The various volumes on an iPhone



Most of the time the volume you set on the iPhone “just works.” But it’s far more complicated than you’d think, and it’s very context dependent. Macworld describes it well.

This article is from 2013, quoted in its entirety here. But things are always changing:

How to control the volume in iOS

By Sharon Zardetto
Macworld | Mar 7, 2013 7:00 AM PT

Most of the time, you hit a volume button on your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, and it does what you expect, whether it’s turning up your reminder alarms or turning down your music. And then there are the other times.

different iOS volume icons

But once you understand the different “kinds” of sounds, the interaction between software settings and the volume buttons, and how context overrides the default course of events, you’ll have better control over your device’s volume.

The sound of more than music

The key to mastering volume adjustment is understanding that most of the sounds on your device fall into one of two categories. General audio includes music and other media, and the voice volume on the iPhone and for FaceTime on all devices. The “ringers and alerts” category includes not only the iPhone ringer, but also: FaceTime rings; Clock app alarms; notifications and individual app alerts; keyboard clicks; and miscellaneous app sounds like the whoosh of sending Mail.

IMG:iPhone settings sound

Basically, you can decide which kind of sounds—general audio or the ringers and alerts—your volume buttons control by going to Settings > Sounds and, under Ringers and Alerts, set Change With Buttons to On or Off; if you turn it off, the buttons control the general audio. But your default choice is easily, and often, overridden because what you’re doing at any given moment takes precedence over the default settings

Context is everything

The volume buttons “just work” most of the time because they’re context-sensitive.

If, for instance, you’re in the Music app, the buttons change the media volume even if you’ve set them to control Ringers and Alerts; this happens even if the music controls are merely showing, on a Lock screen or in the multitasking bar, with no music playing. Conversely, when media volume is the default, you can change the Ringer volume when an alarm is playing. These changes affect the overall volume setting for that category, not just temporarily or for the current sound.
The volume settings screen

The volume icon that appears when you use the buttons helpfully indicates what you’re adjusting. With Ringers and Alerts as the default, press a button when you’re on a Home screen with no music playing and the icon is labeled Ringer (on the iPhone) or Sound Effects (on other devices). If Ringer and Alerts is turned off, you get the unlabeled icon that stands for general audio. If you’re using headphones, it’s their volume that’s altered, not the device’s speaker, and the volume icon notes that.

As for controlling the volume in games, that’s complicated. Many games are set to the Ringers and Alerts volume when you first run them; some interact with that setting if you change the game volume. Some newly launched games inherit the volume level from the last game app you used. A game remembers its own volume setting from its previous use if it’s been sitting in the multitasking bar. Luckily, no matter your default setting for the volume buttons, they will always control the volume of the current game.

Want Siri to talk louder, or to lower its voice? Neither general audio nor Ringers and Alerts volume settings affect that. To adjust both the little chirp and the voice volume, start Siri with a press of the Home button, and use the volume buttons while Siri’s open.

Setting limits

While you’re in Settings, you can also set an upper limit for headphone music volume in Music > Volume Limit to protect your—or a child’s—hearing. The setting doesn’t restrict non-headphone volume. (A side effect of setting a lower limit is that each press of a volume button changes it by a smaller increment.)

You can prevent the youngling from upping the volume by locking the level with a passcode. Go to Settings > General > Restrictions; tap Enable Restrictions if necessary, and supply a passcode. Tap Volume Limit and then Don’t Allow Changes.

Mute and other silencers

Volume isn’t the only thing that depends on context. How you mute your device can depend on which device you’re using, the situation, and hardware or software settings.

  • When your iPhone is ringing, hit either volume button to temporarily mute it; this also works for FaceTime rings on any device.
  • On the iPhone, flip the Ring/Silent switch to kill the ringer; it will still ring through headphones. This also mutes Calendar and Reminder alerts, most games, and other sound effects (including the camera shutter) but not alarms—an important point if you’re sitting in the front row for the New York Philharmonic.
  • On an iPad, use the Side Switch to mute button ringers and alerts; it doesn’t affect music or other media. In Settings > General, under Use Side Switch To, tap Mute. To override the setting, or mute the iPad when the Side Switch is set to Orientation Lock, see the details in Lex Friedman’s guide to muting notifications. You can also mute the volume with the volume button: Hold down the lower end for about two seconds.
  • Use Settings > General and turn on Do Not Disturb to silence notifications during the times you specify. This works only when your device is locked, and does not affect alarms.
  • You can mute certain sounds for some individual apps in Settings > Sounds. Tap New Mail in the Sounds list, for instance, and then tap None.

