This should help
Open the Calculator. Hold down the power button on top of the phone until "slide to power off" appears. Let go of the power button and press and hold the home button. The power off message will disappear and the app will close.
This link How To Recalibrate iPhone Home Button To Make It More Responsive | Redmond Pie was posted earlier in the thread. I've had some problems with double clicking the home button to show all apps that are open, sometimes it would take 3 or 4 attempts to do the right thing, I followed the instructions on the link and it works a treat.
Don't know if its been posted (lazy) but the apple store is now reading 'we are busy updating'
http://store.apple.com/us
Don't know if its been posted (lazy) but the apple store is now reading 'we are busy updating'
http://store.apple.com/us
Having had an iPhone 3gs, an android and now a 4s I can safely say that IPhones PISS all over androids in pretty much every department, perhaps excluding the screen size..
This sentence makes no sense whatsoever? You're comparing a manufacturer's handset to an operating system? One is physical, one is software. That's like saying the technical specs of a Macbook Pro are far better than Linux.
Sigh, you know what I meant...
This sentence makes no sense whatsoever? You're comparing a manufacturer's handset to an operating system? One is physical, one is software. That's like saying the technical specs of a Macbook Pro are far better than Linux.
OK, I've only had 2 Android phones, an HTC Desire S and a Samsung Galaxy S. Both are eclipsed by an iPhone 3GS. There may be a better (hardware spec) Android phone, but if it is running Android it is just too flakey, rubbish apps, cumbersome OS, a nightmare to configure (ask our IT manager) and dreadful to actually operate.
I think, for most people, that's it's a case of what you tended to use first. I try and use my friend's iPhone or iPad, and I just get frustrated with it. Processes to do something just seem illogical or confusing, whereas I know what to do on my Android phone without any trouble at all. In terms of interfaces, they both seem fairly similar - there's icons for apps and folders you can put them in. I struggle with the iPad when trying to browse websites.
My original reason for not going with the iPhone (or iPod etc) was because I hated it's reliance on iTunes. I didn't want some big piece of software restricting what I could or couldn't listen to (from the days when illegally downloaded MP3s were commonplace). All other phones or mp3 devices just used Windows Explorer to drag & drop stuff on. My intolerance towards Apple still stems from those early days, I think.
I struggle with the iPad when trying to browse websites.
If you can't navigate the web on an iPad, you must be special. And not in a good way.
Had a HTC Hero when they were brand new, owned iPhone 3 and 4, given wife's Galaxy S3 a try, impressed by screen size but that's about it. Much prefer iOS.
Had a HTC Hero when they were brand new, owned iPhone 3 and 4, given wife's Galaxy S3 a try, impressed by screen size but that's about it. Much prefer iOS.
To be realistic, anybody with at least a single drop of technology knowledge would know by how superior android is over the Iphone.
First of all, hardware. For the price of an iPhone 4G (Which has a processor piece that is really weak), you can get an S3 or One X, which offer around 6 times the power of the 4G.
Second, OS. I agree that iOS is far more stable than Android, but the great thing is that Android is YOUR very own unlocked device. Once you buy it, you are allowed to do whatever you want with it, with only the radical activities would break the warranty bond. This is great for people experienced with modifying system and such.
Also, iPhone is ridiculously bad for small time software developers. You have to pay 10 times more dollars (99,99) just to be able to get a license to develop your own stuff. On the Android, on the other hand, you can get one for 9,99.
This would be just some of the reasons why I think iPhone is really the worst solution. (Except for Nokia.)