What We Need:
JailBroken Iphone any Version
IphoneBrowser Or Winscp
Respring - Download in Cydia or ICY (Optional)
Download this Sms tone - sms-received1 New Message .rar
1.) Connect your Iphone To IphoneBrowser or Winscp
2.) If you are Already connected, Look For system > library > audio > UIsounds
3.) Now in this Folder UIsounds Look For this Format:sms-received1.cafsms-received2.cafsms-received3.cafsms-received4.cafsms-received5.cafsms-received6.caf
4.) Rename This file Dont Delete, this is your BackUp rename it sample sms-received11.caf
5.) Unrar the Tone that you download here and drag and drop the sms-received1.caf in UIsound folder thats It.ORCreate a Folder sample "MySMSTone" open the Folder create anothe folder name it "UISounds" open the Folder again that you created Note: In your Iphone SMS tone there are ONly 6 SMS tonethis are tri-tone, Chime, Glass, Horn, Bell, Electronic..Here the Guide What IPhone SMS tone That you change:sms-received1.caf - Tri-tonesms-received2.caf - Chimesms-received3.caf - Glasssms-received4.caf - Hornsms-received5.caf - Bellsms-received6.caf - Electronic
6.) In this Guide you Change your sms-received1.caf this is Tri -tone..
7.) So Goto Settings Sounds > New Text Message > Click Tri-tone and the New SMS tone is ChangeNote: If you Dont Here a Sound After you Click What you Change, Reboot your Iphone or Respring It!
Saturday, January 9, 2010
How to Change the iPhone Homescreen Layout
When you finally lay your hands on your iPhone, you will definately want to change some of the looks of your iPhone, such as the wallpaper, the homescreen, and the four primary main icons in the dock. Read on to discover how to do it!
One of the first things you will want to do is to change the background picture on your iPhone. First you need to upload your pictures to your iPhone. This is done by adding the correct iPhone or windows folder to the ‘photo’ screen of the iTunes iPhone synchronisation interface. Next you can select the photo-application on your iPhone, and select the photo you would like to use. Tap the lower left icon, which shows the arrow jumping out of the box. Then you will get a few options, of which you select “Use as Background”. In the next screen you can position and zoom your picture, and select “use” or “cancel”. If you tap “use”, you will see the picture when your iPhone is locked.
Next, you will want change the layout of the icons on your homescreen. Good news, this is very easy to do:
Tap and hold one of the icons on your homescreen untill they start shaking.
Select the icons you want to move, and slide them over to the place you want them to be. If you slide them off the left or right edge of the screen, they will jump to the next screen. As soon as the icons start to tremble, a new blank screen is created.
You can now group the icons the way that works best for you. I personally have one screen with the standard apps, but ordered by most used or most important, a second screen with website/blogging apps, a screen with all types of other tools that I use, and a last screen with games and entertainment apps.
Deleting apps or icons can simply be done by tapping the white-on-black cross that appears when the icons start shaking.
Going back to the normal state of the home screen is done by… Tzadzaaaam! Clicking the “home” button indeed
What you can also do, is add links to the websites you visit often. These links are called ”web clips” on the iPhone and look the same as regular icons. Really cool, they display the specific portion of the page of the website you were viewing when you created the icon. To create a web clip in the Safari web browser on your iPhone, tap on the “Add” icon and then the “Screen” icon as you are viewing the specific page of the website you want to save. Before saving, your iPhone will ask you to name the webclip (10 characters maximum). You can delete web clips from the home screen the same way you can delete normal apps.
And to end this article, an often overlooked feature.
