Chapter 9. Maps and Apps

Your Home screen comes loaded with the icons of 18 applications. These are the essentials, the starting points; eventually, of course, you'll fill that Home screen, and many overflow screens, with additional programs that you download and install yourself (Chapter 11).

The starter programs include major gateways to the Internet (Safari), critical communications tools (Phone, Text, and Mail), visual records of your life (Photos, Camera), Apple shopping centers (iTunes, App Store), and a well-stocked entertainment center (iPod).

Most of those programs get chapters of their own. This chapter covers the smaller programs: Calendar, YouTube, Stocks, Maps, Weather, Clock, Calculator, and Notes.

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Calendar

What kind of digital companion would the iPhone be if it didn't have a calendar program? In fact, not only does it have a calendar—it even has one that syncs with your computer.

If you maintain your life's schedule on a Mac (in iCal or Entourage) or a PC (in Outlook), then you already have your calendar on your iPhone. Make a change in one place, and it changes in the other, every time you sync over the USB cable.

Better yet, if you have a MobileMe account or work for a company with an Exchange server (Chapters Chapter 14 and Chapter 15), your calendar can be synchronized with your computer automatically, wirelessly, over the air. (And if you have both MobileMe and Exchange, ...

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