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Showing posts from May, 2025

Taking phone scammers through a reverse security check! Has to be done, and great fun!

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It can't only be me who has scam phone calls come in. The most recent (and most common) is an Indian call centre voice saying that they're from my mobile phone operator, quoting (or guessing correctly) Three, in this case. They open up with 'We can offer you a 45% discount on your current mobile monthly bill'. Which, in itself, should raise alarm bells - what company ever contacts you to get you to pay them less money?? The scam itself is intended to get you to hand over all your details, of course, including payment, for the 'new contract' - and presumably your account then gets debited for a whole lot. But the point of this blog post is to point out that you should always interrupt their spiel and ask them to prove their identity. After all, it was them that called you, so the onus is on them - just as it would be if you called a company and wanted to change something in your own contract with them - they'd run you through security questions before doing ...

Avoiding pre-roll and mid-roll ads in many streaming video services on iPhone

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One of the annoyances of modern life is that adverts have crept into video streaming services - yes, you can pay more to get an 'ad free' tier, but if you do that for everything you watch then life gets quite expensive. Happily, I have found that many video streaming services support picture in picture (don't worry, I'll explain) and therefore, when an advert does hit, either before or in the middle of a programme, you can swipe the video to a screen corner and at least do something else productive during the enforced 30 second or 90 second ad. For example, answering an email or text or browsing your favourite social network. Then, when the advert ends, a single tap restores full screen playback of your programme. To illustrate this, I'll use Disney+, though this also works for BBC iPlayer, Prime Video, YouTube, and, I'm sure, several others - you'll have to experiment! So I'm watching a programme full-screen: And the ad starts, so I swipe up to go home,...

Steve's Phones Show Shorts, sorted and indexed, 2024-2025!

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It occurs to me, browsing through my own extensive library of Shorts on YouTube (half 60 seconds long, and the other half, since YouTube's expansion of the format, up to 3 minutes long), it's not trivial to find videos on a particular topic or of a particular type. Hence, I thought I'd try an index of sorts here. That I could point people towards and also refer back to myself when needed. [Updated May 2025] NB. The video lists are sorted in approximate chronological order in each section. NB2. I've gone back a year, so as not to burden you with too much out of date or more primitive content. For the full set of videos, see my YouTube channel generally ! NB3. The lists below show just how much video content I've created in this format. If you'd like to show your appreciation via PayPal ? iPhone-related reviews and comment AirPods Pro 2nd gen: the best of three worlds? Clicks Keyboard review: part 1: Multi-tool, Multi-accessories Clicks Keyboard review: part 2: Wh...

The iPhone 16 range and 'Fusion' photos - how does it work and how WELL does it work?

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Even though I maintain to this day (2025) that photo resolutions of over 12MP are 'over the top' for 99% of people's needs, I have to concede that Apple's implementation in 2024 of 24MP 'Fusion' images is impressive and does work well. If the extra file size doesn't bother you, then it does give enough resolution margin of error to downscale or crop or process later, as needed. (Note that this is all aside from my favoured technique for important shots on the iPhone 'Pro' models, which is to use ProRAW, giving all the HDR and texture intelligence but without sharpening and edge enhancement, at the expense of huge file sizes, over 20MB per image.) Apple's idea stemmed from looking at the two alternatives from its 48MP camera sensors: a pixel-binned 12MP shot, with lower digital noise and greater 'purity'. a full resolution 48MP shot, with higher native resolution but more noise and more uncertainty at the pixel level. So I guess someone at...

The Smartphone Plateau - What It Is... And Isn't!

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We've been hearing about the phone world 'plateauing' for years. I've been the one proclaiming the concept, since about 2020 - and I'm absolutely right. But 'plateau' is perhaps not what you thought it was. After all, a true plateau is just that - flat, whereas the meaning in the phone world is subtly different. What is DOES mean is that the days of significant year on year advances in phone technology are long gone.  Any phone from 2020 will work just fine today, whether iOS or Android-based. Its performance will be 'fine', its camera putting out photos that are 'fine', its speakers and microphones 'fine', its battery life 'fine'. And so forth. Whereas once (pre-2015, say), there would be compelling reasons to trade your phone in after even less than a year, in order to get the shiny new model that was evidently better at something important, in 2025 there's almost no reason. In fact, we've reached the point where it...