Source - http://www.zdnet.com/
By - Matt Baxter-Reynolds
Category - California Vacation Packages
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
By - Matt Baxter-Reynolds
Category - California Vacation Packages
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
California Vacation Packages |
A standout point for me in Tuesday's Apple announcement was that 50
percent of people lock their iPhones. I was surprised it was that high
-- it seems every week I say to someone, "Dude, do you really not lock
your phone?" My guess would have been closer to 20 percent.
Anyway, I'm grateful that Apple is putting more awareness out there
around the importance of locking portable devices. After all, your whole
life is on there -- it really should be locked regardless of how many
dozens of times you have to key in your PIN each day.
Locking your smartphone or tablet creates a problem though. How do you get it back if you lose it?
The one and only time I've lost my old school pre-smartphone phone,
someone found it and handed it in at a local police station. An officer
there just went through my address book and called the one marked "Mum
and Dad". I got the phone back the same day.
But if it's locked -- that's a different story.
Old school
The simplest thing to do here is to get your contact information on
your lock screen. That way when someone finds your phone they see the
contact information and call you on an alternative number.
When I discussed this on Twitter, generally people weren't happy with
that. The preferred option from my self-selecting collection of
friendly technologists was that you use the "Find my Whatever" feature
offered by the platform and use that.
However, that won't work with Wi-Fi only devices, like my iPad. It
will probably work better with a smartphone admittedly, but think about
this for a moment. If you've lost your phone, you want this really,
really easy. You want anyone just to pick up your phone and get it back
to you. A message on the lock screen is the simplest way to do this.
On old school BlackBerry OS 7 phones this has always been a feature.
(In fact, you could push it out as enterprise policy to all the devices
in your purview.) Weirdly, as we pivoted to current generation post-PC
devices this brilliant idea of just having the device render "If lost…"
info onto the lock screen didn't quite make it through to the new era.
If you don't want to spend any money on this and you do want to
fiddle around, take a picture, and Photoshop in the contact information.
Then set that image to the lock screen background.
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