1. Use your iPhone as a storage device
One of side benefits to the iPod beyond its music-playing
capabilities is the fact that you can use it to store files. You
can’t do this with an out-of-the-box iPhone. But with the help
of a $10 program—and a Mac—you can. The app is
iPhoneDrive, a
small utility from Ecamm Network that displays the free storage
area of an iPhone in the manner of a Finder window in Column
view. To add files to the iPhone, either click the Copy to
iPhone button or drag a file or folder to the iPhoneDrive
Window; dragging from the iPhone or clicking on Copy From iPhone
puts iPhone files on your Mac. Note that music and photo files
for use on your iPhone are off limits.—CHRISTOPHER BREEN

2. Get a bigger keyboard for Web browsing
Like any other iPhone function requiring data entry, tapping
Safari’s address bar summons an on-screen keyboard. However, if
you rotate the iPhone horizontally before tapping the
address bar, the Safari window will switch to horizontal mode;
then, when you then tap the address bar, the onscreen keyboard
also appears horizontally. More important, it will also be much
larger than the standard vertical keyboard, making data entry a
little easier. By the way, Safari is currently the only iPhone
application in which this horizontal keyboard appears. (Also
worth noting: If you summon the keyboard before rotating your
iPhone, then Safari won’t rotate.)—DAN FRAKES
3. Create a home page in Safari
With the regular version of Safari that runs on your Mac (and
now your Windows-based PC), setting a particular site as your
home page is as simple as going to the General tab in
Preferences and typing in a URL. You can’t do that on the iPhone,
however. But you can use this work-around: Add your would-be
home page to your bookmarks list and then move it to the top of
your bookmarks list. Yes it’s an extra tap—first the Bookmarks
button and then the bookmark itself—but it will get you to your
favorite Web page with a minimum of fuss.—DF
4. Share your URLs
If you want to send the URL of a Web page you’re viewing to a
friend, tap the Address Bar, then tap Share. A new e-mail
message, containing the URL, will open in Mail; just choose a
recipient(s), add any comments you want to include, and tap
Send.—DF
5. Scroll through separate boxes on a Web page
If you encounter a scrolling box or list when surfing Safari
on your iPhone—say you’re responding to a post at the
Macworld.com forums —and try to scroll using your finger,
you’ll find that the entire page scrolls, instead of just the
box. The trick is to zoom in and scroll such areas with two
fingers.—DF
6. Make a call from Safari
If you find a phone number in Safari that you’d like to
call—say the phone number at a restaurant you’d like to make
reservations at—there’s no need to jump to the phone component.
Just tap the number; iPhone will dial it for you. (This is also
the case with phone numbers and URL embedded in e-mails and SMS
chats; tapping either one will place a call or open a Web page,
respectively.)—PHILIP MICHAELS
7. Find out where those links go
When in Safari, holding your fingertip down on a link instead
of tapping it produces an information balloon that displays the
underlying URL. The same thing happens in Mail when you hold a
link, which makes this tip much more useful. Now when
those “account update” e-mails appear, you can press and hold on
the link to find out if you’re really going to be taken to the
site the e-mail claims.—DF
8. Avoid Mail confusion
Don’t name two of your e-mail accounts with the same name, as
Mail will get confused and copy the settings from one account to
the other. And you can’t fix the situation by simply renaming
one account; you’ll need to delete one of the accounts and then
recreate it.—DF
9. Mark previously-read messages as unread
There doesn’t appear to be a way to the mark a read message
as unread on the iPhone, but it’s in there. While viewing a
message, tap Details, which reveals a Mark As Unread option; tap
it, and the next time you view your Inbox, the message will
display the Unread indicator.—DF
10. Recover ‘lost’ e-mails
Say you try to send an e-mail, but the iPhone can’t get
network access. You might think your message has disappeared
completely, but don’t worry—it’s still on your phone. A
temporary Outgoing folder is created, and the message winds up
in there. You can access this temporary folder from the main
screen of the sending account; the folder will disappear once
network access is available and the message is sent.—DF
11. Create e-mail folders
Well, actually, you can’t create e-mail folders on the iPhone.
What you can do, however, with an IMAP e-mail account is create
folders on the IMAP server—for example, if you have a .Mac
account, using the .Mac Web Mail interface. Those folders will
then appear on the iPhone, and their contents will—eventually—be
synced between the iPhone and the server.—DF
12. Save e-mail messages as drafts
If you want to save a message you’re working on so you can
come back to it later, tap Cancel. Instead of deleting the
message immediately, Mail pops up a dialog asking you to Save,
Don’t Save, or Cancel. Tap Save and the message is placed in
your Drafts folder. If your account doesn’t currently have a
Drafts folder, Mail will create one. However, don’t be alarmed
if the message doesn’t appear in Drafts immediately; in my
testing, it takes a while to show up.—DF

13. Pick where you listen to voicemail
If you’ve got a Bluetooth headset, incoming calls get routed
there automatically—not so when you call up Visual Voicemail.