The 4 icons located on the grey bar at the bottom of your iPhone - Phone, Mail,iPod, Safari – often called the four primary main icons, are movable, just like the rest of the icons. Press and hold the icons, then drag them while they are shaking. Even better, you can put any 4 icons from your homescreens on your dock. Simply great, lots of people have been looking hard and long for this
One of the first things you will want to do is to change the background picture on your iPhone. First you need to upload your pictures to your iPhone. This is done by adding the correct iPhone or windows folder to the ‘photo’ screen of the iTunes iPhone synchronisation interface. Next you can select the photo-application on your iPhone, and select the photo you would like to use. Tap the lower left icon, which shows the arrow jumping out of the box. Then you will get a few options, of which you select “Use as Background”. In the next screen you can position and zoom your picture, and select “use” or “cancel”. If you tap “use”, you will see the picture when your iPhone is locked.
Next, you will want change the layout of the icons on your homescreen. Good news, this is very easy to do:
Tap and hold one of the icons on your homescreen untill they start shaking.
Select the icons you want to move, and slide them over to the place you want them to be. If you slide them off the left or right edge of the screen, they will jump to the next screen. As soon as the icons start to tremble, a new blank screen is created.
You can now group the icons the way that works best for you. I personally have one screen with the standard apps, but ordered by most used or most important, a second screen with website/blogging apps, a screen with all types of other tools that I use, and a last screen with games and entertainment apps.
Deleting apps or icons can simply be done by tapping the white-on-black cross that appears when the icons start shaking.
Going back to the normal state of the home screen is done by… Tzadzaaaam! Clicking the “home” button indeed
What you can also do, is add links to the websites you visit often. These links are called ”web clips” on the iPhone and look the same as regular icons. Really cool, they display the specific portion of the page of the website you were viewing when you created the icon. To create a web clip in the Safari web browser on your iPhone, tap on the “Add” icon and then the “Screen” icon as you are viewing the specific page of the website you want to save. Before saving, your iPhone will ask you to name the webclip (10 characters maximum). You can delete web clips from the home screen the same way you can delete normal apps.
And to end this article, an often overlooked feature.
The 4 icons located on the grey bar at the bottom of your iPhone - Phone, Mail,iPod, Safari – often called the four primary main icons, are movable, just like the rest of the icons. Press and hold the icons, then drag them while they are shaking. Even better, you can put any 4 icons from your homescreens on your dock. Simply great, lots of people have been looking hard and long for this
iPhone Tips
1. Adding a special character, fast
On the standard keyboard, pushing the ‘123′ key, and keeping it pushed, will bring up the special chars screen. Here you can slide towards the character you need, and release. The character is now inserted, and your normal keyboard is back.
2. Using special versions of letters
Are you looking for the é or ï, there is no need to use the special characters screen. Simply hold your finger on the letter, and all the alternatives will appear.
3. Intelligent of the dictionary
Another way of working is to avoid all those special characters, and have them fixed by the dictionary. If you type in the word without the special character, your dictionary will try to fix it.
4. Scroll inside a frame.
When there is an extra scrollbar on a page, for instance in a frame, this can be scrolled by using two fingers, while one finger scrolls the complete page.
6. Doubletap the spacebar
Doubletapping the spacebar adds a dot (.) followed by the space (. ). Much easier then having to go to the special characters screen.
7. Looking up the URLs in SafariKeep your finger on a link for a few seconds. Then the URL to which the link points will be shown.
8. Scroll back up, fast, in SafariHave you scrolled all the way down a long page while reading? No need to scroll all the way back up, just doubletap on the top of your screen (where the clock is), and Safari will jump back up to the top of the page.
9. Save pictures from webpagesKeep your finger on a picture for a few seconds, and a ’save image’ menu will appear. Using this, you can save the picture in your picture-gallery.
10. Get a Bigger Keyboard
As with any other iPhone function requiring data entry, tapping on Safari’s address bar gets you the on-screen keyboard. But, if you rotate the iPhone horizontally before tapping on the address bar, the Safari window will switch to horizontal mode; then, when you tap on the address bar, the on-screen keyboard will also appear horizontally, which makes it considerably larger and easier to use. Too bad Safari is currently the only app that offers this horizontal keyboard.
