Article ID -- Article Title. FD40296 - Technical Note: How to see Web Application Firewall (WAF) logs on the FortiAnalyzer FD40423 - Technical Note: IPsec VPN - Site. ![]() A8. 00, 1. 90. 0 MHz UMTS / HSDPA/HSPA+/DC- HSDPA8. MHz GSM / EDGE8. 50, 9. MHz. Power. Years Active- 2. V 5. 1. 8 W. They run Apple's i. OS mobile operating system. The i. Phone has Wi- Fi and can connect to cellular networks. An i. Phone can shoot video (though this was not a standard feature until the i. Phone 3. GS), take photos, play music, send and receive email, browse the web, send and receive text messages, follow GPS navigation, record notes, perform mathematical calculations, and receive visual voicemail. As of January 2. 01. Apple's App Store contained more than 2. Phone and other i. OS devices. The original 1st- generation i. Phone was a GSM phone and established design precedents, such as a button placement that has persisted throughout all releases and a screen size maintained for the next four iterations. The i. Phone 3. G added 3. G network support, and was followed by the 3. GS with improved hardware, the 4 with a metal chassis, higher display resolution and front- facing camera, and the 4. S with improved hardware and the voice assistant Siri. The i. Phone 5 featured a taller, 4- inch display and Apple's newly introduced Lightning connector. In 2. 01. 3, Apple released the 5. An anonymous 22-year-old security researcher who goes by MalwareTech has, at least temporarily, managed to find a kill switch for the ransomware that spread across. A community-built site of hints and tips on using Apple's new Mac OS X operating system. S with improved hardware and a fingerprint reader, and the lower- cost 5. C, a version of the 5 with colored plastic casings instead of metal. They were followed by the larger i. Phone 6, with models featuring 4. The i. Phone 6. S was introduced the following year, which featured hardware upgrades and support for pressure- sensitive touch inputs, as well as the SE—which featured hardware from the 6. S but the smaller form factor of the 5. S. In 2. 01. 6, Apple unveiled the i. Phone 7 and 7 Plus, which add water resistance, improved system and graphics performance, a new rear dual- camera setup on the Plus model, and new color options, while removing the 3. As of late 2. 01. Fans of Bitmoji: there’s a new caricature app that you’ll want to see. It’s more aesthetically pleasing and a breeze to use, but not so simple to share. MacOS is designed to take full advantage of the capabilities in every Mac. It’s easy to use, comes with amazing apps, and helps protect your data. Different types of vacations require different gear, and one of the biggest choices most of us make as we head off to the airport is the choice between packing. IOS is a mobile operating system, developed by Apple Inc. Updates for iOS are released through the iTunes software, and, since iOS. ![]() Over time our collection of free icons became one of the largest libraries on the web. Some of the best looking, most effective buttons contain icons and. The front face of the Jet Black iPhone 7. Manufacturer: Foxconn, Pegatron (contract manufacturers). In einer grossen schüssel zucchini, karotten, knoblauch und zwiebel gut vermischen und ordentlich mit salz und pfeffer abschmecken, die eier, die haferflocken und. Apple leads the world in innovation with iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, iOS, macOS, watchOS, and more. Visit the site to learn, buy, and get support. Donald Trump is still convinced that former president Barack Obama ordered wiretapping of Trump Tower last year, despite a congressional investigation and multiple. OS X El Capitan brings a smarter, smoother, more sophisticated experience to the Mac. OS X Leopard begat OS X Snow Leopard. OS X Lion begat OS X Mountain Lion. Phone had a 4. 3. Samsung (2. 7. 6%), LG (9. Motorola (4. 8%). Among other deficiencies, the ROKR E1's firmware limited storage to only 1. Tunes songs to avoid competing with Apple's i. Pod nano. Many would- be users objected to the i. Phone's cost. The i. Phone 3. G and 3. GS feature a full plastic back to increase the strength of the GSM signal. The i. Phone 3. GS was available in both colors, regardless of storage capacity. The i. Phone 4 has an aluminosilicate glass front and back with a stainless steel edge that serves as the antennas. It was at first available in black; the white version was announced, but not released until April 2. Users of the i. Phone 4 reported dropped/disconnected telephone calls when holding their phones in a certain way. This became known as antennagate. Verizon said it would be available for pre- order on February 3, with a release set for February 1. Over 1 million 4. S models were sold in the first 2. October 2. 01. 1. The average selling price has remained fairly constant for most of the phone's lifespan, hovering between $6. It has a 4- inch display, up from its predecessors' 3. The device comes with the same 3. Phone 4 and 4. S. The i. Phone 5 has the So. C A6 processor, the chip is 2. Phone 4. S' A5 and is twice as fast, doubling the graphics performance of its predecessor. The device is 1. 8% thinner than the i. Phone 4. S, measuring 7. On July 6, 2. 