From “How to control the volume in iOS”

Google Drive Private Sharing Requires a Google Account

Everybody says, “It’s easy, just use Google Drive. It’s free.”

And I’m sure Google wants you to think that.

And it is easy except for one type of sharing:

  • Password protected sharing to people who do not have a google account.

To be specific, here are the layers of sharing:

  1. Public. AKA Publish to the web. Everyone can view. Even strangers.
  2. Sharing with people by emailing them a link
    • Good News: do not need to have a google account
    • Bad news: ANYONE who has the link can view the file.
  3. Sharing with specific people only–ie only people who have the password
    • Bad news: REQUIRES a google account. In fact, the password to their google account is what protects the file from unauthorized eyes.

So the premium feature is sharing with ONLY SPECIFIC PEOPLE – WITHOUT a google account.

Box.com can do it with paid subscription only. As little as $10 or $5 / month.

RemoteUtilities agent.exe download problem in Mozilla Firefox : false-positive malware detection



RemoteUtilities is my favorite remote access software.

But there was a problem while downloading its “Agent“.

I debugged that problem and posted a workaround on their forum. I’ve quoted it below:

Downloading agent.exe in Firefox results in: blocked may contain a virus or spyware
john kumpf
Posts: 5
Joined: 11/03/2014

12/03/2014 20:35:55

Firefox silently did not download agent.exe file from http://www.remoteutilities.com/download/

The link to the file was: http://www.remoteutilities.com/download/agent.exe

I had to do “Show all downloads” to see this error message.

The error message was:

Quote
Blocked: may contain a virus or spyware

I worked around this problem by reading this article:

http://www.ghacks.net/2014/11/19/bypass-firefoxs-blocked-may-contain-a-virus-or-spyware-message/

What i did: in firefox

Type “about:config” in address bar (without the quotes); hit return.
Click the “I’ll be careful, I promise!” button.
Type “safe” into the search box (without the quotes).
Double click the item “browser.safebrowsing.malware.enabled” to turn it from true to false.

Then i was able to download the agent.exe program.