However, an Audio button on the Visual Voicemail screen lets you
set where you listen to your message: the handset, the built-in
speaker, or a Bluetooth headset.—JIM DALRYMPLE
14. Find another way to scroll through Contacts
Everyone knows that you can scroll through the Contacts list
on your iPhone two different ways—either flick your finger on
the list to scroll up or down, or tap on one of the letters on
the alphabet running down the right side of the screen to jump
to contacts beginning with that letter. But there is a third
way: hold your finger on the alphabetical list and then slide up
and down—you’ll be able to scroll through your Contacts in a
more controlled manner than by flicking your finger.—JD
15. Use the Favorites and Recents list for more than just
phone calls
Favorites and Recents are part of the main Phone screen; the
former is iPhone’s version of frequently called numbers while
the latter is a list of people who you’ve called and whose calls
you missed. But this is not just a phone feature—assuming the
numbers in Favorites and Recents belong to a mobile phone, you
can send them an SMS message. Just tap the > button next to the
contact name or number and then tap the Text Message button at
the bottom of the contact listing.—DF
16. Save time in driving directions
One of the primary uses for the iPhone’s Map application is
to get driving directions. Both the starting point and
destination fields offer the Bookmarks button, so you can
quickly use a bookmark, recent location, or contact when
searching for directions. The first thing you should do in Maps
is find your own address and then bookmark it—this will make
finding directions to and from locations as easy as tapping your
home bookmark.—DF
17. Recreate some of the iPod’s audio controls
If you listen to an audiobook on an iPod, you probably know
that, ever since
the fourth-generation iPod’s release, you can alter the
playback speed to make it go faster or slower as your
preferences dictate. That feature makes its way over to the
iPhone as well. Just tap Settings and then the iPod option; tap
the Audiobook Speed entry and in the resulting screen, tap to
choose among Slower, Normal, or Faster.
In fact, that’s just one iPod feature that also appears on
the iPhone. You can also use the Settings screen to turn on
Sound Check (the feature that makes volume more consistent from
one track to another) and change the EQ with 22 included
equalization presets.—CB
18. Change your iPod icons
By default, the icons on the bottom of the iPod screen are
Playlists, Artists, Songs, Videos, and More. You can change
those first four, just as you would the commands that appear on
an iPod’s main screen. Simply tap the More icon and, in the More
screen, tap the Edit button at the top-left of the screen. A
Configure screen will wipe up from the bottom and display icons
for Albums, Podcasts, Audiobooks, Genres, Composers,
Compilations, Playlists, Artists, Songs, and Videos. To
substitute one of these icons for one that appears at the bottom
of the screen, just tap and hold on an icon and drag it over the
icon you want to replace. Tap Done when you’re done.—CB
19. Say goodbye to already-viewed videos
Even owners of the largest-capacity iPhone might feel
constrained by the 8GB limit when it comes to storing videos. A
full-length motion picture takes up around 1GB of storage, which
is a significant chunk of space for just one piece of media. To
help ease the storage crunch however, the iPhone offers to
delete videos after you’ve finished watching them; just tap a
button and Pirates of the Caribbean will disappear off
your iPhone, freeing up more space.—CB
20. Syncing notes with the iPhone
One of the major limitations to the iPhone’s Notes app is
that you can’t sync it with data from any application on your
Mac. There’s a work-around, however—each contact has a notes
field. So create a fake contact and paste any info you’d like to
keep with you in the notes field for that contact in Address
Book. One sync later, and all that info will be at your
fingertips.—JONATHAN SEFF
21. Rebooting your iPhone
Pretend for a moment that your iPhone suddenly becomes
unresponsive. Pushing the Home button does nothing. Hitting the
On/Off button produces the same discouraging result. What do you
do? Apple’s first reset tip is to press and hold the Home button
for about six seconds to quit any application that might have
locked up your iPhone. If that doesn’t work, trying pressing and
holding both Home and On/Off; after about 10 seconds
the Apple logo will appear. (This reboot trick takes a little
big longer than the iPod equivalent—holding down Select and Menu
usually restarts your music player after four seconds.)—CB
This tips is a contribution from MacWorld.com Got your own
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