Messages In This Digest (20 Messages)
- 1a.
- Re: IOS 5.1.1 and Bluetooth On/Off App From: Gijzette Strickland
- 2a.
- Re: mobile email downloading ? From: N.A. Nada
- 3a.
- U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beginni From: Brent
- 3b.
- Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg From: N.A. Nada
- 3c.
- Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg From: AnneL
- 3d.
- Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg From: AnneL
- 3e.
- Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg From: Brent
- 3f.
- Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg From: N.A. Nada
- 3g.
- Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg From: Brent
- 4a.
- Odd phone call. From: Frank T
- 4b.
- Re: Odd phone call. From: Brent
- 4c.
- Re: Odd phone call. From: N.A. Nada
- 4d.
- Re: Odd phone call. From: Frank T
- 4e.
- Re: Odd phone call. From: Clark Martin
- 5a.
- Free data for iPhone? From: Devitt
- 5b.
- Re: Free data for iPhone? From: lwr32
- 6a.
- Help needed with Camera+ App Please From: Bob Newman
- 6b.
- Re: Help needed with Camera+ App Please From: Richard Bauer
- 6c.
- Re: Help needed with Camera+ App Please From: Bob Newman
- 6d.
- Re: Help needed with Camera+ App Please From: Richard Raiff
Messages
- 1a.
-
Re: IOS 5.1.1 and Bluetooth On/Off App
Posted by: "Gijzette Strickland" gsstrickland@gmail.com elfinbears
Fri May 11, 2012 4:22 am (PDT)
Well I updated the iOS and the app is still working...Yay.
Rich leaving bluetooth on eats my battery faster. I do everything
imaginable to save battery.
Thanks everyone for their replies.
--Gijzette
On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 11:15 PM, Richard Bauer <rk911@yahoo.com > wrote:
> **
>
>
> I just leave my BT on 24/7. I 'spose saving 1.08 seconds is important. ;o)
>
> rich
> ________________
>
> I've never thought about an app to turn Bluetooth on and off. I suppose if
> you're constantly turning Bluetooth on and off, it would be a good thing.
>
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 2a.
-
Re: mobile email downloading ?
Posted by: "N.A. Nada" whodo678@comcast.net
Fri May 11, 2012 4:23 am (PDT)
You're not using a browser, so you're not using web mail. (Where you go to your ISP's web site and log in.) Sounds like you are using Mail.app on your iPhone.
I get my email almost simultaneously on my Mac and iPhone. I'm with AT&T and Comcast. My mac.com account is IMAP. The Comcast is POP and the only some of the accounts are active on the phone. Push is on. I have never seen a "email cannot download because it is Being used by another device" and know of no reason you would get one.
Have you checked with RoadRunner so see what they suggest your setting should be? And about the message? It is not on the Apple end if you have the settings correct.
brent
On May 10, 2012, at 8:07 PM, itasara wrote:
> Gee, I don't know. I set up my email accounts one box at a time. I use the in formation from my mail.app on my computer. I guess I am not going thru the web. I don't go thru a browser on my phone. I just list the id, password, description, incoming and outgoing servers for each mail box. Some I keep inactive. I'm also set up on icloud for one of the boxes. It is interesting that on my phone I set up my smtp as smtp.roadrunner.com and now when I look it was automatically changed to mobile-smtp. roadrunner. com. I am also noticing double email addresses and the outgoing mail is as I originally posted without the mobile part. maybe that is why I am getting those alerts that I have another in use?
>
> If that is the reason, what do I do? Do I delete one or make one inactive and which on the moble.smtp or the plain smtp.
> And if that is not the problem, what could it be?
>
> Ellen
>
> Re: mobile email downloading ?
> Posted by: "N.A. Nada" whodo678@comcast.net
> Thu May 10, 2012 1:55 pm (PDT)
>
> Are you using an email app on your iPhone or are you using web mail?
- 3a.
