Tuesday, October 22, 2013

How to share files on iOS 7 & above using AirDrop


Source: macworld.com


Introduced in Mac OS X Lion, AirDrop is a feature that lets you easily share files with other Mac users on your local network. With iOS 7, iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch users get to join in the fun. AirDrop on iOS devices can share photos, videos, web pages, map directions, and more. You can't share with Mac computers, though.






AirDrop sharing in the Photos app.


To use it, you need to make sure you and the person you want to share something with have AirDrop turned on. Swipe up from the bottom of the screen to open Control Center,  then tap AirDrop. To receive AirDrop shares only from people who are in your contacts list, tap Contacts Only; to share with anyone nearby, tap Everyone. Ask the person you want to share with to do the same.
Next, open an app that supports sharing via AirDrop—in this case, let's use the Photos app as an example. Open a photo, then locate the share button (it's a square with an upward-pointing arrow). If the other person has AirDrop turned on and is nearby, they should show up along the top of the sharing panel. Tap the name of the person you want to share, and they'll get a message asking to accept the photo. Once the person you're sharing with taps the Accept button, your phone will beam the photo to theirs.







What your friend will see when you share a photo with them.

AirDrop works over Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, but it doesn't work over the cellular networks. You don't even need to be on the same Wi-Fi network for it to work—you'll automatically create an temporary direct connection to the other person, so long as you're within a close proximity to one another.
Bear in mind that AirDrop does not work on all iOS 7-compatible devices: It only works with the iPhone 5 and newer, the 4th-generation iPad and iPad Mini, and the 5th-generation iPod Touch and newer. You'll also need an iCloud account in order to use it. AirDrop's transfers are encrypted, too.
This story, "How to share files on iOS 7 using AirDrop" was originally published by TechHive.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Ten things I'm happy Apple is fixing in iOS 7


Source: macworld.com

I love my iPhone, and have loved it since I ditched my Sony Ericsson 710a way back in 2008. But no device is perfect, and every year I look forward to Worldwide Developers Conference keynotes and the new iOS features that typically come with it. iOS 7—previewed at this year’s WWDC—brings fixes for quite a few of my long-term quibbles—here are the ten I’m most looking forward to.

