Unlocked iPhone Notes

In its default state, the ATT unlocked 3G iPhone is missing some key applications, such as a spreadsheet, simple database and word processor. This is not entirely surprising – it is a phone, not a computer, after all – and you can plug the gaps by using online applications, such as Zoho’s web-based office suite at mini.zoho.com. This should be always available over the US unlocked iPhone’s wifi or 3G connection, but when you just want to make a quick note it can be overkill.

That is where the GSM 8GB unlocked iPhone’s own Notes application comes in. It is a simple jotter with the appearance of a regular notepad, the only limitation being that you have to enter text using the on-screen keyboard, as there is obviously no way to use the unlocked iPhone prepaid or postpaid with a stylus. This also means you can’t draw sketches or scribble random thoughts in the margin.

New notes are added by tapping the + icon on the on the toolbar, and you can flick back and forwards between them using the arrows keys. As you do, you will notice that the buff pages turn over, as they would in a regular notebook. When you delete a note by tapping the dustbin button at the bottom of the page it is sucked down into the icon for disposal.

Like Mail, the Notes application is a good place to draft information you need to send to colleagues, as it connects directly with the unlocked iPhone’s email client. If you have already set up your unlocked iPhone for Gmail usage, clicking on the envelope icon on the toolbar will dispatch the current note using your default account. Rather confusingly, this is set through the Home touchscreen’s Settings application, in the Mail subsection.

Unlocked iPhone Calculator

It may seem a waste to buy something relatively expensive, sleek and technologically advanced as an AT&T unlocked 16GB iPhone and then use it for nothing more challenging than addition and multiplication, but the fact remains that the unlocked iPhone’s calculator is among the best on any mobile phone. It is clear and has large graphical buttons, really benefiting from the multi-touch display in a way that no conventional digital cell phone can ever hope to rival.

In its original incarnation, it was nothing more than a regular upright adding machine with the four key mathematical functions (addition, subtraction, multiplication and division) supplemented by some simple memory functions. With the cheap unlocked iPhone 3G and the arrival of the unlocked iPhone 2.0 software, which updates older phones and the iPod touch, it has now been massively expanded and is context aware. As such, using it in portrait orientation presents you with the same regular calculator as was found on the first phone. Rotate it through 90°, though, and it will sense the change of orientation and present you with a range of scientific functions that would rival even the most advanced dedicated calculator.

Of course, there is still no print-out function or virtual paper roll for mobile accountants, but if you want to work out the diameter of a circle, compile log tables or factor the cosine of a variable then you should find it does everything you need. The unlocked US cellular iPhone is never likely to unseat dedicated scientific calculators from the likes of HP – particularly not in the world of academia – but this is a useful add-on that brings features formerly found only in full computer-based operating systems to every locked and unlocked iPhone owner’s pocket.

Unlocked iPhone photo-taking tips

The AT&T unlocked iPhone is a camera phone. Like all modern mobiles it incorporates a camera. Many expected it to be an ultra-high-resolution device, which for a prepaid or postpaid mobile phone would mean somewhere in the region of five megapixels. However, this leads to problems that include digital noise, where the sensor has been so tightly packed with light-sensitive cells that they are too small to cope with the amount of light they are receiving, or compression artefacts, where in a device throws away too much information while reducing the file size of each image.

Neither of these would be any good on a wireless Internet device with the prestige – not to mention the price tag – of the postpaid or prepaid ATT iPhone, so it would seem that Apple has compromised by incorporating a two-megapixel camera instead. This still delivers results that are very good when viewed on the unlocked cameraphone’s built-in screen and they can be safely posted on a website for viewing online. The photos will be less good when it comes to printing, however.

Even so, it should be remembered that the camera is a secondary function and is not core to the phone’s communications tools. As such, it is not the most developed component, so it should be handled with consideration if you want to get the best results from it. Here, we will take you through the things you need to think about when using the locked or unlocked iPhone’s built-in camera to ensure you have the best chance of taking pictures you will be proud to show (or even send) to your friends. Ensquared has multiple views on the iPhone to give their unlocked customers deeper insight into this unlocked device. One of many excellent articles is ATT Unlocked iPhone browses the wireless Internet

A note on iPhone insurance: The more you see the extent and power of iPhone capabilities the more the need for iPhone insurance is noted. The availability of iPhone insurance will become more urgent as time goes on and demand builds up but curently there are only few iphone insurance options on the market that include extended warranty and phone damage - but not phone lost or stolen