-
U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beginni
Posted by: "Brent" flapdoodle@gmail.com flapdoodle44
Fri May 11, 2012 8:50 am (PDT)
http://goo.gl/hVkjW
Sent to you by Brent via Google Reader: U.S. Postal Service Bans
Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beginning on May 16 via PadGadget
by Juli on 5/11/12
If you want to send an iPad, a Kindle Fire, an iPhone, a laptop, or a
similar device overseas, now is the time to send it, because as of next
week, the U.S. Postal Service will be banning all electronic gadgets
that contain a lithium battery.
The reason? Those lithium batteries can potentially explode or catch
fire when devices are shipped with a full charge, improperly stored, or
improperly packed. Lithium battery related fire incidents have occurred
17 times on passenger flights since 2004, and have been implicated in
at least one major crash of a UPS plane.
As a result of the ban, people who want to ship electronic devices to
troops or to family overseas will have to use a private delivery
service, such as UPS, DHL, and FedEx, which are pricy alternatives.
The ban, which was implemented by the International Civil Aviation
Organization and the Universal Postal Union, may not be permanent. USPS
has told customers that by January 1, 2013, small shipments of
electronics with lithium batteries may be able to be sent overseas, but
until that date rolls around, people hoping to send the devices will
have to shell out the cash for a private shipping company.
USPS's refusal to ship devices with lithium batteries will have the
greatest impact on military serving overseas (DHL and UPS do not
deliver to APO or FPO boxes) and commercial resellers, who will have to
increase shipping costs and rely on FedEx, DHL, and UPS, which still
have challenges in countries like Russia.
The United States and Australia are the only countries that ban the
overseas shipments of lithium batteries, while other countries, like
the U.K. allow for smartphones and iPads while banning laptop computer
batteries, and Japan, who restricts lithium batteries to sea mail. Some
countries, like Germany, allow international air mail of lithium
batteries with strict safety requirements.
USPS has not given a reason for the rush, and claims that it is just
adhering to international guidelines. If you had any shipments planned,
it's best to get them out now, before the ban is in place and before
the prices rise. Check out the graphic below for a guide on what's
going to be forbidden.
[via Fast Company]
» Related posts:
- Are iPads and other Gadgets Impacting Professional Sports?
- British Airways Using iPads to Revolutionize Customer Service
- Motorola Introduces Live Streaming Device for iPad and Other Gadgets
Things you can do from here:
- Subscribe to PadGadget using Google Reader
- Get started using Google Reader to easily keep up with all your
favorite sites
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 3b.
-
Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg
Posted by: "N.A. Nada" whodo678@comcast.net
Fri May 11, 2012 11:37 am (PDT)
I hope the ban does not become permanent. The problem is with bulk shipments of lithium metal or lithium batteries. Yes, something needs to change, but a ban is the wrong answer.
According to a Wikipedia article, that cited two Aviation Herald articles, "In October 2010, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued a Safety Alert For Operators highlighting the fact that the cargo on board Flight 6 contained a large quantity of lithium batteries and that Halon 1301 was inefficient in fighting fires involving them.[8] The FAA issued a restriction on the carrying of lithium batteries in bulk on passenger flights.[28]" It does not quote the FAA Safety Alert or what is considered a large quantity.
I believe as a passenger you are allowed to bring on board something like 3 or 5 grams of lithium, but you would have to carry on something like 5 laptops to do that. Again, that is the limitation for passengers on a passenger plane, not cargo.
So require hazmat warning labels and paperwork for mailing items with lithium batteries. I'm sure the letter carriers would like to know if they are carrying a lithium battery, in their truck loaded with paper, or their bag.