1. No more digging around settings
As a general rule, I like keeping the automatic brightness control off, so as to save my battery life. Unfortunately, this means that my screen’s occasionally too bright (or too dim) for the environment. But until iOS 7, there’s been no easy way to change my brightness on the iPhone without diving into several Settings menus. Thank goodness, then, for Control Center. In addition to bringing easy on/off controls for Airplane mode, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Do Not Disturb, and screen rotation, there are big friendly sliders for both brightness and volume. Not only does this bring the iPhone ahead of the iOS 6’s paltry controls implementation, but it gives the end-user more control over basic settings (and eliminates one of the major reasons I ever thought about jailbreaking my device). iOS 7’s Control Center also reminds me a lot of OS X’s menu bar widgets: Your controls on iOS 7 may not live in your iPhone’s menu bar, but you can access them anywhere—even on the lock screen. There are even app shortcuts along the bottom of the Control Center to quickly turn on your LED flash and launch the Clock, Calculator, or Camera apps. Of course, seeing those app shortcuts makes me hope we’ll soon be able to customize them, but that might be a wish better saved for iOS 8.
2. Goodbye, multitasking bar
The multitasking bar was a godsend when Apple first introduced it in iOS 4. It was limited, sure, and you had to do a lot of tapping and swiping, but it at last brought some semblance of multitasking to the iPhone and iPad. But three years later, it’s time for a change, and iOS 7 delivers. The new multitasking interface feels much more in tune with the modern mobile OS. No more accidental tapping on app icons because you tried to switch too quickly; instead, you get beautiful miniature screen captures of your apps to swipe through, with the icons along the bottom (just in case you’re not sure what’s on the screen). The feature I love most about the new multitasking screen, though, isn’t the captures themselves; it’s when you need to quit an app. In the past, force-quitting an application involved tapping and holding on an icon to make it shake, then tapping the red delete button. Inevitably, this rather confusing process got me questions from my relatives: “Did I just delete my Facebook?” Quitting an app in iOS 7 feels much more natural: You just remove it from the carousel by dragging it upwards. The card disappears, and your other apps slide over. Easy peasy, and no scary delete button to frighten your parents. I still would like to see a Multi-Touch gesture for opening the multitasking screen on the iPhone (a pinch from the home screen, maybe, a la Mission Control on OS X?), but I suspect Apple worries about overloading the iPhone’s smaller screen with too many gestures. (And, no, Android fans, I don’t think the the solution is to make the iPhone bigger.)
3. Photographic updates with friends
Based on the popularity of apps like Snapchat, it’s obvious that people like sharing images with their friends. Apple tried to hop on this bandwagon with Shared Photo Streams in iOS 6, which let you send pictures to your buddies; unfortunately, the “shared” in Shared Photo Streams wasn’t very sharing-friendly at all. Photo streams were one-way trips: You could send images to your friends and add more throughout the week, but if they wanted to give pictures back to you, they had to create their own separate stream. Aggravating at the least, and it did a lot to convince me not to use Shared Photo Streams, an otherwise very nifty feature. Thankfully, iOS 7 addresses the core problem, giving you the option for one- or multi-way Shared Photo Streams. In addition, Apple’s added support for video sharing—so you can spice up that static stream with a moving picture or three. In the future, I hope we’ll see even more control over who can see and post to streams. I love the concept of having a shared repository of great images, and it would be great to see Apple further iterate on that.
4. Easy local file sharing
Given the iPhone’s popularity, it’s not surprising to be at a party with friends who all have an iPhone. Less fun, however, is trying to share images or files with those friends on the spot. You have two options—email and Messages (which only really lets you send photos or video) or using a third-party app like Dropbox. So hallelujah for AirDrop, Apple’s OS X peer-to-peer sharing network, coming soon to an iOS device near you in iOS 7. It uses Wi-Fi and Bluetooth to wirelessly share photos, video, Passbook passes, map data, contact cards, and possibly even more (depending on how third-party apps implement it) to your nearby friends—no email or messages needed. The AirDrop icon is all over iOS 7, and its settings even appear in Control Center, where you can choose to allow anyone to send you files, just your contacts, and no one. And according to this post from the Bluetooth blog, AirDrop may use the latest iteration of Bluetooth Smart technology.
5. Welcome back, keychain sync
Once upon a time, users of Apple’s MobileMe service (now known as iCloud) had an option called Keychain Sync, which would store passwords from OS X’s Keychain Access and let you access those on all of your Macs. It didn’t always work reliably—which was probably why it disappeared during the iCloud transition—but I’m really excited to see its partial return in the form of iCloud Keychain. Granted, Apple hasn’t said how iCloud Keychain performs its magic, but the end result is similar: Enter a password in Safari on your Mac, and iCloud will remember that password for you on your other Macs or iOS devices. You can also store account information, credit card numbers, and your Wi-Fi networks and passwords. All I know is I’ll certainly be overjoyed if I never have to manually enter in a credit card number on my phone again.
6. Searching in Siri
My colleague Lex Friedman uses Siri for search and all sorts of everyday tasks. But I haven’t been able to stomach it: I hate getting kicked out to Safari whenever I ask Apple’s virtual assistant something it can’t source Wolfram Alpha or its own servers for—and unfortunately, that happens pretty often. So Siri’s new inline search options sounds pretty promising to me. I’m not quite as sure how I feel about Apple’s partnership with Bing search, having been a Google searcher since I dropped Alta Vista, but I’m willing to give it a shot. (And hey—currently, you can force Siri to search Wolfram Alpha by prefacing all queries with “search Wolfram Alpha,” so it’s possible you might be able to force Siri to search Google by doing something similar.)
7. No more manual downloads
There’s just something about those awful red update badges that tweak my OCD something fierce. I’ve turned them off in every app I can, but the App Store app has ever remained, mocking me silently with its “2 app updates” reminder. So when Apple announced during its keynote that John McCain would be getting his wish and automatic updates would indeed come to iOS, I cheered. I do hope Apple does this sensibly: The company hasn’t publicly mentioned whether you can limit automatic downloads while on cellular data, or if you can disable automatic updates at all. That said, Apple’s been pretty good about letting users monitor and turn off cellular data for things like automatic music, books, and app downloads, so there’s a pretty good chance we might see a similar switch for updates in iOS 7.
8. Even more Multi-Touch gestures
I’ve long wished for more iPhone Multi-Touch gestures to match my iPad and Mac’s capabilities. Four finger swipes seem a bit crazy on the iPhone, but there are plenty of other gestures to add functionality. And while Apple didn’t include my most wished-for gesture (one for opening the multitasking bar on the iPhone), there are new swipes abound in iOS 7. You can swipe upward to access Control Center. Swipe to the right to go back hierarchically. Pull down from the center to access the search screen. Swipe up on an app in the multitasking screen to force-quit it. Many of these gestures we’ve seen in third-party apps, and I’m very happy to see them come to the iPhone in the fall.
9. Mail search will actually work (we hope)
Oh, mobile mail search. The bane of my existence—and, I imagine, many an email-laden worker. Apple’s Mail app has been limited to searching solely in the mailbox you’re occupying for as long as I’ve had an iPhone, and for someone who has a lot of folders and organizational tics (yours truly), it makes finding messages almost impossible. iOS 7, in contrast, looks to finally end our long national nightmare by letting us search all mailboxes from any mail screen—whether it’s our inbox or three levels down in a “coupons” folder. It’s a feature I’m eagerly awaiting—though I suppose it means I can no longer use the excuse “I’m on my iPhone and I can’t find that email with the information you need” when I’m not at work.
10. Thieves, beware
It looked as if senior vice president of software engineering Craig Federighi tossed in Activation Lock at the end of the iOS 7 presentation almost as an afterthought—but it’s clear Apple’s very proud of its new theft deterrent. Activation Lock prevents would-be iPhone thieves from wiping and reselling your phone by first requiring your iCloud username and password to unlock it. I lost my phone once last year, and that experience (coupled with a few close calls from sketchy characters in major metropolitan cities) makes me incredibly grateful for any extra security measures Apple can implement. We keep so much important, private data on our phones these days that it’s vital to have efficient protection from thieves and would-be snoopers, and I’m glad to see the company taking an interest in these matters.

