iPhone Life

Posted by on Sep 4, 2010 | 5 Comments

There should be an image here!iPhone Life magazine covers all things iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. Each regular issue is chocked full of app reviews, information about new accessories, and the latest news about Apple handheld devices. It’s also loaded with tips and how-tos, user profiles, business solutions, and more. There’s also a section dedicated to how to create and market apps. The theme of the magazine is: “have more fun, get more done.”

A yearly subscription includes 6 issues per year: 4 regular yearly issues, plus 2 special issues, a Buyer’s Guide and a How-To Guide. All subscribers will also receive the digital edition of iPhone Life, which can be read on the iPhone/iPad and Mac or PC. Your paid subscription rate is $15.95, a savings of $40 off the newsstand price. If you decide iPhone Life magazine isn’t for you, simply write CANCEL on the invoice that you receive, return it, and owe nothing. The free print and digital issues are yours to keep.

“I have also subscribed to iPhone Life magazine starting with issue number one, and I can say it is the ONLY one I read cover to cover! It is wonderful.” — Lorene Romero, President, North Coast Mac Users Group

Get your free trial issue of iPhone Life magazine today!

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  • http://sunnyis.me/ Sunny Singh

    Totally agree with you. Every time I open up RockMelt to see what’s new and what not, I think “Wow, this would be a really nice browser… if my life revolved around Facebook.” I only have around 100 something friends (removed most of the people I didn’t really know), and the notifications are still a huge pain. Add that in with Twitter, well you explained it pretty well.

    I think RockMelt needs to realize what people really want in a social browser. One button for sharing is nice, and I like the Read Later feature. It’s really not a big deal to have Facebook open in a tab, especially if it’s pinned, so keep all the Facebook-only features out of the browser itself. And if the browser wasn’t one huge distraction, they wouldn’t need a button to hide what they have been advertising to be so great.

  • Anonymous

    I completely agree. I found RockMelt very distracting before the update. Receiving a notification every time someone performs an action on Facebook or Twitter would be overwhelming. I don’t think you’re missing out by turning off notifications. I think there are more effective ways to monitor your networks that don’t distract you or lower your productivity.

    Sorry RockMelt, but you were uninstalled a while ago.

  • http://josedmorales.net Josè Daniel

    I used to love Rockmelt … in fact, it was my primary browser for 5 months! The current RM is just horrible. Don’t even get me started on how their Windows version has awfully destroyed the Windows GUI parameters.

  • Angeline Vargas

    I don’t know what’s wrong with Rockmelt. These days, my Facebook chatbox is no longer working. It’s always unavailable. Am I the only one experiencing this? When I open my FB account with other browsers, I can use my chatbox. One thing more, the notifications do not appear automatically anymore when I’m on Rockmelt. I have to refresh the page first before the notifications appear.

  • Angeline Vargas

    I don’t know what’s wrong with Rockmelt. These days, my Facebook chatbox is no longer working. It’s always unavailable. Am I the only one experiencing this? When I open my FB account with other browsers, I can use my chatbox. One thing more, the notifications do not appear automatically anymore when I’m on Rockmelt. I have to refresh the page first before the notifications appear.