11. Create a Home Page
Settnig a homepage on your iphone is not as straightforward as it is on most computer-browsers. There is a trick to do it however: add your favourite homepage to your bookmarkslist, and then place it on the top position of that list. Now, when you open Safari, it will load this page.
12. Share URLs
If you want to send a friend the URL of a Web page you’re viewing, tap on the address bar, and then tap on Share. A new e-mail message, containing the URL, will open in Mail; just choose one or more recipients, add your comments, and tap on Send.
13. Make a Call from Safari
If you find a phone number in Safari that you’d like to call, a shop or restaurant for instance, you don’t need to jump to the phone part. Just tap on the number, and the iPhone will dial it for you. This neat little trick also works with phone numbers and URLs you found in e-mails and SMS chats, simply tapping on either one will place a call or open a Web page, respectively.
14. Stop a hanging app
When an iPhone app crashes or freezes, or uses too much memory, you can close it by pushing the home-key for 5 seconds. This will also bring you back to the home-screen at once.
15. Switching off the iPhone, very fastPush both the home-key and the small key on top for 5 seconds, and your iPhone will be totally off.
12. Taking a screenshotPushing both the home-key and the small key on top for only a very short time takes a screenshot of your current iPhone screen, and places the image in your picture-album.
13. Deleting SMS-es, podcasts etceterMost of the items that are shown in a list can easily be deleted using the deletebutton. This button can be shown by sliding from left to right over the item you wish to delete.
14. Facebook refresh: shake it baby
However weird this may sound, when you have facebook open on your iPhone, and you are in news feed mode, simply shaking your iPhone will refresh the news feed.
15. Avoid Mail Confusion
If you give two e-mail accounts the same name, Mail will get confused and copy the settings from one account to the other. To fix this, you’ll need to delete one of the accounts and then re-create it.
16. Mark Read Messages as Unread
It appears as if there is no way to mark read messages as unread on the iPhone, but there is. While viewing a message, tap on Details, which shows a Mark As Unread option; tap on it, and the next time you view your inbox, the message will display a blue dot, showing that the message has not been read.
17. Recover “Lost” E-mails
If you try to send an e-mail but your iPhone can’t access the network, it may look like your message has disappeared. No need to worry though: a temporary Outgoing folder is created which holds the message. You can see this folder from the main screen of the account, and the folder will disappear again once your iPhone connects to the network again and the message is sent.
18. Create E-mail Folders
Well, in fact, it is not possible to create e-mail folders on the iPhone. However, what you can do with an IMAP e-mail account is to create folders on the IMAP server. These folders will then appear on the iPhone, and their contents will be synced between the iPhone and the server.
19. Save E-mail Drafts
If you want to save a message you’re working on so you can come back to it later, tap on Cancel. Instead of deleting the message immediately, Mail pops up a dialog box with the options Save, Don’t Save, or Cancel. Tap on Save and the message will be placed in your Drafts folder. No need to stress if the message doesn’t immediately appear in Drafts though, it sometimes takes several minutes for the draft message to show up.
20. Re-create iPod Audio Controls
If you sometimes listen to audiobooks on an iPod, you may know that, since the fourth-generation iPod’s release, you’ve had the option to set the playback speed faster or slower. Good news, the iPhone shares this feature. Just tap on the Settings button and then on the iPod option; tap on the Audiobook Speed entry and, in the next screen, choose Slower, Normal, or Faster. Other iPod features also appear on the iPhone: You can use the Settings screen to turn on Sound Check (to make volume more consistent from one track to another) and to select any of 22 included equalization presets.
21. Change iPod Icons
By default, the buttons at the bottom of the iPod screen are Playlists, Artists, Songs, Videos, and More. You can change these four by simply taping on the More icon, and then tap on the Edit button in the upper left corner of the resulting screen. A Configure screen will appear with icons for Albums, Podcasts, Audiobooks, Genres, Composers, Compilations, Playlists, Artists, Songs, and Videos. To change one of these icons with one that appears at the bottom of the iPod screen, just tap and hold on the icon you prefer and drag it over the icon you want to replace. Tap on Done when you’re finished.
