air Hockey for the iPhone vs. Palm Pre

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

airhockey

Acceleroto, makers of the iPhone apps Air Hockey [$0.99 - iTunes link] and Air Hockey Free [Free - iTunes link] have written an interesting post on the differences between developing their app for the iPhone App Store vs. the Palm Pre App Catalog. Some take away:

  • They charge more for the webOS version due to lower volume expectations
  • iPhone and Palm Pre are “remarkably similar” hardware-wise
  • They already knew Objective-C, but Javascript wasn’t difficult to pick up
  • iPhone is native, webOS is interpreted, so there’s a difference in execution speed (more important for game developers)
  • Getting code onto the Pre is faster. Debugging is much more difficult than iPhone.
  • Had to “skinny up” iPhone code to get 30-fps for webOS.
  • Multitasking and garbage collection impacts performance
  • Since webOS apps are “web pages”, touch events are handled as mouse-clicks and aren’t as smooth
  • No sound yet, because the requisite timing isn’t possible.

So, as we’ve heard before, development for non-intensive apps is likely quicker and easier for the Palm Pre, but more intensive apps, like games, are still a challenge. Doubtless Apple will continue to work on making casual apps easier to deploy, and Palm on making deeper apps run better.

The full post also includes the backstory of how and why Air Hockey was ported to webOS, and shown off as part of the Palm Pixi introduction. Give it a read, and then let us know what you think.

[Acceleroto via PreCentral.net]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Acceleroto on Developing Air Hockey for the iPhone vs. Palm Pre


The Competition: HTC Gets a Hero and Motorola Goes Android with CLIQ

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

cliq60018

First up, the highly anticipated HTC Hero is in Android Central’s house, and Casey gives us a look at the decidedly non-Google Android phone and SenseUI, something closer akin to HTC’s previous Windows Mobile powered TouchFLO3D. And we think he likes it:

We believe that you’ll be stunned at how easy it is to use and how polished it all works. If you’re looking from the myTouch 3G or T-Mobile G1, you can’t help but be jealous of the Hero. The UI offers a great experience while still maintaining the same lovely Android and even adds a better browser! We have no hesitation in saying that the HTC Hero is the best Android phone available and after using HTC Sense, will be for quite some time.

Next up, I don’t think we’ve ever mentioned “Motorola” and “competition” to the iPhone in the same paragraph before, but with the introduction of the CLIQ, their first device running Google’s Android OS, do we have to stop chuckling at the mere concept?

Maybe. We often say (okay, Chad often says) that Apple designed the iPhone for RAZR users — the first dead-simple, consumer-friendly smartphone. Well Moto built the RAZR, and now they’ve built MOTOBLUR, a new, hyper-social network focused new layer on top of Android designed to hook the heart of the Twitter/FaceBook generation (yes, Icebike, I campout firmly in the former). And they’ve put it on a G1/Dream-style horizontal slider.

Have they succeeded? Engadget says:

Let’s be very clear: though it fares pretty competitively against the aging crop of Google-powered devices on the market today, the CLIQ isn’t the Android phone to end all Android phones. Then again, it’s not supposed to be — at least, we hope it isn’t — because a smallish HVGA display and an overworked, outmatched MSM7201A core aren’t going to win any believers that haven’t already been won over by HTC’s stable. What the CLIQ does do, though, is lay the groundwork for something better — a Motorola that doesn’t cause eyes to roll, a Motorola that makes aspirational phones that people can want to own again.

One thing’s clear, however. The competition is focusing on the social networks, something Apple’s never been historically good at, and something they may still not quite understand. Is it an achilles heel for the iPhone? Not yet, especially not with the App Store. But there’s no MOTOBLUR or widgets or Synergy in the App Store yet, and likely there won’t be given SDK restrictions. So, Apple, howsabout 4.0?

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

The Competition: HTC Gets a Hero and Motorola Goes Android with CLIQ


Review: TiltShift for iPhone

Posted on by Beau Colburn.
Categories: Uncategorized.
This image-editing app provides a number of tools to simulate common tilt-shift photography effects on the images you've got stored on your iPhone or iPod touch.

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