Controlling your Family's Wireless Usage

Summer vacation means more time for the youngest customers who use Verizon Wireless phones to send and receive messages, download and use apps and games, surf the Web, and make calls on their cell phones.  But, with a few tools from Verizon Wireless, summertime doesn’t have to mean unexpected high wireless bills. 
Visit Verizon's Parental Controls Center to watch a video  that will show you how you can use Usage Controls to easily monitor wireless usage – voice, messaging, and data – for each line on your account.  

Summer vacation means more time for the youngest customers who use Verizon Wireless phones to send and receive messages, download and use apps and games, surf the Web, and make calls on their cell phones.  But, with a few tools from Verizon Wireless, summertime doesn’t have to mean unexpected high wireless bills. 
Visit Verizon's Parental Controls Center to watch a video  that will show you how you can use Usage Controls to easily monitor wireless usage – voice, messaging, and data – for each line on your account.  

Similar Messages

  • Family Sharing - Your Family Is Managed By Alternate Apple ID

    All,
    I asked this in the iCloud Forum, but, now I think my problem needs to be discussed here based on on what I have discovered......
    I just got a new iPhone 6 Plus.  I set it up as new rather than restore from backup of my old iPhone.  I signed into my own iCloud account for iTunes/Apps, Family Sharing and etc. I am a parent/guardian and NOT the organizer.
    The issue is when I go to the App Store>Purchased on the 6 Plus, I notice the following message:
    "This iTunes account is setup to use Family Sharing with a different iCloud account than 'Organizer's Primary Apple ID'. Learn More"
    I do see my other family members and their purchases.  I am also able to download their purchases as well.  So Family Sharing on the App Store appears to be functioning properly with the exception of the message.  iTunes and iBooks do not show the message.
    My old iPhone and my iPad also do not display this message when I go to the App Store.
    This is what I have noticed on my iPhone when I go to Settings > iTunes & App Store > Apple ID: My ID > View Apple ID > Family Sharing
    "You are part of a Family.  The payment method for your Family is managed by 'Organizer's ALTERNATE Apple ID'......."
    The organizer has only signed into iTunes, iCloud and set up Family Sharing using the Primary Apple ID, so I do not understand why the Alternate Apple ID appears to be used in the background to manage our Family. I think this is what is causing the above error message.
    Any ideas deals on how to fix?
    Thank you

    Yeah - not sure why that is happening only for Apps. Might be best for you to give Apple Support a call. You are still within your 90-day period, so the support will be free of charge. Here's the link - just follow the prompts and it will take you to a page where you can set up a call:
    https://getsupport.apple.com/GetproductgroupList.action
    Sorry I couldn't be of more help
    GB

  • How do you correct the merging of contacts, calendars, etc with other members of your family on your account?

    How do you correct the merging of contacts, calendars, etc with other members of your family on your account?

    Wow!
    I'm not going to be of much use regarding answers but I sure am going to watching this post like a hawk for any replies. My package is a slightly diluted version of this and I do find the BBtalk and data limits hard to make the most of as well.
    If nothing else this totally highlights how complicated BT have managed to make their packages.
    A cynic would assume that they are trying to catch us out at every step and for us to either be overspending or not really getting the moneys worth.

  • To download shared content, your family must have a valid payment method

    I'm trying to share movies bought on my account with my son and keep receiving the message "to download shared content, your family must have a valid payment method". I already have a credit card linked to my account. Help?

    Hi Mel3b,
    I'm sorry to hear you are having these issues with Family Sharing. If you are getting the "valid payment" alert message when you alreadyt have a credit card on file, you may want to try re-entering the card details on the account, even if you know they are currently correct. You may find the following article helpful:
    Family purchases and payments - Apple Support
    Regards,
    - Brenden

  • How to control your roaming calls/sms cost?

    When you're traveling abroad with your 3G mobile handset take the following tips:
    1) Ask your carrier FOR eurotariff rates: this will cut you're mobile cost
    What is "Eurotariff"? The new EU Regulation sets limits on international roaming rates. These limits, or "Eurotariffs", will be gradually reduced over the three years following the Regulation's entry into force.
    The prices of the Eurotariff cannot exceed 49 cents for making calls and 24 cents for receiving calls for the next year (excluding VAT).
    Quote from MEMO/07/251.
    2) Your mobile phone is one of the 3G Phones supports symbian 9.1/9.2(such as Nokia N95,N773,N70,N7 ) you can use the pbc - eurotariff ( mobile application provide by pbc-mobile company ) to control in real time the eurotariff cost for voice calls and sms.
    you can download this application from handango site
    if you want to get a new cost control application from this company ,based on your tariff agreement.
    Send your email to [email protected] as far as i know they'll send you a private application which you will be able to control your mobile cost.
    Enjoy

    Welcome to the forums! 
    If you can, please post a snippet of code from what you've attempted so far. We can take a look at it and make some recommendations. 
    One of the lessons in Core 1 also talked about the use of the event structure. It may be a good use case for an event driven state machine that can modify the states of specific switches. 
    Nathan M.
    Applications Engineer
    National Instruments

  • Trying to update apps on iphone and getting error message, there is not enough available local storage to download these items. you can manage your local device storage usage in settings

    trying to update apps on iphone and getting error message, there is not enough available local storage to download these items. you can manage your local device storage usage in settings. What am I to do?

    The storage you purchased is in the cloud, and doesn't do anything with your pad.  Your problem is simply that you have too much content on your pad.   Go to settings, general, usage, and it will show you how much space you have avaliable on your pad.  If you let the screen sit for a while, all the apps will be displayed, and you can see how much stuff you have associated with each.
    You have to no option but to delete some of the content on your pad.  Videos, comics, pitcures and some music files use a lot of space.   The cloud allows you to leave stuff there, so you can get it when you need it.