22. Delete Already-Viewed Videos
Since even 8GB can run out of space when storing videos, the iPhone offers to delete videos after you’ve finished watching them. Just tap on the Delete button, and Histoire d’O will disappear from your iPhone, freeing up more space, and saving your relation.
23. Store Files
Out-of-the-box, the iPhone can’t store files, unless you have the help of a Mac and a $10 utility. The program, Ecamm Network’s iPhoneDrive, lets you view files on your iPhone in a Finder-like interface. You can copy files to and from your iPhone via drag and drop, some simple buttons, or the program’s File menu.
23. Scroll Through Contacts Another Way
You most probably know that you can scroll through the list of contacts on your iPhone two ways by either moving your finger on the list to scroll up or down, or by tapping on one of the letters in the alphabet running down the right side of the screen to jump to contacts beginning with that letter. However, there is a third way: hold your finger on the alphabetical list, and then slide up and down. This will allow you to scroll through your contacts in a more convenient way than by flicking your finger.
24. Use Favorites and Recents for More Than Calls
Favorites and Recents are part of the iPhone’s main Phone screen; Favorites is the iPhone’s version of frequently called numbers, and Recents is a list of the numbers of people you’ve called recently and calls you’ve missed. You can tap on any number in these lists to place a call quickly. But this is not just a phone feature: Assuming that a number or name in Favorites or Recents belongs to a mobile phone, you can also send it an SMS message. Just tap on the right angle bracket (>) icon next to the contact name or number, and then tap on the Text Message button at the bottom of the contact listing.
25. Get Driving Directions Fast
One of the primary uses for the iPhone’s Maps application is to get driving directions. Both the starting and destination fields offer a Bookmarks icon, so you can quickly use a bookmark, a recent location, or a contact when searching for directions. The first thing you should do in Maps is find your own address and bookmark it, this will make finding directions to and from locations much easier.
26. Sync Notes
One of the major limitations of the iPhone’s Notes application is that you can’t sync it with data from any program on your Mac. There’s a workaround, however. Each contact has a notes field. So you can create a fake contact and paste any info you like in the notes field for that contact in Address Book. One sync later, all that information will be at your fingertips.
On the standard keyboard, pushing the ‘123′ key, and keeping it pushed, will bring up the special chars screen. Here you can slide towards the character you need, and release. The character is now inserted, and your normal keyboard is back.
2. Using special versions of letters
Are you looking for the é or ï, there is no need to use the special characters screen. Simply hold your finger on the letter, and all the alternatives will appear.
3. Intelligent of the dictionary
Another way of working is to avoid all those special characters, and have them fixed by the dictionary. If you type in the word without the special character, your dictionary will try to fix it.
4. Scroll inside a frame.
When there is an extra scrollbar on a page, for instance in a frame, this can be scrolled by using two fingers, while one finger scrolls the complete page.
6. Doubletap the spacebar
Doubletapping the spacebar adds a dot (.) followed by the space (. ). Much easier then having to go to the special characters screen.
7. Looking up the URLs in SafariKeep your finger on a link for a few seconds. Then the URL to which the link points will be shown.
8. Scroll back up, fast, in SafariHave you scrolled all the way down a long page while reading? No need to scroll all the way back up, just doubletap on the top of your screen (where the clock is), and Safari will jump back up to the top of the page.
9. Save pictures from webpagesKeep your finger on a picture for a few seconds, and a ’save image’ menu will appear. Using this, you can save the picture in your picture-gallery.
