iPhone 15 eSIM: How to transfer your phone number to Apple's new iPhone
Apple ditched the SIM card with the iPhone 14 release, and the upcoming iPhone 15 won't have a physical card either. Here's how to set up your digital SIM.
Apple ditched the SIM card with the iPhone 14 release, and the upcoming iPhone 15 won't have a physical card either. Here's how to set up your digital SIM.
You've got about 30 minutes until you're out of the door and you realize that your iPhone's battery is almost dead! What's the best way to get as much charge into the battery as possible?
An iPhone XS Max with 256GB of storage is yours for $1,249. But how much does it cost Apple to build?
Readers of my blog know that I am a very big fan of the Evernote application and service and am personally a professional edition subscriber. I use it on my iPhone, Windows Mobile phones, Mac, and PC to capture thoughts and notes for archiving and usage. I was pleased to get the news that they partnered with Eye-Fi so that now your photos captured on your Eye-Fi card can be instantly synced to your Evernote notebooks.
Cheap phones made the Palm Pilot obsolete years ago, even though the Palm did some things better. The same may be true with tablets, although the big issue here is different -- price.
Offer doctors a cool phone, a reasonable price, a monthly charge, they're going to go for it. They're going to get those Electronic Medical Records. And they're going to start working together.
Apparently, Steve Jobs still has what it takes to sell Apple - even to battered-down Wall Street.For the past week or so, there's been a lot of chatter about the state of the economy and what sort of impact it might have on companies during the holiday quarter.
The first touch screen BlackBerry has finally arrived and the iPhone is clearly in its cross hairs. Learn the pros and cons of the new BlackBerry Storm and see how well it stacks up against the iPhone as a business device.
I am sure most of the mobile-focused readers of this blog have read or read about Russell Beattie's The end of Mowser blog post that has turned into an "End of the Mobile Web" debate. I am sorry that Russell's mobile initiative didn't work out, but as I'll talk about below this same method appears to have worked for another company and I think we are just beginning to see the start of the mobile web. While there are those who say the Mobile Web must die since mobile devices today have the horsepower and hardware to bring us the full web on the go, there are many more millions of people who do not have these devices and need the web mobilized or they will never experience it and it may indeed die a slow death.
I'm still in the process of tracking down some devices to show off during my show n' tell at Mobile Expo in NYC in a couple of weeks. This is a presentation that my fellow CNET editor Brian Cooley usually does.