Remote Access / LogIn Comparisons



Reference: Comparison of remote desktop software at Wikipedia

name price price per remote host (in office) price per local host (in home / vacation) price per username login price per simultaneous session windows server special price includes what updates? + mobile ios local mobile ios remote mobile android local mobile android remote + remote maint spontan support unattended computers online meetings / presentations / training sessions editing collaboration bidirectional sharing + remote printing clipboard file transfer file transfer from mapped drives picture transfer (they are large) video transfer (they are large) + share files from pc w/ others audio multiple remote monitor support log in as administrator / windows system service encryption uses THEIR server (security / privacy concern) thru firewall / NAT (works behind router) + remote install required? remote removed after session local install required / optional / not available local in browser InternetExplorer (IE) FireFox Chrome + hd quality available remote reboot remote reboot – UNATTENDED reboot and reconnect safe mode UAC ability to remote install any program Keyboard locking Screen blanking + Notes
TeamViewer free free n/a n/a ? ? ? ? TeamViewer free ? ? ? ? TeamViewer free ? ? ? ? ? ? TeamViewer free yes ? yes ? ? ? TeamViewer free ? ? ? yes yes yes TeamViewer free ? ? ? ? ? ? ? TeamViewer free ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? TeamViewer free ?
TeamViewer commercial $1166 = $749 + $139 * 3 addl loc ? free ? $139 ? ? ? w/in main ver forever TeamViewer com ? ? ? ? TeamViewer com yes yes yes yes yes ? TeamViewer com yes ? yes ? ? ? TeamViewer com ? ? ? yes yes yes TeamViewer com ? ? ? ? ? ? ? TeamViewer com yes ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? TeamViewer com ?
name price price / remote price / local pri / usr logi price / simul win srv special price includes? + ios loc ios rem android loc android rem + remote maintenance spontaneous support unattended computers online mtg / pres / train editing collaboration bidir shar + remote printing clipboard file transfer file xfer mapd picture transfer video transfer + share files w/ oth audio multi mon admin login sys srvc encryption uses THEIR server thru FW / NAT + rem inst reqd rem rem loc inst reqd browser IE FireFox Chrome + hd rem reb rem reb unat reboot reconnect safe mode UAC rem inst any pgm kbd lck Scrn blank + Notes
logmein pro w/o central (refs) $300/yr for 6 $99/2/yr $249/5/yr $449/10/yr free ONLY 1 USERNAME ? no ? logmein pro yes ? yes ? logmein pro ? ? yes installs as sys srvc ? ? ? logmein pro yes yes yes ? yes yes logmein pro ? yes ? ssl established thru their server; then direct http logmein pro full no logmein rmt ctrl client pro limited web inteface yes (limited) yes (limited) yes (limited) logmein pro yes yes yes yes yes ? yes ? ? logmein pro ?
logmein central w/basic only ? 299/year ? 0-100 included free free free no ? logmein central basic yes in free ? yes in free ? logmein central basic ? ? yes installs as sys srvc ? ? ? logmein central basic no yes no ? no no logmein central basic ? no ? ssl established thru their server; then direct http logmein central basic full no logmein client rmt ctrl basic ? ? ? ? logmein central basic yes yes yes yes yes ? yes ? ? logmein central basic ?
logmein central w/ pro, console completely web based; with instl app rem ctrl $299 + 6 * $50 = $600 $50 free free free no ? logmein central pro yes in free ? yes in free ? logmein central pro ? ? yes installs as sys srvc ? ? ? logmein central pro yes yes yes ? yes yes logmein central pro ? yes ? ssl established thru their server; then direct http logmein central pro full no logmein rmt ctrl client pro ? ? ? ? logmein central pro yes yes yes yes yes ? yes ? ? logmein central pro ?
logmein rescue (refs) $1188 / yr (+ $768 mobile) free free $1188 / yr 10 max included no 1yr maint only logmein rescue no yes $768 ? no yes $768 ? logmein rescue ? ? yes applet starts a sys srvc ? ? yes logmein rescue no yes yes ? yes yes logmein rescue ? no yes ssl established thru their server; then direct http logmein rescue lightweight applet w/ sys srvc opt yes yes ? yes (addon) ? yes yes yes logmein rescue yes yes yes yes w/ sys srvc yes w/ sys srvc ? yes ? ? logmein rescue ?
RemotelyAnywhere by logmein (refs) $700 = 5*99 + 199 $99 free (web) ? ? $199 (includes ws) 1year maint only RemotelyAnywhere by logmein pc-based-only yes pc-based-only yes RemotelyAnywhere by logmein yes yes ? ? ? ? RemotelyAnywhere by logmein ? ? ? ? ? ? RemotelyAnywhere by logmein ? ? ? ? not typically manual RemotelyAnywhere by logmein ? ? no yes yes yes yes (v11) RemotelyAnywhere by logmein yes ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? RemotelyAnywhere by logmein ?
join.me by logmein free free free ? ? free free join.me by logmein ? ? ? ? join.me by logmein ? ? NO ? ? ? join.me by logmein ? ? ? ? ? ? join.me by logmein ? ? ? ? ? ? join.me by logmein ? ? ? ? ? ? ? join.me by logmein yes ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? join.me by logmein ?
name price price / remote price / local pri / usr logi price / simul win srv special price includes? + ios loc ios rem android loc android rem + remote maintenance spontaneous support unattended computers online mtg / pres / train editing collaboration bidir shar + remote printing clipboard file transfer file xfer mapd picture transfer video transfer + share files w/ oth audio multi mon admin login sys srvc encryption uses THEIR server thru FW / NAT + rem inst reqd rem rem loc inst reqd browser IE FireFox Chrome + hd rem reb rem reb unat reboot reconnect safe mode UAC rem inst any pgm kbd lck Scrn blank + Notes
citrix GoToMyPc (refs) $613.90 / yr or $61.70 / mo for 6 rmt PCs $10.28 / rem @ 6 free? ? ? ? ? GoToMyPc yes ? yes ? GoToMyPc ? ? yes ? ? ? GoToMyPc yes yes yes ? ? ? GoToMyPc ? ? ? yes ? ? GoToMyPc ? ? ? ? ? ? ? GoToMyPc ? ? ? ? ? ? ? yes yes GoToMyPc ?