USPS, you're not helping your own case and survival with decisions like this. Keep Saturday deliveries, stop Monday deliveries and close the local post offices on Mondays.
the other Brent
On May 11, 2012, at 8:50 AM, Brent wrote:
> http://goo.gl/hVkjW
>
> Sent to you by Brent via Google Reader: U.S. Postal Service Bans
> Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beginning on May 16 via PadGadget
> by Juli on 5/11/12
>
> If you want to send an iPad, a Kindle Fire, an iPhone, a laptop, or a
> similar device overseas, now is the time to send it, because as of next
> week, the U.S. Postal Service will be banning all electronic gadgets
> that contain a lithium battery.
>
> The reason? Those lithium batteries can potentially explode or catch
> fire when devices are shipped with a full charge, improperly stored, or
> improperly packed. Lithium battery related fire incidents have occurred
> 17 times on passenger flights since 2004, and have been implicated in
> at least one major crash of a UPS plane.
>
> As a result of the ban, people who want to ship electronic devices to
> troops or to family overseas will have to use a private delivery
> service, such as UPS, DHL, and FedEx, which are pricy alternatives.
>
> The ban, which was implemented by the International Civil Aviation
> Organization and the Universal Postal Union, may not be permanent. USPS
> has told customers that by January 1, 2013, small shipments of
> electronics with lithium batteries may be able to be sent overseas, but
> until that date rolls around, people hoping to send the devices will
> have to shell out the cash for a private shipping company.
>
> USPS�s refusal to ship devices with lithium batteries will have the
> greatest impact on military serving overseas (DHL and UPS do not
> deliver to APO or FPO boxes) and commercial resellers, who will have to
> increase shipping costs and rely on FedEx, DHL, and UPS, which still
> have challenges in countries like Russia.
>
> The United States and Australia are the only countries that ban the
> overseas shipments of lithium batteries, while other countries, like
> the U.K. allow for smartphones and iPads while banning laptop computer
> batteries, and Japan, who restricts lithium batteries to sea mail. Some
> countries, like Germany, allow international air mail of lithium
> batteries with strict safety requirements.
>
> USPS has not given a reason for the rush, and claims that it is just
> adhering to international guidelines. If you had any shipments planned,
> it�s best to get them out now, before the ban is in place and before
> the prices rise. Check out the graphic below for a guide on what�s
> going to be forbidden.
>
>
>
> [via Fast Company]
>
> � Related posts:
> - Are iPads and other Gadgets Impacting Professional Sports?
> - British Airways Using iPads to Revolutionize Customer Service
> - Motorola Introduces Live Streaming Device for iPad and Other Gadgets
>
> Things you can do from here:
> - Subscribe to PadGadget using Google Reader
> - Get started using Google Reader to easily keep up with all your
> favorite sites
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
- 3c.
-
Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg
Posted by: "AnneL" shadow484@comcast.net alogston
Fri May 11, 2012 11:59 am (PDT)
> USPS, you're not helping your own case and survival with decisions like
> this. Keep Saturday deliveries, stop Monday deliveries and close the local
> post offices on Mondays.
I agree, the USPS seems determined to cut its own throat, doesn't it?
Anything that involves the post office cutting days of service is going to
cause probably irreparable harm, not only to the USPS but to others.
Cutting Saturdays means cutting off the only time that a lot of working
people can actually go to the post office. Cutting a weekday delivery is
going to cause a massive problem with legal notices and court filings.
Anne
- 3d.
-
Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg
Posted by: "AnneL" shadow484@comcast.net alogston
Fri May 11, 2012 12:00 pm (PDT)
Okay, the title of the article is a little misleading. After looking
further, they're not banning shipping of electronics with lithium batteries
entirely; it's apparently only international shipments.
Anne
- 3e.
-
Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg
Posted by: "Brent" flapdoodle@gmail.com flapdoodle44
Fri May 11, 2012 12:06 pm (PDT)
Over the years I have shipped much stuff to Iraq. Priority mail form the
USPS is almost the only way to get it there. All mail goes to an APO (Army
Post Office) address. I was not able to ship FexEx or UPS to an APO.