01. Apple was in talks with Korean mobile carrier SK Telecom to release the next generation i. Phone with LTE Advanced technology. The i. Phone 5. C, a mid- range- priced version of the handset that is designed to increase accessibility due to its price is available in five colors (green, blue, yellow, pink, and white) and is made of plastic. The i. Phone 5. S comes in three colors (black, white, and gold) and the home button is replaced with a fingerprint scanner (Touch ID). Both phones shipped on September 2. Both devices had a larger screen than their predecessor, at 4. Recorded sales grew steadily thereafter, and by the end of fiscal year 2. Phones were sold. Apple's sales surpassed that of Research in Motion's 1. Black. Berry units sold in their most recent quarter ended August 2. The average selling price has remained fairly constant for most of the phone's lifespan, hovering between $6. As the industry profits grew from $5. This is due to increasing carrier subsidies and the high selling prices of the i. Phone, which had a negative effect on the wireless carriers (AT& T Mobility, Verizon, and Sprint) who have seen their EBITDA service margins drop as they sold an increasing number of i. Phones. According to Strategy Analytics' data, this was . While Samsung has led in worldwide sales of smartphones, Apple's i. Phone line has still managed to top Samsung's smartphone offerings in the United States. For the program to become available, customers must have a valid contract and must purchase a new phone, rather than simply receive credit to be used at a later date. A significant part of the program's goal is to increase the number of customers who purchase i. Phones at Apple stores rather than carrier stores. This was the first time that Apple has simultaneously launched two models and the inclusion of China in the list of markets contributed to the record sales result. The store's high sales results are due to the absence of a sales tax in the state of Delaware. The multi- year agreement provides i. Phone access to over 7. China Mobile subscribers. The program consists of . Once 1. 2 months have passed, consumers can trade their current i. Phone with a new one, and the payments are transferred from the old device to the new device, and the program . Upgrade every 1. 2 months, and you’ll never stop owing Apple money for i. Phones. Additionally, the program is limited to just the i. Phone hardware; cell phone service from a network operator is not included. Phones at the time were designed around carrier and business limits which were conservative with regards to bandwidth usage and battery life. Some market research has found that, unusually for a technology product, i. Phone users are disproportionately female. These operating systems never focused on applications and developers, and due to infighting among manufacturers as well as the complexity of developing on their low- memory hardware, they never developed a thriving ecosystem like Apple's App Store or Android's Google Play. Meanwhile, Apple's decision to base its OS on OS X had the unexpected benefit of allowing OS X developers to rapidly expand into i. OS development. The i. Phone's success has led to a decline in sales of high- end fashion phones and business- oriented smartphones such as Vertu and Black. Berry and respectively, as well as Nokia. It ultimately agreed to a technology- sharing deal and then a takeover from Microsoft. In 2. 01. 1, after Tim Cook became CEO of the company, Apple changed its outsourcing strategy, for the first time increasing its supply partners. The i. Phone 4s in 2. Foxconn as well as Pegatron, also based in Taiwan. Although Foxconn is still responsible for the larger share of production, Pegatron's orders have been slowly increased, with the company being tasked with producing a part of the i. Phone 5. C line in 2. Phone 6 devices in 2. The 6 Plus model is being produced solely by Foxconn. The screens on the first three generations have a resolution of 3. All i. Phones were and still are equipped with LCDs. The initial models were using twisted- nematic (TN) LCDs. Starting with i. Phone 4, the technology was changed to in- plane switching (IPS) LCDs. The i. Phone 5 model's screen results in an aspect ratio of approximately 1. The touch and gesture features of the i. Phone are based on technology originally developed by Finger. Works. The i. Phone 3. GS and later also feature a fingerprint- resistant oleophobic coating. From left to right, sides: wake/sleep button, silence switch, volume up, and volume down. The i. Phone has a minimal hardware user interface, featuring five buttons. The only physical menu button is situated directly below the display, and is called the . The home button is denoted not by a house, as on many other similar devices, but a rounded square, reminiscent of the shape of icons on the home screen. However, the Home button on i. Phones with Apple's fingerprint recognition feature Touch ID (which use the Home button as the fingerprint sensor) have no symbol. A multi- function sleep/wake button is located on the top of the device. It serves as the unit's power button, and also controls phone calls. When a call is received, pressing the sleep/wake button once silences the ringtone, and when pressed twice transfers the call to voicemail. Situated on the left spine are the volume adjustment controls. The i. Phone 4 has two separate circular buttons to increase and decrease the volume; all earlier models house two switches under a single plastic panel, known as a rocker switch, which could reasonably be counted as either one or two buttons. Directly above the volume controls is a ring/silent switch that when engaged mutes telephone ringing, alert sounds from new & sent emails, text messages, and other push notifications, camera