citrix GoToAssist (refs) $69 / mo = $828 / yr free unlim ? ? ? ? ? GoToAssist yes yes unclear yes yes unclear GoToAssist ? ? yes ? ? ? yes GoToAssist ? ? yes ? ? ? GoToAssist ? ? yes yes yes yes GoToAssist no “pre” ? ? ? ? ? ? GoToAssist ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? GoToAssist notes ?
cicso webex support center (refs) $99 / mo = $1200 / yr free ? ? 5 ? ? webex supt ctr ? ? ? ? webex supt ctr ? ? no ? ? ? ? webex supt ctr yes ? yes ? ? ? webex supt ctr ? ? ? yes yes ? http/s webex supt ctr no n/a no yes ? ? ? webex supt ctr ? yes ? yes yes ? ? ? ? webex supt ctr notes ?
cicso webex support center w/ remote access (refs) $99 / mo = $1200 / yr + 6 * $60 = $2400 $60 / yr ? ? ? unclear ? webex SC w/ rmt acc ? ? ? ? webex SC w/ rmt acc ? ? yes ? ? ? webex SC w/ rmt acc yes ? yes ? ? ? webex SC w/ rmt acc ? ? ? yes yes ? yes webex SC w/ rmt acc no ? no ? ? ? ? webex SC w/ rmt acc ? yes ? yes ? ? ? ? ? webex SC w/ rmt acc notes ?
name price price / remote price / local pri / usr logi price / simul win srv special price includes? + ios loc ios rem android loc android rem + remote maintenance spontaneous support unattended computers online mtg / pres / train editing collaboration bidir shar + remote printing clipboard file transfer file xfer mapd picture transfer video transfer + share files w/ oth audio multi mon admin login sys srvc encryption uses THEIR server thru FW / NAT + rem inst reqd rem rem loc inst reqd browser IE FireFox Chrome + hd rem reb rem reb unat reboot reconnect safe mode UAC rem inst any pgm kbd lck Scrn blank + Notes
UltraVNC ? ? ? ? ? ? ? UltraVNC ? ? ? ? UltraVNC ? ? yes ? ? ? UltraVNC ? ? ? ? ? ? UltraVNC ? ? ? ? no 1 yes, 2 ? UltraVNC ? ? ? ? ? ? ? UltraVNC ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? UltraVNC ?
RealVNC free free free free ? ? no unlim free upd to free ver RealVNC free ? ? ? ? RealVNC free ? ? yes ? ? ? RealVNC free yes yes yes ? ? ? RealVNC free with other simultaneously connected no ? no no 1 yes, 2 ? RealVNC free ? ? ? ? ? ? ? RealVNC free ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? RealVNC free ?
RealVNC personal $180 = 6 * 30 30 free ? ? yes ∞, upds 1 yr RealVNC personal yes ? yes ? RealVNC personal ? ? yes ? ? ? RealVNC personal yes yes yes ? yes yes RealVNC personal with other simultaneously connected no ? yes no 1 yes, 2 ? RealVNC personal yes no yes no n/a n/a n/a RealVNC personal ? yes ? yes ? yes ? ? ? yes ? ? RealVNC personal ?
TightVNC
TurboVNC
name price price / remote price / local pri / usr logi price / simul win srv special price includes? + ios loc ios rem android loc android rem + remote maintenance spontaneous support unattended computers online mtg / pres / train editing collaboration bidir shar + remote printing clipboard file transfer file xfer mapd picture transfer video transfer + share files w/ oth audio multi mon admin login sys srvc encryption uses THEIR server thru FW / NAT + rem inst reqd rem rem loc inst reqd browser IE FireFox Chrome + hd rem reb rem reb unat reboot reconnect safe mode UAC rem inst any pgm kbd lck Scrn blank + Notes
splashtop ? personal free up to 5 PCs; $60/yser free, unlm ? $60 ? no ? Splashtop yes yes yes yes Splashtop ? ? ? ? ? ? Splashtop ? ? no no no no Splashtop ? ? ? ? ? ? Splashtop ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Splashtop yes ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Splashtop ?
remotepc $49.75 / yr / 10 PCs ? ? free free free ? no ? Remotepc yes ? yes ? Remotepc ? ? seems like it ? ? ? Remotepc yes ? yes yes ? ? Remotepc ? yes ? yes ? yes Remotepc yes no yes yes ? ? ? Remotepc ? think yes seems like it maybe? ? ? ? ? ? Remotepc ?
remotepc helpdesk basic $14.95 / mo / 3 concur ? 100 free ? ? ? ? ? Remotepc helpdesk ? ? ? ? Remotepc helpdesk ? ? ? ? ? ? Remotepc helpdesk yes yes yes ? ? ? Remotepc helpdesk ? ? ? yes ? ? Remotepc helpdesk yes yes optional optional ? ? ? Remotepc helpdesk ? yes ? yes ? ? ? ? ? Remotepc helpdesk ?
remote utilities ? (refs) per rmt or per techn free <=10 $29.95 ? free $549 ? free unlim no major 1 yr + minor ∞ ? remote utilities yes ? yes ? remote utilities ? ? yes ? ? ? remote utilities yes yes yes no ? yes yes remote utilities ? ? ? yes ? ? remote utilities yes ? yes no ? ? ? remote utilities ? yes yes yes yes ? yes seems yes ? ? remote utilities ?
name price price / remote price / local pri / usr logi price / simul win srv special price includes? + ios loc ios rem android loc android rem + remote maintenance spontaneous support unattended computers online mtg / pres / train editing collaboration bidir shar + remote printing clipboard file transfer file xfer mapd picture transfer video transfer + share files w/ oth audio multi mon admin login sys srvc encryption uses THEIR server thru FW / NAT + rem inst reqd rem rem loc inst reqd browser IE FireFox Chrome + hd rem reb rem reb unat reboot reconnect safe mode UAC rem inst any pgm kbd lck Scrn blank + Notes
radmin ? not lower
BeAnywhere no price ?
crossloop gone ?
aeroadmin free free free free free seems like yes ? ? aeroadmin no no no no aeroadmin ? ? yes ? ? ? ? aeroadmin looks like no yes yes ? yes yes yes aeroadmin ? ? ? yes ? yes aeroadmin no dont think so no looks like no ? ? ? aeroadmin ? yes yes ? yes looks like no maybe not assume so ? ? aeroadmin ?
ammyy ? ? $66.90 * 10 = $669.00 ? $66.90 1-time ? 2 rem 4 loc ? all minor upg
Remote Graphics by HP linux only
name price price / remote price / local pri / usr logi price / simul win srv special price includes? + ios loc ios rem android loc android rem + remote maintenance spontaneous support unattended computers online mtg / pres / train editing collaboration bidir shar + remote printing clipboard file transfer file xfer mapd picture transfer video transfer + share files w/ oth audio multi mon admin login sys srvc encryption uses THEIR server thru FW / NAT + rem inst reqd rem rem loc inst reqd browser IE FireFox Chrome + hd rem reb rem reb unat reboot reconnect safe mode UAC rem inst any pgm kbd lck Scrn blank + Notes