On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 1:51 PM, AnneL <shadow484@comcast.net > wrote:
> **
>
>
> Okay, the title of the article is a little misleading. After looking
> further, they're not banning shipping of electronics with lithium
> batteries
> entirely; it's apparently only international shipments.
>
> Anne
>
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 3f.
-
Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg
Posted by: "N.A. Nada" whodo678@comcast.net
Fri May 11, 2012 12:24 pm (PDT)
That is why I suggested closing the local post office and stopping service on Monday. That way deferred deliveries can be made, and access to the PO is available for most people on Saturdays. Haven't some rural routes not made deliveries on Saturdays, forever?
The low cost delivery system should be able to function on 5 days a week. And the legal system would adjust if it were the law of the land, or they would allow other services to supplement the USPS for the one day.
Being a city boy, I had to get used to traveling to small towns for work and finding all the restaurants and many business closed
on Sundays. But I go used to it. Had to scramble a couple of times to find Sunday dinner, but I managed.
On May 11, 2012, at 11:54 AM, AnneL wrote:
> USPS, you're not helping your own case and survival with decisions like
> this. Keep Saturday deliveries, stop Monday deliveries and close the local
> post offices on Mondays.
I agree, the USPS seems determined to cut its own throat, doesn't it?
Anything that involves the post office cutting days of service is going to
cause probably irreparable harm, not only to the USPS but to others.
Cutting Saturdays means cutting off the only time that a lot of working
people can actually go to the post office. Cutting a weekday delivery is
going to cause a massive problem with legal notices and court filings.
Anne
- 3g.
-
Re: U.S. Postal Service Bans Shipping of iPads and Other Gadgets Beg
Posted by: "Brent" flapdoodle@gmail.com flapdoodle44
Fri May 11, 2012 12:28 pm (PDT)
I was shipping a large Priority Mail box to Anchorage, AK. I asked UPS for
a price and it $110. USPS did it in 3 days for $15. There was an iPad in
the box.
On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 2:13 PM, N.A. Nada <whodo678@comcast.net > wrote:
> That is why I suggested closing the local post office and stopping service
> on Monday. That way deferred deliveries can be made, and access to the PO
> is available for most people on Saturdays. Haven't some rural routes not
> made deliveries on Saturdays, forever?
>
> The low cost delivery system should be able to function on 5 days a week.
> And the legal system would adjust if it were the law of the land, or they
> would allow other services to supplement the USPS for the one day.
>
> Being a city boy, I had to get used to traveling to small towns for work
> and finding all the restaurants and many business closed
> on Sundays. But I go used to it. Had to scramble a couple of times to find
> Sunday dinner, but I managed.
>
> On May 11, 2012, at 11:54 AM, AnneL wrote:
>
> > USPS, you're not helping your own case and survival with decisions like
> > this. Keep Saturday deliveries, stop Monday deliveries and close the
> local
> > post offices on Mondays.
>
> I agree, the USPS seems determined to cut its own throat, doesn't it?
>
> Anything that involves the post office cutting days of service is going to
> cause probably irreparable harm, not only to the USPS but to others.
> Cutting Saturdays means cutting off the only time that a lot of working
> people can actually go to the post office. Cutting a weekday delivery is
> going to cause a massive problem with legal notices and court filings.
>
> Anne
>
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 4a.
-
Odd phone call.
Posted by: "Frank T" fjt2@mac.com frankt192
Fri May 11, 2012 11:25 am (PDT)
Several times I have recieved a call and no one was there. Still don't know why.
Strange but true, anyone have a simular call and why did it happen?
Frank
- 4b.
-
Re: Odd phone call.
Posted by: "Brent" flapdoodle@gmail.com flapdoodle44
Fri May 11, 2012 11:27 am (PDT)
Annoying but not strange. Telemarketers ring several phones at the same
time and connect to the one that answers first.