10. Get a Bigger Keyboard
As with any other iPhone function requiring data entry, tapping on Safari’s address bar gets you the on-screen keyboard. But, if you rotate the iPhone horizontally before tapping on the address bar, the Safari window will switch to horizontal mode; then, when you tap on the address bar, the on-screen keyboard will also appear horizontally, which makes it considerably larger and easier to use. Too bad Safari is currently the only app that offers this horizontal keyboard.
11. Create a Home Page
Settnig a homepage on your iphone is not as straightforward as it is on most computer-browsers. There is a trick to do it however: add your favourite homepage to your bookmarkslist, and then place it on the top position of that list. Now, when you open Safari, it will load this page.
12. Share URLs
If you want to send a friend the URL of a Web page you’re viewing, tap on the address bar, and then tap on Share. A new e-mail message, containing the URL, will open in Mail; just choose one or more recipients, add your comments, and tap on Send.
13. Make a Call from Safari
If you find a phone number in Safari that you’d like to call, a shop or restaurant for instance, you don’t need to jump to the phone part. Just tap on the number, and the iPhone will dial it for you. This neat little trick also works with phone numbers and URLs you found in e-mails and SMS chats, simply tapping on either one will place a call or open a Web page, respectively.
14. Stop a hanging app
When an iPhone app crashes or freezes, or uses too much memory, you can close it by pushing the home-key for 5 seconds. This will also bring you back to the home-screen at once.
15. Switching off the iPhone, very fastPush both the home-key and the small key on top for 5 seconds, and your iPhone will be totally off.
12. Taking a screenshotPushing both the home-key and the small key on top for only a very short time takes a screenshot of your current iPhone screen, and places the image in your picture-album.
13. Deleting SMS-es, podcasts etceterMost of the items that are shown in a list can easily be deleted using the deletebutton. This button can be shown by sliding from left to right over the item you wish to delete.
14. Facebook refresh: shake it baby
However weird this may sound, when you have facebook open on your iPhone, and you are in news feed mode, simply shaking your iPhone will refresh the news feed.
15. Avoid Mail Confusion
If you give two e-mail accounts the same name, Mail will get confused and copy the settings from one account to the other. To fix this, you’ll need to delete one of the accounts and then re-create it.
16. Mark Read Messages as Unread
It appears as if there is no way to mark read messages as unread on the iPhone, but there is. While viewing a message, tap on Details, which shows a Mark As Unread option; tap on it, and the next time you view your inbox, the message will display a blue dot, showing that the message has not been read.
17. Recover “Lost” E-mails
If you try to send an e-mail but your iPhone can’t access the network, it may look like your message has disappeared. No need to worry though: a temporary Outgoing folder is created which holds the message. You can see this folder from the main screen of the account, and the folder will disappear again once your iPhone connects to the network again and the message is sent.
18. Create E-mail Folders
Well, in fact, it is not possible to create e-mail folders on the iPhone. However, what you can do with an IMAP e-mail account is to create folders on the IMAP server. These folders will then appear on the iPhone, and their contents will be synced between the iPhone and the server.
19. Save E-mail Drafts
If you want to save a message you’re working on so you can come back to it later, tap on Cancel. Instead of deleting the message immediately, Mail pops up a dialog box with the options Save, Don’t Save, or Cancel. Tap on Save and the message will be placed in your Drafts folder. No need to stress if the message doesn’t immediately appear in Drafts though, it sometimes takes several minutes for the draft message to show up.
20. Re-create iPod Audio Controls
If you sometimes listen to audiobooks on an iPod, you may know that, since the fourth-generation iPod’s release, you’ve had the option to set the playback speed faster or slower. Good news, the iPhone shares this feature. Just tap on the Settings button and then on the iPod option; tap on the Audiobook Speed entry and, in the next screen, choose Slower, Normal, or Faster. Other iPod features also appear on the iPhone: You can use the Settings screen to turn on Sound Check (to make volume more consistent from one track to another) and to select any of 22 included equalization presets.