Product Specific References

?

iOS: Back up and restore your iOS device with…iTunes

(You can also do it with iCloud)

– You can use iTunes to back up and restore your content on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch. Note that iTunes and iOS do not support installing backups of newer versions of iOS onto devices using earlier versions of iOS.

Back up

To back up the content on your iOS device, follow these steps:

  • Make sure your computer has the latest version of iTunes.
  • Connect your iOS device to your computer.
  • Choose File > Devices > Back up.
  • If you’re using iTunes 10.7 or earlier, right-click the device from the list and choose Backup Now.

    You can also back up by syncing your iOS device with your computer. When you use iTunes to sync, backing up is the first step.

    To verify that the backup finished successfully, open iTunes Preferences and select the Devices tab. You’ll see the name of the device along with the date and time iTunes created the backup.

    Your backup in Devices Preferences

    Restore from a backup

    If you have a new iOS device, or if you need to restore your device to resolve an issue, follow these steps:

  • Connect your iOS device to the computer that has your backup.
  • Make sure this computer has the latest version of iTunes.
  • Choose File > Devices > Restore from Back up.
  • If you’re using iTunes 10.7 or earlier, right-click the device from the list and choose Restore from Backup.

    via iOS: Back up and restore your iOS device with iCloud or iTunes.

What Secrets Your Phone Is Sharing About You

“Businesses Use Sensors to Track Customers, Build Shopper Profiles”

From Wall Street Journal Article <http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303453004579290632128929194>

By Elizabeth Dwoskin

Jan. 13, 2014 8:47 p.m. ET

Fan Zhang, the owner of Happy Child, a trendy Asian restaurant in downtown Toronto, knows that 170 of his customers went clubbing in November. He knows that 250 went to the gym that month, and that 216 came in from Yorkville, an upscale neighborhood.