On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 1:18 PM, Frank T <fjt2@mac.com> wrote:
> **
>
>
> Several times I have recieved a call and no one was there. Still don't
> know why.
>
> Strange but true, anyone have a simular call and why did it happen?
>
> Frank
>
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 4c.
-
Re: Odd phone call.
Posted by: "N.A. Nada" whodo678@comcast.net
Fri May 11, 2012 12:02 pm (PDT)
Yeah, you're getting called by an auto-dialer and a human solicitor is not available to con you out of your money.
Register for the Do Not Call List at www.donotcall.gov. It is free, if you end up at a site that wants to charge you money to register, you got the wrong one.
It will take about 30 days for your name to get on the list and a little while longer for the honest business to remove you.
From the web site, the emphasis is mine:
"If I register my number on the National Do Not Call Registry, will it stop all telemarketing calls?
No. Placing your number on the National Do Not Call Registry will stop most telemarketing calls, but not all. Because of limitations in the jurisdiction of the FTC and FCC, calls from or on behalf of political organizations, charities, and telephone surveyors would still be permitted, as would calls from companies with which you have an existing business relationship, or those to whom you�ve provided express agreement in writing to receive their calls. However, if you ask a company with which you have an existing business relationship to place your number on its own do-not-call list, it must honor your request. You should keep a record of the date you make the request."
Please note, it does not exempt religious groups.
It will not stop dishonest businesses, either. To stop those you have to file a complaint at the same site, every time you get a call from a dishonest business, but you need to be able to identify them, so play them along and get their phone number and business name at minimum.
Again from the Do Not Call web site:
"Can I register my cell phone on the National Do Not Call Registry?
Yes, you may place your personal cell phone number on the National Do Not Call Registry. The registry has accepted cell phone numbers since it opened for registrations in June 2003. There is no deadline to register a home or cell phone number on the Registry.
You may have received an email telling you that your cell phone is about to be assaulted by telemarketing calls as a result of a new cell phone number database; however, that is not the case. FCC regulations prohibit telemarketers from using automated dialers to call cell phone numbers. Automated dialers are standard in the industry, so most telemarketers don�t call consumers on their cell phones without their consent."
No, you can not register any business phone.
If your state has it's own No Call List, register on that one also. Oregon's was better than the Federal one, but the stupid legislators let it expire, and if they are sending the text to your cell phone....
I file complaints for unsolicited text messages also, because they are not specifically excluded. That was how I got Oregon to include cell phones. My iPhone is with AT&T so I report text spam to them also.
Brent
On May 11, 2012, at 11:18 AM, Frank T wrote:
Several times I have recieved a call and no one was there. Still don't know why.
Strange but true, anyone have a simular call and why did it happen?
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 4d.
-
Re: Odd phone call.
Posted by: "Frank T" fjt2@mac.com frankt192
Fri May 11, 2012 2:31 pm (PDT)
Thanks.
--- In apple-iphone@yahoogroups. , "N.A. Nada" <whodo678@..com .> wrote:
>
> Yeah, you're getting called by an auto-dialer and a human solicitor is not available to con you out of your money.
>
> Register for the Do Not Call List at www.donotcall.gov. It is free, if you end up at a site that wants to charge you money to register, you got the wrong one.
>
> It will take about 30 days for your name to get on the list and a little while longer for the honest business to remove you.
>
> From the web site, the emphasis is mine:
>
> "If I register my number on the National Do Not Call Registry, will it stop all telemarketing calls?
>
> No. Placing your number on the National Do Not Call Registry will stop most telemarketing calls, but not all. Because of limitations in the jurisdiction of the FTC and FCC, calls from or on behalf of political organizations, charities, and telephone surveyors would still be permitted, as would calls from companies with which you have an existing business relationship, or those to whom you've provided express agreement in writing to receive their calls. However, if you ask a company with which you have an existing business relationship to place your number on its own do-not-call list, it must honor your request. You should keep a record of the date you make the request."
