Rogers rolling out OS 10.3.1.2576 to BlackBerry Passport owners
Are you a Rogers customer who purchased their BlackBerry Passport from Rogers but haven’t received 10.3.1 yet? If so, you might want to go ahead and check for software updates if you don’t already have a notification showing. As reported by several folks in the CrackBerry Forums and Twitter and checked through Sachesi, Rogers has now officially released OS 10.3.1.2576 (Software version 10.3.1.1779) to BlackBerry Passport owners.
How to navigate moments, collections, and years views in Photos for iPhone or iPad
Photos for OS X uses the same hierarchy as Photos for iOS — intelligently grouping images and videos into moments, collections, and years.
That lets Photos for OS X show you small moments in time and space, like yesterday at the park, but also collections of moments marked by larger changes, like that party across town or that week at the beach, and even an entire year all at once. That way you can quickly zoom out, drill down, or scrub through to find exactly the photos and videos you want to look at, edit, or share. And all it takes is a few clicks and swipes!
- How to move between Moments, Collections, and Years smart groups
- How to scrub through and quickly jump to a picture or video in Collections or Years
Note: You can’t manually add an item to a specific moment, collection, or year — not without some metadata hackery, at least. They just take whatever you bring in and intelligently sort them into the right time and place.
How to move between Moments, Collections, and Years smart groups
- Launch Photos for Mac.
- Click the Back button to move from a photo to moments, moments to collections or collections to years.
- Click on the Forward button move from years to collections or collections to moments.
- Click on a section of a year to move to that collections, or a section of a collection to move to that moment, or an item in a moment to move to that image or video.
- Tap an arrow key to move between photos and videos in a moment.
- Click on a photo or video to select it or double-click on a photo or video to go to it.
How to scrub through and quickly jump to a picture or video in Collections or Years
Because of the volume of photos in collections or years view the thumbnails are small and can be hard to see. Luckily there’s a scrubbing gesture that not only lets you get a better look, it also lets you jump immediately to that picture or video so you don’t have to click all the way through.
- Click and hold down on the year or collection view.
- Move your mouse or trackpad pointer around, in any direction, to get a larger thumbnail preview.
- Let go when you get to the picture or video you want, and you’ll be taken directly to it.
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iTranslate Voice 3.0 will save and sync your favorite phrases
iTranslate Voice has been updated to version 3.0, and now lets you save your most-used phrases for quick and easy access.
Phrasebook in iTranslate Voice, one of our favorite translation apps lets you save commonly-used phrases, letting you easily access them when you need them. Your phrases will sync over iCloud, letting you access them on both iPhone and iPad.
Below is the full list of changes in iTranslate Voice 3.0:
Introducing Phrasebook:
With Phrasebook you finally have a way to save frequently used phrases, sentences or questions. Imagine you are a doctor and need to ask patients with different native languages the same 5 questions over and over again. Or you travel to many different countries and want to have a list of the 10 most important phrases always at hand?
With Phrasebook you can now save those phrases and instantly translate them into whatever language we currently offer. Of course your phrases are synced with iCloud, so you’ll never lose them.
- Added full voice recognition support for Hindi
- Added full App localization for 15 more languages
You can download iTranslate Voice 3.0 from the App Store right now.
- $4.99 – Download Now
The Gameband Minecraft USB wearable saves your worlds for $79.99
They say you learn something new every day, well that goes for us too. We have just become aware of a wearable that joins the Microsoft Band on the Microsoft Store site. The Gameband Minecraft device allows PC players of the popular sandbox game to never lose their worlds for the price of $79.99.
How to type Spock’s vulcan salute emoji with your iPhone or iPad
How do you type Mr. Spock’s live long and prosper (llap) Vulcan salute emoji on your iPhone or iPad?