And he gleans this information without his customers’ knowledge, or ever asking them a single question.

Mr. Zhang is a client of Turnstyle Solutions Inc., a year-old local company that has placed sensors in about 200 businesses within a 0.7 mile radius in downtown Toronto to track shoppers as they move in the city.

The sensors, each about the size of a deck of cards, follow signals emitted from Wi-Fi-enabled smartphones. That allows them to create portraits of roughly 2 million people’s habits as they have gone about their daily lives, traveling from yoga studios to restaurants, to coffee shops, sports stadiums, hotels, and nightclubs.

“Instead of offering a general promotion that may or may not hit a nerve, we can promote specifically to the customer’s taste,” says Mr. Zhang. He recently emblazoned workout tank-tops with his restaurant’s logo, based on the data about his customers’ gym visits.

Turnstyle is at the forefront of a movement to track consumers who are continuously broadcasting their location from phones. Other startups, such as San Francisco-based Euclid Analytics Inc., use sensors to analyze foot-traffic patterns, largely within an individual retailer’s properties to glean insight about customer behavior.

Their success speaks to the growing value of location data. Verizon Wireless last year began crunching its own location information from customers to help retailers see which neighborhoods shoppers arrived from or limited information about their habits, such as restaurants they drive past. Apple Inc. recently released its iBeacon technology, which can be integrated into sensors to read customer’s smartphone signals in brick-and-mortar stores.

But Turnstyle is among the few that have begun using the technology more broadly to follow people where they live, work and shop. The company’s dense network of sensors can track any phone that has Wi-Fi turned on, enabling the company to build profiles of consumers lifestyles.

Turnstyle’s weekly reports to clients use aggregate numbers and don’t include people’s names. But the company does collect the names, ages, genders, and social media profiles of some people who log in with Facebook to a free Wi-Fi service that Turnstyle runs at local restaurants and coffee shops, including Happy Child. It uses that information, along with the wider foot traffic data, to come up dozens lifestyle categories, including yoga-goers, people who like theater, and hipsters.

A business that knows which sports team is most favored by its clients could offer special promotions on game days, says Turnstyle’s 27-year-old founder Chris Gilpin. Czehoski, a local restaurant, hired an ’80s-music DJ for Friday nights after learning from Turnstyle that more than 60% of the restaurant’s Wi-Fi-enabled customers were over 30.

But as the industry grows in prominence, location trackers are bound to ignite privacy concerns. A company could, for example, track people’s visits to specialist doctors or hospitals and sell that data to marketers.

“Locations have meanings,” says Eloise Gratton, a privacy lawyer. Marketers can infer that a person has a certain disease from their Internet searches. A geolocation company can actually see the person visiting the doctor, “making the inference that the individual has this disease probably even more accurate,” she says.

Mr. Glipin says his data doesn’t include doctors visits or sensitive health information, nor does he sell his profile data to marketers. He is considering offering more detailed profiles based on the logged-in information, an endeavor that would be legal in Canada as long as consumers provided consent.

“We know there is more value to be extracted from this data,” Mr. Gilpin says. “But we’re wanting to move cautiously and turn on the tap slowly—in a way that doesn’t offend customers.”

In the U.S., companies don’t have to get a consent before collecting and sharing most personal information, including their location. A bill, proposed by Minnesota Senator Al Franken, would require consent before collecting location data. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission settled its first location privacy case in December, against an app developer that misled consumers into believing their location data wouldn’t be sold to marketers.

Some customers have concerns. Aj Tin, a university student and customer at Rsquared Café, was surprised to learn that by logging into the Wi-Fi at the coffee shop, he was enabling Turnstyle to track his movements and offer other local businesses an aggregated profile of his activities. The disclosure form tells consumers they will be tracked, but not how aggregated personal information will be distributed. “Privacy is cheap,” Mr. Tin said.

Even as they covet the data, stores and businesses recognize it is a touchy subject. “It would probably be better not to use this tracking system at all if we had to let people know about it,” says Glenna Weddle, the owner of Rac Boutique, a women’s clothing store that is a Turnstyle client. “It’s not invasive. It might raise alarms for no reason.”

Viasense Inc., another Toronto startup, is building detailed dossiers of people’s lifestyles by merging location data with those from other sources, including marketing firms. The company follows between 3 million and 6 million devices each day in a 400-kilometer radius surrounding Toronto. It buys bulk phone-signal data from Canada’s national cellphone carriers. Viasense’s algorithms then break those users into lifestyle categories based on their daily travels, which it says it can track down to the square meter.