shutter sounds, Voice Memo sound effects, phone lock/unlock sounds, keyboard clicks, and spoken auto- corrections. This switch does not mute alarm sounds from the Clock application, and in some countries or regions it will not mute the camera shutter or Voice Memo sound effects. The touchscreen furnishes the remainder of the user interface. A software update in January 2. Since the i. Phone 3. G generation, the i. Phone employs A- GPS operated by the United States. Since the i. Phone 4. S generation the device also supports the GLONASS global positioning system, which is operated by Russia. The i. Phone 6. S and 6. S Plus, introduced in 2. An example of how this technology will be used is lightly pressing the screen to preview a photograph and pressing down to take it. Sensors. Latest i. Phone devices feature eight sensors, which are used to adjust the screen based on operating conditions, enable motion- controlled games, and location- based services. OS X El Capitan review. OS X El Capitan brings a smarter, smoother, more sophisticated experience to the Mac. OS X Leopard begat OS X Snow Leopard. OS X Lion begat OS X Mountain Lion. And now OS X Yosemite has begotten OS X El Capitan. Just as the granite monolith is part of the national park yet every bit a landmark in its own right, so is Apple's latest operating system for the Mac. It has the same general design and architecture as what came before, but brings an entirely new level of intelligence, convenience, and polish. That includes an improved Mission Control and new Split View; a smarter Spotlight and improved apps like Notes, Safari, Mail, Maps, and Photos; enhanced security and performance, including bringing the Metal graphics framework to the Mac; and new system fonts like San Francisco for alphabetic languages and Ping Fang for Chinese. There's also content blocking extensions, audio unit extensions, and much more going on under the hood as well. So, did they make it to the top? Windows hold the content and the controls. They can vary in size and position and often there can be multiple tabs per window, multiple windows per app, and multiple apps per workspace. That can make finding the window you need amid all those layers and layouts a challenge. And it's one Apple's been trying to solve on OS X for years. Expos. Dashboard, which provided a separate space for widgets, is all but deprecated now that Notification Center has widgets of its own. Spaces, which provided for multiple desktops, also enabled full- screen apps. Hot corners, which can trigger actions based on mouse movement, have been augmented by multitouch gestures. All of them have their purpose, but not all of them always contributed towards a single, coherent purpose. El Cap hopes to change that. Find my Cursor. Find my Cursor isn't strictly windows management but it is new to OS X El Capitan and is something you'll encounter immediately when trying to manage your windows. It's also every bit as strange and genius as it sounds. We've all stared at our screens at one time or another and rapidly shaken our mouse or swiped across our trackpads in hopes the movement would draw our eyes to the cursor. El Cap makes sure you won't miss it by just as rapidly enlarging the cursor until it's impossible to miss. Like all great interactive flourishes, it's a natural extension of instinctive behavior, and that's why it works so wonderfully well. Even when you're thinking and fiddling and doing it just for fun. Split View apps. Full- screen apps came with OS X Lion. It was part of the movement to bring the i. OS and i. Pad experience to back to the Mac—to make things more familiar but to also more focused. It worked for some apps, especially photo and video editors where the content really needs as much space as possible, or text editors where distraction needs to be avoided. It removed the traditional power of the multi- window operating system. It traded one type of productivity for another. Split View attempts to create a balance. It fills the screen, but with two apps instead of one. In so doing it hopes to retain both focus and flexibility. And not coincidentally, the i. Pad is doing the same thing in i. OS 9. That Split View, like full screen, is handled at the system level means that it works in a consistent way and consistency, as I'm endlessly fond of repeating, is a customer- facing feature. You enter the Split View from regular window mode by clicking and holding down on the green button in an app's toolbar. The app then docks to the left or right side of the display. You can choose which one by dragging the pointer to whichever side you please. Once docked the other half of the screen shows you thumbnails of the other available apps. Click on one and it'll dock on that side. Don't click on one, and you go full screen. It would be convenient, and save a lot of back- and- forths, if you could also click and hold on the green button from full screen to go to Split View, but that hasn't been enabled (at least not yet). By default, Split View takes half the width of the screen but you can drag the border to make it wider or narrower. An app can't be narrower than it's pre- set minimum width nor wider than the minimum width of the app tiled beside it will allow. You can also easily switch sides by dragging an app's toolbar from left to right or vice versa. You can exit it by hitting the green button again or escape on the keyboard. That makes the app you escaped return to normal window mode, but the other app go full screen. That