Wow, the iPhone can now be considered an actual smartphone. Good for them, seriously.
Editing Microsoft docs is the final, key piece the iPhone needed. That it still can't edit email attachments keeps it at the back of the class, but now it is at least in the room.
Clever WiFi trick, too, to get around Apple's refusal to access the device like a normal drive.
"That it still can't edit email attachments keeps it at the back of the class, but now it is at least in the room." I wonder if the cut, copy and paste can work well in this scenario. Copy all the text on the e-mail attachment and paste it on a new doc file, then edit and send it. I dunno. I haven't got 3.0 yet. Can somebody comment on this?
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Colonel Kernel @ Jun 13th 2009 1:13PM
Wow, the iPhone can now be considered an actual smartphone. Good for them, seriously.
Editing Microsoft docs is the final, key piece the iPhone needed. That it still can't edit email attachments keeps it at the back of the class, but now it is at least in the room.
Clever WiFi trick, too, to get around Apple's refusal to access the device like a normal drive.
engorged @ Jun 13th 2009 9:43PM
"That it still can't edit email attachments keeps it at the back of the class, but now it is at least in the room."
I wonder if the cut, copy and paste can work well in this scenario. Copy all the text on the e-mail attachment and paste it on a new doc file, then edit and send it. I dunno. I haven't got 3.0 yet. Can somebody comment on this?
Colonel Kernel @ Jun 13th 2009 9:52PM
Even if you can copy/paste from the viewer you can't email the corrected file back out again.
Zachary Waldowski @ Jun 14th 2009 6:07PM
"Even if you can copy/paste from the viewer you can't email the corrected file back out again."
Um... yeah, you can send attachments right from the app...