>
> Please note, it does not exempt religious groups.
>
> It will not stop dishonest businesses, either. To stop those you have to file a complaint at the same site, every time you get a call from a dishonest business, but you need to be able to identify them, so play them along and get their phone number and business name at minimum.
>
> Again from the Do Not Call web site:
>
> "Can I register my cell phone on the National Do Not Call Registry?
> Yes, you may place your personal cell phone number on the National Do Not Call Registry. The registry has accepted cell phone numbers since it opened for registrations in June 2003. There is no deadline to register a home or cell phone number on the Registry.
>
> You may have received an email telling you that your cell phone is about to be assaulted by telemarketing calls as a result of a new cell phone number database; however, that is not the case. FCC regulations prohibit telemarketers from using automated dialers to call cell phone numbers. Automated dialers are standard in the industry, so most telemarketers don't call consumers on their cell phones without their consent."
>
> No, you can not register any business phone.
>
> If your state has it's own No Call List, register on that one also. Oregon's was better than the Federal one, but the stupid legislators let it expire, and if they are sending the text to your cell phone....
>
> I file complaints for unsolicited text messages also, because they are not specifically excluded. That was how I got Oregon to include cell phones. My iPhone is with AT&T so I report text spam to them also.
>
> Brent
>
>
>
> On May 11, 2012, at 11:18 AM, Frank T wrote:
>
> Several times I have recieved a call and no one was there. Still don't know why.
>
> Strange but true, anyone have a simular call and why did it happen?
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
- 4e.
-
Re: Odd phone call.
Posted by: "Clark Martin" cmmac@sonic.net cmartin1138
Fri May 11, 2012 2:32 pm (PDT)
On May 11, 2012, at 11:18 AM, Frank T wrote:
> Several times I have recieved a call and no one was there. Still don't know why.
>
> Strange but true, anyone have a simular call and why did it happen?
What does Caller ID show, someone you know?
As others have said, tele-marketing autodialers (auto crank callers).
But if it's someone you know it may be them butt dialing. I was getting them often till all my daughters went to smart phones.
- 5a.
-
Free data for iPhone?
Posted by: "Devitt" devittad@comcast.net devittad
Fri May 11, 2012 2:31 pm (PDT)
Found the link to this iPhone sleeve on Boing Boing. Supposedly the company is offering free data via the sleeve. Sounds interesting so I thought I'd share. (I have no connection to the company.)
YouTube
http://m.youtube.com/#/watch? desktop_uri= %2Fwatch% 3Fv%3DdjQih2qz90 0&v=djQih2qz900& gl=US
(Sent from Flipboard)
Sent from my iPad
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 5b.
-
Re: Free data for iPhone?
Posted by: "lwr32" whiterabbit32@gmail.com lwr0032
Fri May 11, 2012 11:27 pm (PDT)
Interesting case but quite expensive at $99 for pre-order.
🐰 Alice
On May 11, 2012, at 2:08 PM, Devitt <devittad@comcast.net > wrote:
> Found the link to this iPhone sleeve on Boing Boing. Supposedly the company is offering free data via the sleeve. Sounds interesting so I thought I'd share. (I have no connection to the company.)
>
> YouTube
> http://m.youtube.com/#/watch? desktop_uri= %2Fwatch% 3Fv%3DdjQih2qz90 0&v=djQih2qz900& gl=US
>
> (Sent from Flipboard)
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- 6a.
-
Help needed with Camera+ App Please
Posted by: "Bob Newman" bobnewman@cox.net agunat
Fri May 11, 2012 3:28 pm (PDT)
I am a novice and could use a manual telling me how to work this popular APP.
BUT MOST IMPORTANT I do not see a way to transfer my photos taken with this app to my home Windows based computer. I can do it with the standard Camera app that comes with the phone but not those taken with this app. HELP PLEASE
Thanks in advance... Bob
- 6b.
