Recent comments in /f/iphone

Phoenix_3717 t1_jee2ewi wrote

Hi, i'm going to switch from Android to iPhone 14 Pro, but I don't know which size to choose 256 GB or 512 GB. My current phone is 128 GB and I delete things all the time to make more space. I have more than 1300 photos on my old phone for 4 years, I often watch videos and play games, but I constantly listen to music. For music, I will download songs (about 500) from Spotify and also want to use Apple Music and save songs from there. From large applications, I will use 3-5 games and Lightroom. I plan to rarely shoot video and take photos in RAW so that it is easy to process and crop. What can you advise, I know that you can buy iCloud, but I don’t know how well and quickly it works and will be able to upload photos to RAW

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Aeonon2 t1_jee1cq0 wrote

It works great. No problem with wearing glasses. It even worked when I had those big plastic face shields on. Only if the shield was really fogged up would face id not work.

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emptycitystreets t1_jee17u2 wrote

I use this app daily. I use it as a bit of a diary, just making quick notes of what I get up to each day collected in a single note. My number one complaint with this app, is there is no way to save or set it to open a note at the last location I was writing in it. My work around is to manually add something like FFF as the last thing I write, and then do a find in note for it

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PrometheusCat t1_jedznp3 wrote

Mouse/trackpad question

Hello,

I was wondering if mice or trackpads are at all compatible with iPhones? I do a lot of writing on my iPhone, especially on the Notes app and sometimes the Word app, with a small Bluetooth keyboard, and I was wondering if I were to get one of those small Bluetooth keyboards that also have a little trackpad on it, or if I were to get a little mouse, I’d be able to make use of it with my phone?

I was thinking something like that might help me to be more efficient with taking notes and such.

Is that a thing?

Thanks very much

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jw154j t1_jeduf0f wrote

Your carrier might, most do, throttle streaming video. Some are 480p or 720p. This can cause buffering or issues if trying to play a higher res video. One way to tell is do a Speedtest on http://fast.com This is Netflix’s Speedtest site and most plans consider this streaming. It should show you your streaming download speed. Some carriers, AT&T for one, have a setting you can adjust and change the streaming bandwidth.

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