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| View Larger Image | Taking Your iPhone to the Max (Technology in Action) by Erica Sadun
| | List Price: | $24.99 | | Price: | $18.24 | | You Save: | $6.75 (27%) |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 250115 | | Studio: | Apress |  | | Binding: | Paperback | | Number Of Pages: | 182 | | Publication Date: | December 11, 2007 | | Publisher: | Apress |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description
Unleash your iPhone and take it to the limit using secret tips and techniques from gadget hacker Erica Sadun. Fast and fun to read, Taking Your iPhone to the Max will show you how get the most out of Apple’s iPhone. You’ll find all the best, and undocumented, tricks as well as the most efficient and enjoyable introduction to the iPhone you’ll ever find. Starting with a guide to iPhone basics, you’ll quickly move on to discover the iPhone’s hidden potential, like how to connect to a TV, get contract-free VOIP, and hack OS X so it will run apps on your iPhone. From e-mail and surfing the Web, to using iTunes, iBooks, games, photos, ripping DVDs and getting free VOIP with Skype or Jajah, you’ll find it here. You’ll even find tips on where to get the best and cheapest iPhone accessories. Get ready to take iPhone to the max! What you’ll learn - iPhone basics
- E-mail, voicemail, and using iCal
- Surfing the Web with iPhone using Safari
- Expanding the main menu using third-party software
- Using iTunes, games, and iBooks
- Connecting to the TV and ripping DVDs
- Hacking OS X to run apps on the iPhone
- Getting contract-free VOIP
- Saving on accessories and what you really need
Who is this book for? Anyone who has an iPhone and wants to get more out of it, learn how to connect to other devices, or tinker with it |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 2 reviews)
| Got me through my iPhone learning curve in no time flat.  Since they've come around, I've been one of those people that have had to have the latest and greatest phone. I've had just about every high end PocketPC or Smartphone available. And I've really liked them. I had one of the 1st gen iphones (4gb) but b/c I was on T-Mobile, it was little more than an iPod (and I use a Zune so that wasn't even very important to me). I had an unlucky streak though and broke the last two iMate Smartphones I had within a few weeks of each other so was left using a Windows Mobile 5.0 device. A coworker was going to return his iPhone and offered it to me for a decent discount and i figured what the heck, I'll give it a try.
At first though, it was of little benefit. That's b/c I was on T-Mobile not AT&T and knew veyr little about the iPhone. After looking around the net, I saw this book had really high ratings and was available for the Kindle. So while I was eating dinner, I bought it. A few seconds later it appeared on my kindle and I dove in. I started making notes of what all I needed to do to get it working on T-Mobile and a few other things. I had struggled for a few days trying to get it working to no avail. I was having a lot of trouble getting it to sync with my ultra mobile pc running vista. With this book on my Kindle, I returned home and dove in. About 2 hours later I was up and running. Not only did I have the phone working but I had the ipod synced, and internet connectivity. It took me all of 10 seconds to fall in love with Safari. So chapter by chapter I kept reading. In all, I ended up doing a late nighter b/c I was learning how to do things on the iPhone that I either didn't know about or couldn't get working. Navigation went from being a pain in the a55 to a breeze. In no time I had it synced with my Outlook contacts too... and it even pulled in each contact's picture if it was available in my Outlook profile.
So in just a few hours, I went from not being able to make calls or use the iPod to basically having a smaller and faster version of my ultra mobile PC. In fact, now that I've gotten so familiar with it, I rarely use my ultra mobile b/c it's just another gadget to worry about and have to keep charged.
The book is very easy to read and while I'm not a technical novice, I was completely unfamiliar with Apple products. It got me right over the learning curve in just a few hours. Every single thing I had wanted to do with the iPHone was explained - perfectly I may add, in this book. Additionally, the book amazingly gets right to the point of everything and gives it coverage commensurate with the importance of the feature. It really holds your hand through some of the more difficult things (like getting it working with other networks) but doesn't belabor issues that aren't all that big of a deal.Every other book I can think of on how to use any given mobile device, be it a camera, zune, xbox etc is the opposite - it covers the basics in painful detail and tends to cover the important stuff lightly. Maybe it's just that what I consider important is the same stuff the author did, but I think pretty much anyone new to the iPhone will be left feeling the same way I was. (the best example I can give is with respect to the warnings and explanation of the warranty. If you're a none AT&T user, you don't want to do anything to void the warranty and end up being left out to dry. So I was really hesitant to just indiscriminately try things I found on the net. By specifically addressing this issue, explaining the downside and upside, the author makes it clear they understood what you're facing and then she proceeds to explain it in enough detail that you won't be (or at least I wasn't) afraid to give it a try).
If you have an iPhone already and are well versed in all of its features, then you probably don't need this book although there will be a few things you'll find helpful (particularly in terms of navigation). If you have a AT&T Contract and only use bread and butter features then you'll be in the same boat. But if you're new to iPhone and particularly if you're on another network, and you are of the "I can't live without my phone" mindset, this book is absolutely for you. It's written to that type of user specfically and she does a superb job in that respect
Considering the price for the Kindle edition in particular, it was one of the smartest buys I made in a while. Without it, I would very likely have just given up on the iPhone, and now I've definitely become a major fan of it and would really hate to not have an iPhone. All because of this book. September 13, 2008 | | Nice blend of techie and practical information...  So you've taken the plunge and bought an iPhone. You've read what passes for an instruction manual, and you're amazed that everything just seems to work. But you *know* there's more that you're missing. Taking Your iPhone to the Max by Erica Sadun does a very good job in walking you through all the major parts of the iPhone interface, explaining how they work, and giving you plenty of "hidden tips" along the way. I changed a few ways I do things on my iPhone after reading...
Contents:
Selecting, Buying, and Activating Your iPhone; Interacting with Your New iPhone; Placing Calls with iPhone; iPhone Messaging; iPhone E-mail; Browsing with Safari; Preparing Your Media in iTunes; It's Also an iPod; iPhone Photos; Google Maps and Other Apps; Hacking the iPhone; Index
Since the "instruction manual" included with the iPhone is about eight panels of a fold-out piece of paper, you're not going to get much in the way of instruction when you buy the thing. You can download the PDF guide from Apple's site, but how often did you ever read the manual of your prior cell phone? Thought so... Sadun presents the information in a much more relaxed and understandable format. Rather than a simple "do this, this, and this", she explains why things work the way they do, as well as some things that aren't common knowledge. For instance, there are a number of service shortcuts you can use to get information about your AT&T account. *225# will give you the balance of your bill, *646# will give you the remaining number of minutes on your account, etc. I'm sure you can dig up that information somewhere, but it's all nicely formatted and presented here in a logical, cohesive manner. Personally, I hadn't known of (or remembered) about punctuation dragging, where you touch the .?123 key and then drag your finger over to the punctuation character you want. Since it's a single character action, the keyboard immediately returns to the alpha setting. I find myself doing that all the time now.
While the book is well-suited for the non-techie phone users, there's also coverage of the jailbreak process and how that works. She references that technique in a number of places, and explains where you can find certain directories and files if you've got command-line access to your iPhone. As this came out before the official Apple API release, you won't get any coverage of it here. But when you get down to it, the people who will use the jailbreak method probably won't want to play by the restrictive rules of the official API anyway. :)
This wasn't the first iPhone book I've read, but it was no less valuable than the first one. I find myself picking up new tips and tricks that I didn't remember or that didn't stick the first time. And given the size and style of the book, it hits a nice blend between pure tech and hand-holding newbie. Nicely done... March 26, 2008 | |
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