For example, by monitoring how many times a consumer visits a golf course in a month, Viasense can classify her as a casual, intermediate or heavy golfer. People whose cellphones move at a certain clip across city parks between 5:30 and 8:30 every morning are flagged by the algorithm as “early morning joggers.” The company identifies “youth” by looking at phone signals coming from schools during school hours and nightclubs, and home locations by targeting the places phones spend each night.

Viasense, which says its clients are grocery chains, a large concert venue and a billboard company, then overlays that data with census and marketing lists the company buys from data brokers to deduce demographic information, like whether the cellphone’s owner is in a high-income bracket.

Viasense doesn’t gather personal information or know any of its users’ names, but CEO Mossab Basir says it is simple to figure this out. A person who has enabled location services on an app in which they upload information publicly, such as Twitter, is broadcasting their location and their identity—or at least their handle—at the same time. “People are probably unaware of how much they are making available,” says Mr. Basir. “That’s why it’s a very delicate subject for us. It’s kind of Big Brotheresque.”

A username is considered personal information, which under Canadian law can’t be collected without the consent of the user. In most of the U.S., consent wouldn’t be required.

Right now, the only way to opt-out of geolocation is to either switch off the Wi-Fi on a cellphone, or make a request through a website of one the data companies like Turnstyle that has an opt-out option.

As these companies operate mostly behind the scenes, the nascent industry is keeping a close watch on Google and Apple. With their Android and iOS mobile operating systems, respectively, Google and Apple know the location of every customer’s Wi-Fi-enabled phone—far more location data than any startup could access. The Silicon Valley giants aren’t allowing access to such data by outsiders. Both Google and Apple declined to comment.

Places where people didn’t think they were being watched are now repositories for collecting information, says Ryan Calo assistant professor at the University of Washington School of Law. “Companies are increasingly able to connect between our online and offline lives,” he says.

—David George-Cosh in Toronto contributed to this article.

 

Also from same author at <http://blogs.wsj.com/five-things/2014/01/14/5-things-to-check-to-see-whether-companies-are-tracking-your-phone/> “5 Things to Check to See Whether Companies Are Tracking Your Phone”

1 Your Cell Phone Carrier Knows, and Is Beginning to Share

Cell phone carriers have always known your location because the phone must send signals to cell towers. Verizon, and soon AT&T, have businesses selling this data to retailers, billboard advertisers, and stadium owners.

Users can’t turn off those signals. But they are generally anonymous. Verizon asks users to agree to let it share their identity with its brick-and-mortar customers, which can lead to pings from nearby merchants when shopping.

How to take a screenshot with the iPhone | iMore

From: http://www.imore.com/how-to-take-a-screenshot-with-the-iphone

How to take a screenshot with the iPhone

By Rene Ritchie, Monday, Oct 6, 2008 a 2:55 pm
While this might be second nature to some, Apple doesn’t tell you how to take a screenshot out of the box, and so so not everyone may yet know that they can capture their iPhone – or iPad or iPod touch – screen contents with just the touch of a button — well, two buttons actually.
To take a screenshot with your iPhone or iPod Touch, just press the Home and Sleep buttons at the same time. If you nail the timing, the screen will flash and you’ll hear the same camera shutter sound that the Camera app makes.
how_to_iphone_screenshot_device
To access your screenshots go to Photos and open the Camera Roll.

Rene Ritchie

Editor-in-Chief of iMore, co-host of Iterate, Debug, ZEN and TECH, MacBreak Weekly. Cook, grappler, photon wrangler. Follow him on Twitter, App.net, Google+.

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What version of Safari am I running on my iOS (iPhone, iTouch)

Apparently there’s no way to tell what version of Safari you’re running on your iPhone or iPod Touch. It’s not in the Safari app, nor in the Safari entry in Settings.

But you can type this into your Safari browser address bar:

javascript:alert(navigator.userAgent)

Or, just click here (same thing),

Here’s what it looks like on my iPhone 4s (running iOS v6.1.2)

iphone_safari_user_agent(click to enlarge)

This show’s i’m running Safari v6.0.

Actually, this works in any browser.  Eg in Firefox on Windows it gives this:

User_Agent_Mozilla_Windows

I got this tip from a tweet by Tim Acheson