shouldn't happen too often, though. Any standard window that can be resized can be put into Split View. Developers can explicitly make apps available for tiling even if they're not otherwise resizable, or can opt- out of entirely if they don't ever want their app to run that way. So, for example, a calculator can temporarily add extra vertical padding so it can fit in Split View next to another app, or a video editing app can pop up a message saying . For example, I can't figure out how to hide the Notes list and just focus on one note, and I can't figure out how to show the Messages list and not be trapped in one conversation. You can sometimes drag to expand and collapse views, but not always, and when in Split View with a wide app you have very little leeway. There's also no way to quickly change the apps contained in an existing Split View on OS X like there is on i. OS. That means you can't just live in it. For example, taking notes persistently on one side while you switch between Safari, Maps, Photos, and more on the other, dragging in everything you want for your vacation planning. Unless I'm missing something obvious, a standard way to show/hide the list views and switch tasks, would go a long way towards making apps more useful in Split View. On the i. Pad Split View doubles your productive potential. On the Mac, it's much more of a middle ground. For those who love the full screen, it's twice the screen to love. For those for whom multi- window drag- and- drop is muscle memory, even twice still isn't enough. But that's what makes the Mac the Mac. You can have it all and easily switch between full screen, Split View, and good old- fashioned multi- window desktops with ease. Or not, if you prefer only working in one mode. Split View is additive. It's there if you ever want or need it but stays completely out of your way if you don't. I've been making a point to use Split View for the last four months, especially for this review. I've got Notes on one side and, typically, Safari on the other. I'm not sure how much I'll stick with it. I just love multi- window so much. But as Apple continues to iterate on it, I think a lot of people, especially those who get lost in layers, will come to appreciate it. Split View really does manage to balance more and less, and full screen with fuller productivity. Mission Control. Mission Control in OS X El Capitan takes everything that's come before, from Expos. It furthers Yosemite's design principles with a flatter look but also creates a flatter experience. Windows appear in a single, quickly scannable layer that respects the position of the workspaces. Apps on the left are on the left, right on the right. That helps keep everything oriented as well as accessible. But once you're in Mission Control, you have a new way of interacting with your windows. The new Spaces Bar labels your current desktops alongside any full screen and Split View apps you may have running. Mouse over the bar, and it expands to thumbnails so you can immediately, visually identify your workspaces, switch between them, and even rearrange and remove them. There's also a new draggable Mission Control shortcut in El Cap: Just pull any window to the top of the screen, then drag a little more to reveal the Spaces Bar. From there, you can drop the window where you want it, either full screen, onto an existing full- screen app to create a Split View, or onto a new or existing desktop Space. Alas, you can't drop an app onto an existing Split View to replace one of the apps in that Split View, at least not yet. Dragging straight into Mission Control can be tricky to nail at first. You really need to grab the window, push up on the mouse or trackpad until it hits the menu bar and stops, and then push up again. Once you get it, though, you get it. It's an incredibly fluid experience, and the new Mission Control succeeds in making the sometimes mixed workspace metaphors—which were already improved in Yosemite—more usable, more coherent system. OS X El Capitan Spotlight. OS X Yosemite saw an all- new Spotlight design that put Apple's universal search and action bar front- and- center on the Mac. Now, El Cap strives to put it front- and- center in our workflows as well. As part of that, you can move and resize the Spotlight window now. So if you want to check it while you work, you don't have to worry about it overlaying what you're trying to refer from. It's always exactly where you want it. And it's got more there than ever before. New sources. The suggested results engine, which debuted last year, has been enhanced with several new data sources, including weather, stocks, web video, and sports across MLB, NHL, NFL, NBA, WNBA, college football, college basketball, and many European soccer leagues. It's much closer to what i. OS is offering now as well, which creates a better and more consistent experience for those who use both Apple's desktop and mobile platforms. It also works well, and better than I expected given the potential for collision—similar words used in different ways—on a system as complex as OS X. Pretty much any time I type, as long as I keep typing enough, I find what I'm looking for. Natural language. Critically, you can now access Spotlight using natural language. That's the same type of interface Siri has been using for years on i. OS and it's a far more human way of interacting. Instead of writing SQL or boolean or even type: date: contains: you just type the way you talk.
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