• Solving problems syncing your Apple stuff to iCloud

     

    Here are some of the most common problems people have when syncing accounts to iCloud.

    The easiest way to think of The cloud is to imagine a large connected disk drive attached to your computer. All your documents, music, pictures and other stuff can be stored there. But this special disk only allows access with the proper credentials. If you don’t know the password and user name you don’t get access. If there is no internet, there is also no cloud. Once you grasp this concept the rest starts to fall into place.

     

    Apple’s flavor of cloud computing works best with Apple products and contains “built-ins” that take much of the guesswork out for you. Ideal because most Mac owners have other Apple devices that should carry the same information across them. The most likely items you’re trying to sync are contacts, calendars or documents. If you use suggestions in this guide, keep in mind that it can take a little time for things to sort out once you make a change so if you know you have all the settings correct and are still having problems, wait a quarter hour or so before checking your efforts. If it absolutely is not working after following this guide, contact Apple Support for iCloud, or give Denver Mac a call.

     

    These instructions are written for Mac users, PC users will find resources on related sites.

     

    CHECK SETTINGS

    Most problems can be resolved by fixing these. For iCloud, settings consist of having the iCloud services turned on, choosing which items to sync, and using the same credentials among each device in the sync. For our example we will be syncing calendars between a Mac and iPhone.  An iPad and other Macs work the same way. You’ll need to find the right settings and turn things on.

     

    Assuming here you’re running OS X 10.7 LION. Start with your Mac. System Preferences > iCloud. Item that you wish to sync should be checked off in the list at the right. A valid iCloud account is shown with a name under the iCloud icon. In the picture below, the text where your account name will appear is shown as “Your Account.” If there is no name that appears under the iCloud icon, click Sign In and enter the email address you have registered with Apple. You’ll need to enter the password as well.

     

     

    Paramount to iCloud syncing is iCloud itself. It is an easy mistake to try syncing between two devices without verifying your stuff hit the cloud. If you are troubleshooting, start with just one device and the cloud. Turn on syncing in one of the devices (usually a Mac first) then check to see if that information hits the cloud BEFORE turning on syncing on another device. Knowing that iCloud itself is a device, troubleshooting gets simplified. You access iCloud through your internet browser. Go to http://www.icloud.com after turning syncing on in your first device to make sure everything works right.

     

    It may take a few minutes to get everything uploaded, there are progress indicators while the sync takes place. Understand that when you enable iCloud, your space on Apple’s cloud servers becomes active. That active space is the core of your cloud. Devices don’t sync to each other, they all get their information from iCloud, its the middleman in the process. Use a web browser to go to that core: http://www.icloud.com

     

     

    After signing in, take a look at contacts and calendars in the iCloud web browser. The items you sync’d earlier should be accessible in the cloud. iCloud holds the items you have linked from your Mac. It is your home master. Adding or deleting information from sync’d items in your Mac should reflect in iCloud from your web browser and visa versa. Try it out before proceeding further by adding test contacts or calendar events. You can delete them after your testing from either the device or directly from iCloud with your browser. Changes should get updated across your first two synced devices – Mac and iCloud. If this doesn’t happen, don’t go any further until this crucial step gets resolved.

    And as mentioned before, make sure anything in your new sync group is connected to the internet. WIFI or phone band work as long as nothing between your device and the internet such as a firewall or router is blocking access.

     

    Now to add a second device to your cloud sync. Here, we’re going to add an iPhone to the mix. The pictures below are what the settings look like on iPhone running IOS 5. The top graphic shows the list of settings. Choose iCloud and that takes you to the second window. The most important item is at the top of the second graphic – Account. You need to sign into iCloud on the new device with the same credentials used with your first device. Now choose what you would like to sync on the second device. In the example below just about everything is turned on except Photo Stream and Documents & Data.

     

     

     

    We will need to look for messages from iCloud after we turn the sync on. There might be contacts or calendar events that do not match up with what iCloud holds from our first device and iCloud will both warn us and give options for syncing. Again it is best to choose merge when adding new devices to your iCloud but you’ll need to think things through because your case may be different. For example you may have built the bulk of your contacts or calendar entries on your phone instead of your Mac. You may have separate mail accounts on different phones or some other uniqueness that will need thought before you start clicking the options iCloud gives when adding accounts. Just think it through before making decisions and it will with good likelyhood work itself out after a few hours.

     

    Continue adding devices using the same process outlined here until all of your devices are included. Now giving a little time for the syncing to catch up with all your devices, you should enjoy cloud computing Apple style.

     

     

    Some problems we have seen in iCloud syncing and how to fix them:

     

    Families sometimes share a Mac between them but have separate iCloud accounts: Set up separate accounts on the Mac using each person’s iCloud account assigned to each Mac account.

     

    After syncing to iCloud, entries in Calendar and Contacts get double entered: Turn iCloud off in each device. Clean up calendars and contacts on the devices. Then turn on iCloud again to delete duplicates. See this Apple Tech article for more information on deleting duplicate iCal entries: http://support.apple.com/kb/TS4118  And also here: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4968

     

    We will add more here as it become available.