-
Re: Help needed with Camera+ App Please
Posted by: "Richard Bauer" rk911@yahoo.com rk911
Fri May 11, 2012 5:51 pm (PDT)
first, just connect your phone to the PC via a USB port. then open Windows
Explorer (RIGHT click on START and choose DXPLORE is one way to do that).
your phone will be listed somewhere in the left column. LEFT click on your
phone and all of your photo files will be displayed in the right side
column. then it's just a matter of dragging and dropping them to wherever
you want them to be.
rich
__________________
I am a novice and could use a manual telling me how to work this popular
APP.
BUT MOST IMPORTANT I do not see a way to transfer my photos taken with this
app to my home Windows based computer. I can do it with the standard Camera
app that comes with the phone but not those taken with this app. HELP
PLEASE
Thanks in advance... Bob
--------------------- --------- ------
Yahoo! Groups Links
- 6c.
-
Re: Help needed with Camera+ App Please
Posted by: "Bob Newman" bobnewman@cox.net agunat
Fri May 11, 2012 6:49 pm (PDT)
I do not know what DXPLORE is and see no reference to it. I have used your method though to find the pictures taken with iPhone's native Camera app with Windows Explorer (I must drill down several folders though). In a folder labeled 860OKMZ0 I found the photos taken with the Camera app but I cannot find those taken with the optional Camera+ app. All of my NY vacation photos are there.
Bob
--- In apple-iphone@yahoogroups. , "Richard Bauer" <rk911@...> wrote:com
>
> first, just connect your phone to the PC via a USB port. then open Windows
> Explorer (RIGHT click on START and choose DXPLORE is one way to do that).
> your phone will be listed somewhere in the left column. LEFT click on your
> phone and all of your photo files will be displayed in the right side
> column. then it's just a matter of dragging and dropping them to wherever
> you want them to be.
>
> rich
> __________________
>
> I am a novice and could use a manual telling me how to work this popular
> APP.
>
> BUT MOST IMPORTANT I do not see a way to transfer my photos taken with this
> app to my home Windows based computer. I can do it with the standard Camera
> app that comes with the phone but not those taken with this app. HELP
> PLEASE
>
> Thanks in advance... Bob
>
>
>
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Re: Help needed with Camera+ App Please
Posted by: "Richard Raiff" richraiff@gmail.com raiffrj
Fri May 11, 2012 7:32 pm (PDT)
In camera+ go to menu, lower right corner of the screen, then go to
autosave. choose Camera roll and you will be able to drag and drop the same
as in the native camera app.
*Rich Raiff*
On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 9:28 PM, Bob Newman <bobnewman@cox.net > wrote:
> **
>
>
> I do not know what DXPLORE is and see no reference to it. I have used your
> method though to find the pictures taken with iPhone's native Camera app
> with Windows Explorer (I must drill down several folders though). In a
> folder labeled 860OKMZ0 I found the photos taken with the Camera app but I
> cannot find those taken with the optional Camera+ app. All of my NY
> vacation photos are there.
>
> Bob
>
>
> --- In apple-iphone@yahoogroups. , "Richard Bauer" <rk911@...> wrote:com
> >
> > first, just connect your phone to the PC via a USB port. then open
> Windows
> > Explorer (RIGHT click on START and choose DXPLORE is one way to do that).
> > your phone will be listed somewhere in the left column. LEFT click on
> your
> > phone and all of your photo files will be displayed in the right side
> > column. then it's just a matter of dragging and dropping them to wherever
> > you want them to be.
> >
> > rich
> > __________________
> >
> > I am a novice and could use a manual telling me how to work this popular
> > APP.
> >
> > BUT MOST IMPORTANT I do not see a way to transfer my photos taken with
> this
> > app to my home Windows based computer. I can do it with the standard
> Camera
> > app that comes with the phone but not those taken with this app. HELP
> > PLEASE
> >
> > Thanks in advance... Bob
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