iPhone Kerbe - wie man ein iPhone/iPod Dock mit Mappe befestigt bildet!

Klicken Sie hier, um Schirm-Modus vollständig anzusehen
Ist hier ein kühles DIY auf, wie man ein iPhone Dock mit Mappe Clips bildet!
Hier wird es unten in gerade 61 Wörter gekocht: Klemmen Sie einen mittelgrossen Clip am iPod Ende Ihres Kabels, Steckerseite heraus fest. Entfernen Sie die Leitung Handgriffe und verstauen Sie das Kabel entlang dem fetten Rand. Nehmen Sie einen grösseren Clip und eine Klemmplatte, die auf das kleinere, damit zwischen den Abstand Kabeltrasse. Entfernen Sie die Handgriffe. Addieren Sie iPod. Versuchen Sie, es nicht rüber zu klopfen und den Stecker zu brechen.
über verdrahtet, bilden Sie
Barack Obama iPhone App!

Well it seems at least Barack Obama or his campaign managers are smart on the latest technology, they created an iPhone app for getting involved in this politics race.
Knock yourself out if you are for Barack Obama. Now, where’s McCain’s iPhone app? His probably too old to even know what an iPhone is. Oh well, I’d really like to see a President who’s updated on technology.
Features:
Landing Page of Obama ‘08 app* Application Landing Page
* Call Friends
* Events: Local Event Detail
* Issues
* Media: Photos and Video* Call Friends: A great volunteering tool that lets you make a difference any time you want by talking to people you already know. Your contacts are prioritized by key battleground states, and you can make calls and organize results all in one place.
* Call Stats: See nationwide Obama ‘08 Call Friends totals and find out how your call totals compare to leading callers.
* Get Involved: Do more. Find and contact your local Obama for America HQ.
* Receive Updates: Receive the latest news and announcements via text messages or email.
* News: Browse complete coverage of national and local campaign news.
* Local Events: Find local events, share by email and get maps and directions.
* Media: Browse videos and photos from the campaign
* Issues: Get clear facts about Barack Obama and Joe Biden’s plan for essential issues facing Americans.
iPhone Hack - How to Make an iPhone Stand using Paper Clips!

Here’s a guy who managed to come up with an iPhone stand out of paper clips. He’s even providing printable sketch sheet for those of you who want to make one.
It looks pretty simple, brilliant idea. They could sell these with different colors of paint or somethin’
Get the template here. Print it out with your favorite PDF reader. Be sure not to stretch the document. If you have a ruler, do a reality check to make sure the document didn’t get resized when printed. When the paper clip is straightened out, it should be the same length as the grey line in the template. A pair of pliers will make your job a lot easier.
via lifehacker, DIY Page
iPhone Coasters!
iPhone Hack - How to Develop Native iPhone Apps with Javascript/HTML!
Here’s a cool iPhone dev app called PhoneGap that allows you to develop iPhone Apps with Javascript and HTML for webmasters who know nothing about C.
PhoneGap is a free open source development tool and framework that allows web developers to take advantage of the powerful features in the iPhone SDK from HTML and JavaScript. We’re trying to make iPhone app development easy and open. For many applications a web application is the way to but in Safari you don’t get access to the native iPhone APIs, and the that’s the problem we’re trying to solve.
It is written in Objective-C and allows developers to embed their web app (HTML, JavaScript, CSS) in Webkit within a native iPhone app. We’re big advocates of the Open Web and want JavaScript developers to be able to get access iPhone features such as a spring board icon, background processing, push, geo location, camera, local sqlLite and accelerometers without the burden of learning Objective-C and Cocoa.
Here’s an example of how you could access iPhone data using Javascript:
Geo Location
//request location - this triggers a subsequent method call to gotLocation(lat,lon)
getLocation();//GAP will invoke this function once it has the location
function gotLocation(lat,lon){
$(’lat’).innerHTML = “latitude: ” + lat;
$(’lon’).innerHTML = “longitude: ” + lon;
}Accelerometer
//You have instant access to the accellerometer data via the accelX, accelY, and accelZ variables
function updateAccel(){
$(’accel’).innerHTML = “accel: ” + accelX + ” ” + accelY + ” ” + accelZ;
setTimeout(updateAccel,100);
}
You can now Buy iPhone 3G Online and Steve Jobs seems to be desperate!

