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iPhone: The Missing Manual: Covers the iPhone 3G (Missing Manual)

iPhone: The Missing Manual: Covers the iPhone 3G (Missing Manual)
Author: David Pogue
Publisher: Pogue Press
Category: Book

List Price: $24.99
Buy New: $14.46
You Save: $10.53 (42%)

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Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 555

Format: Illustrated
Media: Paperback
Edition: 2
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 376
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 0.7

ISBN: 0596521677
Dewey Decimal Number: 621.38456
EAN: 9780596521677

Publication Date: August 20, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: New American book. Shipped within the US in 4-7 days (expedited) or about 10-14 days (standard). Standard can occasionally be slower so we advise using expedited if quicker delivery is important!

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review

Written by New York Times columnist and Missing Manual series creator David Pogue, this first-to-market update shows readers and tire kickers everything they need to know to get the most out of their new Apple iPhone. As beautiful as the product it covers, this full-color book helps readers accomplish everything from Web browsing to watching videos.


Author David Pogues iPhone 2E Tips
The beauty of the new iPhone 3G is that you dont need one. Almost all of the juicy stuff actually comes with the iPhone 2.0 software and the online App Store, both of which run perfectly well on the old iPhone as well. That, incidentally, is also the beauty of iPhone: The Missing Manual, 2nd Edition. It covers both the old and the new iPhones, because it covers the 2.0 software, the iPhone App Store, and so on. Here are a few of my favorite tips from the book:
David Pogue with his iPhone

1) At the top of the screen, little icons indicate how youre connected to the Internet: an E for the vast but dog-slow AT&T Edge network, a 3G icon if youre on the faster but limited-area AT&T third-generation network, and radiating signal bars if youre on Wi-Fi. The tip here: The two cellular icons (E and 3G) disappear whenever youre on Wi-Fi. Thats not a mistake. The iPhone assumes that Wi-Fi is faster and better than any cellular network, and if youre on it, you dont care about E or 3G (and its right).

2) Unfortunately, 3G is a battery hog. If you dont see a 3G icon on your iPhone 3Gs status bar, then youre not in a 3G hot spot, and youre not getting any benefit from the phones 3G radio. By turning it off, youll double the length of your iPhone 3Gs battery power, from 5 hours of talk time to 10. To do so, from the Home screen, tap Settings->General->Network-> Enable 3G Off. Yes, this is sort of a hassle, but if youre anticipating a long day and you cant risk the battery dying halfway through, it might be worth doing. After all, most 3G phones dont even let you turn off their 3G circuitry.

3) More ways to save power: turn off more features. In Settings, you can turn off Bluetooth; Wi-Fi; GPS; "push" data; and the cellphone radio. Each saves you another bit of power.

4) When typing on the on-screen keyboard, you can save time by deliberately leaving out the apostrophe in contractions like Im, dont, cant, and so on. Type im, dont, cant, and so on. The iPhone proposes Im, dont, or cant, so you can just tap the Space bar to fix the word and continue.

5) To produce an accented character (like e, e, e, e, and so on), keep your finger pressed on that key for 1 second. A palette of accented alternatives appears; slide onto the one you want. (Keys that sprout these alternative versions: E, Y, U, I, O, S, L, Z, C, N, ?, ', ", $, and !.)

6) Even if youve engaged the silencer switch on the side, the iPhone still sounds any alarm youve set. Good to know.

7) You probably already know that you can rearrange your Home screen, and even set up multiple Home screens (up to 9). Just hold your finger down on any one icon until they all begin to wiggle. Now you can drag them to rearrange them (even onto the Dock of four special icons at the bottom), or drag off to the right to create a new Home screen. And what if, in the process of downloading and then deleting new App store programs, you wind up with unsightly gaps on your Home screens? Heres a quick way to consolidate them onto a smaller number of full Home screens, without gaps: tap Settings->General-> Reset->Reset Home Screen Layout. If youd put 10 programs on each of four Home screens, you wind up with only two screens, each packed with 20 icons. Any leftover blank pages are eliminated.

8) If you come to the iPhone from another, lesser GSM phone, your phone book may be stored on its little SIM card instead of in the phone itself . In that case, you dont have to retype all of those names and numbers to bring them into your iPhone. In Settings->Contacts, the new Import SIM Contacts button can do the job for you. (The results may not be pretty. For example, some phones store all address-book data in CAPITAL LETTERS.)

9) If youve indulged yourself by downloading some goodies from the App Store, then you may find yourself wondering where youre supposed to adjust their preferences. Turns out they often get stashed away in a completely different programin Settings. Thats where Apple encourages software authors to locate their own setting screens. For example, heres where you can edit your screen name and password for the AIM chat program, change how many days worth of news you want the NY Times Reader to display, and so on.

10) Dont type http://www or .com when entering Web addresses. Safari is smart enough to know that most Web addresses use that formatso you can leave all that stuff out, and it will supply them automatically. Instead of http://www.cnn.com, for example, just type cnn and hit Go.

