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6ix Passions is edited by Jean-Philippe Cyr,
a freelance user experience strategist.

He lives in Montreal, Magog and St. Martin, likes good foods and wines, cooking, travelling, movies, tv series and outdoor. He plays with his iPhone and browses the Web with his enhanced Firefox on a Mac.

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Archive

Posts tagged iphone

Jan
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Sep
21st
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Sep
20th
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Sep
16th
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Apple picking - an iPhone 4 creation.

Last weekend, we went apple picking in an orchard near my country house. It was a sunny and perfect day to test the camera and video capabilities of the new iPhone 4.

This is my first start to finish iPhone 4 video creation. The photos have been taken with the 5 MP camera, the videos are in 720p and the movie has been edited using the iMovie App for iPhone and iTouch. I even published it to Facebook using Internet Tethering. I think it is pretty conclusive.

Sep
14th
Tue
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Epic Citadel
Epic Citadel is more a demo than a game, but what a demo! It’s using the Unreal Engine 3. The graphics are stunning on the new iPhone 4 Retina Display.

Epic Citadel

Epic Citadel is more a demo than a game, but what a demo! It’s using the Unreal Engine 3. The graphics are stunning on the new iPhone 4 Retina Display.

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Sep
12th
Sun
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iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, and iPod Touch 4th gen
Slimmer and slimmer…

iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, and iPod Touch 4th gen

Slimmer and slimmer…

(Source: ledebugger)

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People want apps that are useful and simple.

Marco Arment - Most common words unique to 1-star and 5-star App Store reviews

Probably obvious you’ll tell me, but it is an interesting none-scientific study by Marco who wrote a script to find the most common words in the 100 App Store reviews for very satisfied users vs very desapointed users.

(Source: marco)

Sep
9th
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Users will trade price and flexibility in exchange for simplicity and elegance.

Android Is As Open As The Clenched Fist I’d Like To Punch The Carriers With

Here’s another good example why Android sucks and iPhone rules. Not because of Google, but maily because of the carriers who are trying to get back with their lock down ecosystems using the openness of Android.

Sep
8th
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How to fix your Bluetooth Internet Tethering with your iPhone

This weekend I was at the country house and was in need of accessing the Internet, but I did forget my USB wire at home. I tried to setup Internet Tethering on Bluetooth, but I had many problems and a hard time configuring it.

Looking back at some forums on the Net, I can see that I was not the only one having that issue, so here’s how I solved my iPhone Bluetooth Internet Tethering problem:

  1. If your iPhone was already paired with your Mac, under the Mac Bluetooth preferences panel, remove the service by selecting it and pressing the “-” sign. In your iPhone Bluetooth settings page, if your computer is present under “Devices” click on the little arrow close to it and choose “Forget this device”.

  2. Now that we can start fresh, make sure the Bluetooth on your iPhone is at ON, Internet Tethering under General settings > Network is ON and your Bluetooth on your Mac is at ON and Discoverable. Make sure also that you show the Bluetooth status in your menu bar by clicking the appropriate check-box in the Bluetooth preferences panel. Note that if your try this at home, I suggest your disable your Wi-Fi and/or Ethernet services in Network preferences before proceeding (in order to make sure the Bluetooth service is put in front of any others).

  3. Setup a new device by clicking the “+” sign in the list of devices possibly connected to your Mac. The Bluetooth Setup Assistsance should start. It will try to detect your iPhone. When detected click continue. It will then send a pairing code to your iPhone. Click “Pair” in the message popup-box on your iPhone and complete the Setup Wizard on your Mac.

  4. Your Mac and iPhone should be paired by now, but it is far possible that your iPhone is not connected to your computer. Make sure your are not on the Bluetooth settings page on your iPhone (any other General settings page, or your Home screen should be good). In your menu bar, select your iPhone under the Bluetooth icon and press “Connect”. The Bluetooth icon should change for one with a B with 3 dots and the name of your iPhone should be in bold in the list of device(s).

  5. Now that you iPhone is connected via Bluetooth, it doesn’t mean that you have access to the Internet and this even if your iPhone has the blue bar status “Internet Tethering” on it. Open your Mac Network preferences. Add a new service, by clicking the “+” sign. As the interface choose “Bluetooth PAN”, as the service name you can type “iPhone Bluetooth” or anything else you wish. Click “Create”.

  6. Maybe you have Internet now and maybe not. If the service is green, you should be good to go. If it is yellow or red, I suggest your click the “Advanced” button and under the TCP/IP tab, you click “Renew DHCP Lease”. You should be able to to see your iPhone Bluetooth service at green now and be able to make a first test by accessing Google. 

Good luck!