For the weirdest reasons, Apple decides to start selling their iPhones online about 1 day after T-Mobile G1 phone came out.
We figure Steve Jobs is jealous of the new G-phone or he’s feeling desperate for the newest foe.
Steve, do you need some time to recuperate?
iPhone 3G Lawsuits Popping Up Everywhere!
Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
I keep banging this site about how badly iPhone or iPhone 3G is advertised. Of course, most phones do the same thing and could be called “deceptive advertising” but in this case, it’s Apple for christ-sakes.
If they have to lie to consumers on their ads, there’s enough people to get mad enough to sue Apple.
I completely agree that Apple needs to reimburse customers for the slow AT&T 3G speeds and also for false advertising.
Even if 99% of people in the world don’t care, it’s plain and pretty easy to prove that iPhone 3G maybe one of the slowest PDAs out there.
Only if Steve Jobs decided to go with Sprint or Verizon, these lawsuits could have been avoided.
I foresee only more trouble for the iPhone 3G for the next couple months. Steve Jobs hyped the “3G” speeds and features, yet consumers report back 3G as slow and not worth the extra features.
Don’t get me wrong, I love Apple’s products, just not their deceptive advertising which happend of lately.
Apple should be Sued for Deceptive iPhone 3G Advertising!
Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
As much as I can appreciate the Safari mobile browser on the iPhone, I still hate the fact that Apple refuses to make “real” ads without trying to cover up the slowness of the iPhone.
Well, as I told you about how iPhone is the biggest marketing scam ever, it seems like people are slowly starting to realize what I’ve predicted all along.
If above video isn’t proof of deceptive advertising than you must be either stupid or you’ve been whitewashed by Apple’s ads. No matter what the case, you need to face the facts and that is no company in the U.S. is allowed to “lie” to the consumers, especially in a public commercial.
Look, all I want is the truth, I know iPhone 3G is still lagging behind Sprint and Verizon’s CDMA network so you don’t have to lie.
Next time, would you add “Time Elapsed” in the commercials so people know that it’s not really “blazingly” fast.
Heck, the iPhone 3G in the commercial is probably faster than my desktop landline LAN connection for god-sakes!
You are doing everything great Steve Jobs, just cut the bullshit out and we will keep lovin’ you.
Here’s and excerpt of False Advertising laws in the U.S. from Wikipedia:
Advertising is regulated by the authority of the Federal Trade Commission, a United States administrative agency, to prohibit “unfair and deceptive acts or practices in commerce.”[3] While it makes laymen’s sense to assume that being deceptive is being unfair, deceptiveness in practice has been treated separately by the FTC, leaving unfairness to refer only to other types.[4] All commercial acts may be deceptive, not just advertising, but noncommercial activity such as advertising for political candidates is not subject to prosecution under the FTC Act. The 50 states have similar statutes, which generally are very similar to that of the FTC and in many cases copied so closely that they are known as “Little FTC Acts.” While the terms “false” and “deceptive” are essentially the same for most, being deceptive is not the same as producing deception. What is illegal is the potential to deceive, which is interpreted to occur when consumers see the advertising to be stating to them, explicitly or implicitly, a claim that they may not realize is false and material. The latter means that the claim, if relied on for making a purchasing decision, is likely to be harmful by adversely affecting that decision. If an ad is implicitly false, evidence must be obtained for what consumers saw the ad saying, and for the materiality of that, and for the true facts about the advertised item, but no evidence is required that actual deception occurred, or that reliance occurred, or that the advertiser intended to deceive or knew that the claim was false.
iPhone Food Hack - iPhone Cupcakes!

Although I do have regrets about Steve Job’s decision to go with slow AT&T network, I have to say this iPhone cupcake looks really delicious.
What will people think of next, iPhone cookies now?