11) Dont type .net, .org, or .edu, either. Safaris secret pop-up menu of canned URL choices can save you four keyboard-taps apiece. To see it, hold your finger down on the .com button. Then tap the common suffix you want.

12) The iPhone can now geotag the photos you take with it. Geotagging means, "embedding your latitude and longitude information into a photo when you take it." After all, every digital picture youve ever taken comes with its time and date invisibly embedded in its file; why not its location? So the good news is that the iPhone can geotag every photo you take. How you get to see this information, is a bit trickier. Once the photos are synced to your computer, you can view the geotag information in iPhoto (the Get Info command reveals latitude and longitude), Preview (the Inspector window shows a map), Picasa (use the Tools->Geotag menu to see the photos location in Google Earth). Unfortunately, the iPhone strips away the geotags whenever you send a photo by e-mail. Thats a good argument for using the free downloadable program AirMe instead of the iPhones built-in camera program. It avoids that geotag-stripping problem and many others.


Product Description
The new iPhone 3G is here, and New York Times tech columnist David Pogue is on top of it with a thoroughly updated edition of iPhone: The Missing Manual. With its faster downloads, touch-screen iPod, and best-ever mobile Web browser, the new affordable iPhone is packed with possibilities. But without an objective guide like this one, you'll never unlock all it can do for you. In this new edition, there are new chapters on the App Store, with special troubleshooting and sycning issues with iTunes; Apple's new MobileMe service, and what it means to the iPhone; and Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync compatibility. Each custom designed page in iPhone: The Missing Manual helps you accomplish specific tasks with complete step-by-step instructions for everything from scheduling to web browsing to watching videos. You'll learn how to: Use the iPhone as a phone -- get a guided tour of 3G's phone features and learn how much time you can save with things like Visual Voicemail, contact searching, and more Figure out what 3G means and how it affects battery life, internet speed, and even phone call audio quality. Treat the iPhone as an iPod -- listen to music, upload and view photos, and fill the iPhone with TV shows and movies Take the iPhone online -- learn how to get online, use email, browse the Web, and use the GPS Go beyond the iPhone -- discover how to use iPhone with iTunes, sync it with your calendar, and learn about The App Store where you can pick from hundreds of iPhone-friendly programs Teeming with high-quality color graphics and filled with humor, tips, tricks, and surprises, iPhone: The Missing Manual quickly teaches you how to set up, accessorize, and troubleshoot your iPhone. Instead offumbling around, take advantage of this device with the manual that should have been in the box. It's your call.


Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Plain Talk   October 15, 2008
Written so that anyone can understand it! I must admit, I haven't completed the book but it is nice to know I have a place to go. I had no idea I could do so much on my IPhone!


5 out of 5 stars iPhone Lifeboat   October 14, 2008
Excellent choice. Answers all the questions you had plus a whole bunch that you didn't know enough to ask quite yet. Current on the 3G model as well.

Well worth the price, and more.



4 out of 5 stars Two points   October 12, 2008
As always, David Pogue's Manuals are useful, necessary, informative and a delight to read. It took care of some of my apprehensions and opened most of the doors.

One practical suggestion. When it deals with iPhone's intrusive Auto Suggestions, the most important piece of advice
"To ignore the suggestion, tap it with your finger" (p.20)
should be surrounded by NEON.

In one instance the Manual and my iPhone substantially disagree. Page 35 says that the owner's "phone number appears at the very top of the Contacts list..." (if Contacts is opened from within the Phone module). This is not the case on my phone. There is no way that I can find my own phone number on the All Contacts pane. My fault, perhaps. But I have not found any configuration or workaround, or bit of advice.

Would be a great help.



5 out of 5 stars Worth every penny!   October 9, 2008
I'm a manual geek. I write them, I read them. I did read the iPhone user manual and learned a lot, but not nearly as much as I learned from this book. Little things like finding wifi spots, using the maps app better, and learning keyboard tips and tricks have made using the iPhone an altogether more rewarding experience. If you have a iPhone, you need this book!


5 out of 5 stars iPhone Ultimate Reference   October 3, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

David Pogue is so good at what he does he could get hired by Apple or Google immediately and instantly improve their technical documentation department ten-fold. The Missing Manual line of books is so good that it's like candy for the tech reader that wants to learn more about nearly any technology on the market.

With 'iPhone: The Missing Manual: Covers the iPhone 3G' Pogue has done it once again, improving on the previous edition of iPhone TMM by covering the new 3G line of phones. People like Pogue blow me away, they are people that seem to be able to get 25+ hours out of every day that most people only use/get 1440 minutes. I don't know how he is able to turn around such quality books in such a rapid amount of time, it's sick.

From the writing to content to design to the total package, if you want a book that will cover the iPhone top to bottom in a fun, educational way look no further.

***** HIGHEST POSSIBLE RECOMMENDATION


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