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Friday, October 18, 2013

Getting the best Amazon deal




Getting the best Amazon deal


Source: www.macworld.com

Although I’m the guy others come to for answers, there are times when I have questions of my own. For instance, while discussing beloved movies with a friend I was reminded that I don't own copies of Alfred Hitchcock’s greatest movies. Hoping to remedy that I dashed to Amazon and found Alfred Hitchcock: The Master piece Collection [Blu-ray], which includes the greatest hits of Hitchcock’s later work. The collection looked great, but the price did not—$178.96 as I write this.
Reviews indicate that the collection has been sold for as little as $120—a price I would be willing to spring for. But how am I to know when it becomes available at such a discounted price? I turned to Twitter for answers.
Follower John Coxon (@johncoxon) told me about camelcamelcamel. This Web-based service allows you to enter the URL for the item you wish to track. You can then view a history of the item’s price to get a ballpark idea of how low it’s been priced in the past. Then just enter the price you’re willing to pay ($120, in my case) and choose how you wish to be alerted—via email or Twitter.




Mike Hoffman (@MikeHoffman) pointed me to Delite Studio’s free Mac application Price Drop Monitor For Amazon. Download and install it and a shopping cart icon appears in the Mac’s menu bar. In your Web browser just navigate to the item you eventually wish to purchase and drag its URL to this menu bar icon. It will be added to a list of watched items. When the price of a watched item drops you’ll be notified (you can choose from among a sound, notification center, Growl, and email). To track more than 20 items you must pay $3.99 for monitoring of up to 50 items at a time.
Both Chris Lehmkuhl (@ChrisLehmkuhl) and Dave Packard (@cpadave) informed me that all I had to do is add the item to my cart and leave it there, unpurchased. When the price changes you'll see a notification in your Amazon shopping cart.
And finally, I have a solution of my own. With Safari go to the item’s Amazon page and choose File > Open in Dashboard. This is the means for creating a Web clipping. Select the item’s price area and click Add. That clipping will appear in Dashboard. Because Dashboard clippings update whenever you switch to Dashboard, all you need to do is invoke Dashboard to view the item’s current price.



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