21. Change iPod Icons
By default, the buttons at the bottom of the iPod screen are Playlists, Artists, Songs, Videos, and More. You can change these four by simply taping on the More icon, and then tap on the Edit button in the upper left corner of the resulting screen. A Configure screen will appear with icons for Albums, Podcasts, Audiobooks, Genres, Composers, Compilations, Playlists, Artists, Songs, and Videos. To change one of these icons with one that appears at the bottom of the iPod screen, just tap and hold on the icon you prefer and drag it over the icon you want to replace. Tap on Done when you’re finished.
22. Delete Already-Viewed Videos
Since even 8GB can run out of space when storing videos, the iPhone offers to delete videos after you’ve finished watching them. Just tap on the Delete button, and Histoire d’O will disappear from your iPhone, freeing up more space, and saving your relation.
23. Store Files
Out-of-the-box, the iPhone can’t store files, unless you have the help of a Mac and a $10 utility. The program, Ecamm Network’s iPhoneDrive, lets you view files on your iPhone in a Finder-like interface. You can copy files to and from your iPhone via drag and drop, some simple buttons, or the program’s File menu.
23. Scroll Through Contacts Another Way
You most probably know that you can scroll through the list of contacts on your iPhone two ways by either moving your finger on the list to scroll up or down, or by tapping on one of the letters in the alphabet running down the right side of the screen to jump to contacts beginning with that letter. However, there is a third way: hold your finger on the alphabetical list, and then slide up and down. This will allow you to scroll through your contacts in a more convenient way than by flicking your finger.
24. Use Favorites and Recents for More Than Calls
Favorites and Recents are part of the iPhone’s main Phone screen; Favorites is the iPhone’s version of frequently called numbers, and Recents is a list of the numbers of people you’ve called recently and calls you’ve missed. You can tap on any number in these lists to place a call quickly. But this is not just a phone feature: Assuming that a number or name in Favorites or Recents belongs to a mobile phone, you can also send it an SMS message. Just tap on the right angle bracket (>) icon next to the contact name or number, and then tap on the Text Message button at the bottom of the contact listing.
25. Get Driving Directions Fast
One of the primary uses for the iPhone’s Maps application is to get driving directions. Both the starting and destination fields offer a Bookmarks icon, so you can quickly use a bookmark, a recent location, or a contact when searching for directions. The first thing you should do in Maps is find your own address and bookmark it, this will make finding directions to and from locations much easier.
26. Sync Notes
One of the major limitations of the iPhone’s Notes application is that you can’t sync it with data from any program on your Mac. There’s a workaround, however. Each contact has a notes field. So you can create a fake contact and paste any info you like in the notes field for that contact in Address Book. One sync later, all that information will be at your fingertips.
How to Create Customised Ringtone and Use it in iPhone
- Start iTunes and find the song you want to convert. (It must be an MP3.)
- Right-click the song and choose Get Info. & Click the Options tab.
- Check the Start Time and Stop Time boxes, then enter times for each (no more than 30 seconds apart, the maximum length for a ringtone). I used 0:00 and 0:30, respectively, as "Spit It Out" has a perfect ascending lead-in. Click OK.
- Then right-click the song again and choose Create AAC Version. You should immediately see a new 30-second version of the song.
- Drag that version out of iTunes and into the folder of your choice.
- Delete the 30-second version from iTunes and undo the Start Time/Stop Time changes to the original.
- Open the folder containing the 30-second AAC file you dragged out of iTunes, then change the file extension from .m4a to .m4r. For windows, have to go to control panel first. Click on fold options then select "show extensions of known files" [or deselect "Hide extensions for known file types" under View] then hit OK
- Double-click it to play and it immediately gets added to iTunes' ringtone library.
- Finally, sync your iPhone. When it's done, you can head into the settings->sounds->ringtone and select your new ringtone under Custom.
- If Sync does not work automatically, select the desired ringtone and you can manually drag it to your iPhone
Enjoy the customised ringtone of yours! (^o^)
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