After posting the iOS 8.3 emoji keyboard how-to earlier, of course this was the question that quickly flooded my inbox. It’s part of the same new unicode emoji set Apple has added to iOS 8.3 and OS X 10.10.3, so if you’ve updated to one or both of those, you can see it. The problem is, Apple hasn’t yet added it to the emoji keyboard, so you can’t type it. Unless you’re logical about it…
Right now the quickest and simplest way to enter the LLAP — or “raised hand with fingers separated between the ring and the middle finger” as the standard calls it — symbol with your iPhone or iPad is to set up a keyboard shortcut. That way, when you type a combination of letters, iOS will automatically replace them with the live long and prosper symbol. It should be short, so it doesn’t take long to type, but it also needs to be unique, so you’ll never type it as part of another word and trigger the replacement by accident. After some experimentation, I’ve settled on “llap” — obviously! — but you’ll need to find what works for you.
How to set up the LLAP Vulcan salute symbol as a keyboard shortcut in iOS
- Copy the symbol from this tweet
- Launch Settings
- Tap General
- Tap Keyboards
- Tap Shortcuts
- Tap + at the top right
- Double tap next to Phrase to bring up the edit menu
- Tap Paste to insert the symbol
- Enter your shortcut of choice (I’m using “llap”)
- Tap Save
Now you’ll be able to type your shortcut of choice on your iPhone or iPad and insert the green-blooded, pointy eared symbol wherever and whenever you like. Live long and prosper! (Peace and long life!)
iOS 8.3 brings support for EE’s Wi-Fi calling on recent iPhone models
For those of you rocking an iPhone 5c or later on UK carrier EE’s network, today’s iOS 8.3 update has brought support for the carrier’s recently-launched Wi-Fi calling feature.
An EE community manager confirmed that the recently-released iOS 8.3 update includes support for the carrier’s Wi-Fi calling feature on iPhone models ranging from the iPhone 5c up to the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus. To enable Wi-Fi calling, you simply navigate to the Wi-Fi Calling option in the Setting menu where you’ll be presented with an option to turn the feature on. After enabling it, EE notes that it may take up to a day for Wi-Fi calling to be fully enabled on your device.
If you’re unfamiliar with Wi-Fi calling, it enables you to overcome poor cellular reception by using a Wi-Fi connection to place a call instead. EE just launched its Wi-Fi calling a few days ago, but it is currently limited to just a few specific devices.
Source: EE Community Forums
Here’s how to use a Bluetooth Keyboard with Windows Phone 8.1 Update 2
I’m writing this post in Microsoft Word on my Lumia 640. Absolutely nothing unusual about that. Except that I’m doing so without touching the Word Flow keyboard.
That’s because Windows Phone 8.1 Update 2 supports Bluetooth keyboards. Here’s how it all works.
How to view your pictures and videos on a map in Photos for OS X
Where you took a photo or video can be just as important to you as when you took it.
While Photos for OS X lets you easily navigate between moments, collections, and years, it also lets you navigate the world. That is, it lets you see all the photos and videos you took all laid out on a map. So, if you remember where you took a photo or video, you can use that to find it. Or, if you just want to reminisce, you can take a tour of your memories by literally clicking around the world.
How to view picture and video locations on a map
- Launch the Photos app on your Mac.
- Click on the name of the location above a moment or collection.
- Click on the thumbnail stack on the map to expand the individual thumbnails for all the photos taken at that location.
- Use two fingers* to pan around and **pinch to zoom in or out.
- Click on the back arrow button to return to the map view.
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Android Central Photo Contest: Cold
We’re back again with a new photo contest this week, and you may notice that we’ve changed the title of this post from the standard “Weekly Photo Contest” — that’s because we’re moving to photo contests that last two weeks, starting today. We’re keeping the same format and contest rules, simply running for two weeks. That gives everyone twice as long to take and submit a single photo for the contest, and also gives us a chance to give out more (and better) prizes each contest, while also making sure winners get them in a timely manner after they win.
Now with those formalities out of the way, let’s get to this contest’s prompt — “cold.” Now you don’t have to live in a cold climate to take a picture for this contest, but you may have to think outside the box to get something interesting. We can’t wait to see the chilly photos you take this week.
