    (c) Denver Macintosh 2012

     
  • Adding a scanned signature to Apple Pages and Mail docs using Lion


    Among the many great features in Lion  is the camera-scanned signature function for PDF documents — You most likely already know how to get your signature into the computer; Open the Preview application > Choose Preferences, click Signatures, and then click Create Signature. Hold a white piece of paper of your signature in black ink in front of the the camera in your computer aligning the signature to the blue guide line — Once you have the signature on the line, level and centered, there’s no need to continue holding the paper up. Take the paper away and you’ll see it continue to be refined via software. Ok now its in.

     

    Add your signature to PDF documents  using Preview.app’s Annotations toolbar. If its not visible you’ll have to show Annotations from the menu. One thing you can’t do is drag this placed sig. to the desktop or another application – it is locked to the page, something the engineers put thought into because leaving the signature file unlocked opens a real security issue with someone being able to copy it off your computer.

     

    But thankfully, there is a technique to using your scanned signature in other applications. Here is how to get your signature you created in Preview.app into other Apple programs like Pages.app and Mail.app.  Do this:  Once the signature is saved in Preview.app, access it through Preview > Preferences > Signatures pane. You’ll see visuals of the signature or multiple signatures you created and last times they were used.

     

    Try as you might you won’t be able to drag the signature out of the box. Instead select the signature from the signature manager window and do a Copy, Apple-C. Now its on the clipboard. Then switch to a Pages file where you have a document open needing your signature. Hit Paste, Apple-V to paste the signature as a graphic that can be moved or resized. Be aware of the floating vs. inline features of Pages. Here’s how that works. If the cursor is positioned in a line of text, the pasted graphic is locked to the cursor position. To create a floating graphic, deselect the text tool and then paste. Now the graphic is “Floating” so you can move it freely around the page.

     

    To add that signature as a email signature you can select when composing new mail, get into your Mail preferences > signatures and paste the graphic there.

     

    C Denver Macintosh

     
  • Denver Macintosh iPod 4 and iPhone 4 replacement glass

    Apple’s newest line of iPhone and iPod’s sport unique construction making them sleeker and feature enriched – front and back cameras hooray!  While keeping these newest gadgets sleek and nimble, Apple traded off a few things — screws and connectors for glue and tape. It really makes sense as a phone or ipod gets obsolete quickly these days.

    Repairing them is more difficult than previous models. iPhone 4 glass screens are now the final step in take aparts where glass was the first step in the veritable iPhone 3 line. iPod 4′s use adhesive to fasten the screens down which seems like a simple fix when your’s cracks but here’s the kicker. Even though the iPod 4 glass comes off first, the cable attaching it to the iPod runs underneath the innards, making for even trickier repairs than earlier iPod models.

    With iPod and iPhone prices ranging between 230$ and 400$, broken screens are still worth repairing. If your touch glass breaks, figure on spending between 80$ and 150$ to have it replaced. Our  screens come from the same suppliers making them for Apple. You can rest assured your broken screen will be as good as new when you get it back.

    So even though we hope you’ll never have an accident, we want you to know that you’re in good hands if you do!

    Go Here to understand why replacement glass quality is very important.

    Denver Macintosh 303-919-6807


     
  • iPhone iPod glass repairs – Why choose Denver Macintosh?

    When accidents happen to your iPhone, iPad, iPod or Mac we advise first taking it to the nearest Apple Store to try and get a free repair or exchange. Many time you can luck out and have the device swapped out for a new one at no charge. If the device is a month or two old your chances are better.

    If Apple doesn’t give you the free option its because you’ve had it too long, were a dork to them, or showed great negligence for your device.You don’t want to sink lots of money into a repair. If you bring your broken device to Denver Mac, you’ll get an OEM parts replacement at a fair rate. OEM means Original Equipment Manufacturer. They are manufactured by the same company contracted to make them for Apple.  These parts cost more to make and buy but they are stronger and less likely to crack, or fail exactly at the moment you don’t need it to.

    Even though all parts come from China, there are differing levels of quality available, OEM guarantees the same quality as the original.

    Why choose Denver Mac:

    1. Quality
      We source OEM or better parts. Original quality and sometimes better as seen in our new Macbook replacement glass.
    2. Reliability
      Your device is returned to you only when it passes quality control testing.
    3. Integrity
      Straight shooting honesty is what its all about. The thinking here is treat everybody right. We all sleep better at night.
    4. Price
      Denver Mac offers pricing equal or lower than anyone out there. We look out for our customers!

    Denver Macintosh 303-919-6807

    C Denver Macintosh

     
  • Replace cracked MacBook pro glass – Denver Mac Special

    Original Apple glass is so fragile even small drops or impacts can crack it. Given all the things that can happen to your Macbook or Pro, glass replacement has the highest incident rate – but is one of the cheapest repairs. Denver Mac just got in a shipment of Macbook Pro replacement glass that is very impressive for its strength and clarity.  Its  a lot tougher than the factory glass while delivering the Pro’s original look.

     

    It costs more but we’re thinking “make it stronger than before” in case what broke it happens again.  With that said here is a great offer to fix your broken glass – $169 including new glass and labor charges to put the new one in. This special only lasts until this new shipment is used up so act now to take advantage of an outstanding deal.

    Make sure its only the glass that is cracked and not the LCD beneath – if there are splotches in the display, there’s a good chance the LCD screen is damaged as well. But if you can see a good image on your Mac as though you’re looking at it through cracks in the glass, lucky you, your new glass has arrived.