  • Screen Sharing.app fails through ssh tunnel with "You cannot control your own screen"

    I need to control a remote Mac mini running 10.7 through an ssh tunnel.  I've set up ssh with -L for the appropriate ports, and bound my local ports 5900 and 5800 through this.
    When I connect to 127.0.0.1 with Screen Sharing.app on my macbook pro which runs 10.8.4, it says "You cannot control your own screen" however, screen sharing is not enabled locally on my machine, I'm trying to access a remote machine.
    I tried something else.  I created an alias IP of 127.0.0.2 on lo0, and tried again, and got the same thing, so it's doing an ifconfig and looking through all the IPs to see if the IP address of what I'm trying to connect to is bound locally, which defeats the purpose of tunneling through SSH.  I don't wish to setup a VPN.
    How do I let the Screen Sharing.app know that I'm not trying to connect to my own machine and it should skip this check.
    I've also tried with another app, Chicken of the VNC, and that almost works.  It connects and shows a login screen desktop to the target machine, but I'm unable to click on any of the account icons displayed in order to login, and all key presses such as tab, space, and enter are ignored.
    When at the location (on the same vlan as the target machine) I'm able to remote into it just fine with screen sharing.app, but Chicken of the VNC has the same issue of showing a login screen, but not allowing logins to it.

    Your ssh command should look something like:
    ssh -L 22590:localhost:5900 remove.mac.system.address
    Then you connect using
    Finder -> Go -> Connect to server -> vnc://localhost:22590
    Have you been doing anything close to that?

  • HT204368 Can you (Handoff) control your iphone with 3rd party devices ? (Like making calls, sending message, etc...)

    I am wondering if you can control your iphone or other iOS devices with 3rd party devices? I have in mind like making calls, sending sms, etc....
    Thank you!

    No,

  • Control your EOS 7D Mark II Exposure Functions

    Want to control your EOS 7D Mark II exposure functions? Learn how!

    Want to control your EOS 7D Mark II exposure functions? Learn how!

  • How to control timing without 100% CPU usage

    I wanted fine control over timing (in windows XP), but ran into two problems.
    Problem 1: If you use the Swing timer, or Thread.sleep, the resolution is limited to 10 or 11 milliseconds. There is a Thread.sleep(millis, nanos) function, but I tested it and it still has 11ms resolution in WinXP.
    Problem 2: If you use jbanes's GAGE timer, CPU utilization will always be 100%.
    Solution: Use a hybrid technique. I would love to have nanosecond resolution AND low CPU utilization at any speed (and if you have any suggestions, please post them) but for now:
    class /*name*/ extends Thread{
    public void run(){
              setDelay(delaySettings[speed]); //Set "delay" to the desired delay in nanoseconds
              long nanos;
              while(true){
                   if(running){ //"running" is a boolean that can pause or unpause the game
                        nanos=System.nanoTime()+delay;
                        tick(); //Do the game logic and graphics for one frame
                        if(delay>11000000){ //If the system timer can handle it
                             try{sleep(delay/1000000);} //delay/1000000 gives millis
                             catch(Exception e){System.out.println("Caught sleep exception: "+e);}
                        }else{ //use a nanotimer (cpu-expensive)
                             while(System.nanoTime()<nanos){}
                   }else{ //it is paused, so wait a bit
                        try{sleep(50);}
                        catch(Exception e){System.out.println("Caught sleep exception: "+e);}
    //The rest of your code
    }If your desired delay is greater than the system timer resolution (here, I have it set at 11,000,000 nanoseconds, or 11ms) then you can use the Thread.sleep(milliseconds) call, which will have approximately 0% CPU utilization until the thread wakes up. Theoretically, you could use this time for another thread, but at the very minimum, your computer should use less power / generate less heat. If your desired resolution is smaller than 11,000,000 nanoseconds, it goes into a loop that checks nanoTime()... which gives you 100% CPU usage, but is very accurate. This works pretty well if you want to control the framerate dynamically (I use the "-"/"=" buttons to adjust speed) and it handles "pause" events, though I'm sure there are better ways to do that.
    Note: The timing granularity above 11ms for this technique is probably 11ms, though the code could be modified to provide nanosecond granularity at any speed.
    Note 2: I found this to run 3% faster than when I used the GAGE timer.
    -Cherry

    Pause the game when u alt-tab away ^_^
    Thats what most native fullscreen games do (the
    non-networked kind atleast)Good idea, but the crux of the issue is really the underlying scheduler which allows
    the thread to race.
    How to "Eliminate" 100% CPU usage.
    Tony's Law of the exec constant. <<<<"Any thread or process running on a non-preemptive operating system MUST NOT use blocking
    IO, and MUST preempt itself at leat 20MS per iteration."
    The reason it is called a constant is because it is the minimum time needed to ensure
    the underlying operating system gets enough CPU cycles to function correctly.
    Every milliseconds below this increases exponentially the chance of locking up or
    crashing despite the speed of your system.
    Most people who program do not realize the the implications of running under defective schedulers
    such as the one provided with MS windows where, for example, you can block on a socket, and
    hang your whole system.
    >>> Do NOT use Thread.sleep() <<< but instead use Object.wait();
    Do not use blockng IO. If you have to use java.io, use available() to make such you ONLY
    read the exact amount of bytes you need without blocking and make sure to prempt
    yourself at least 20MS per iteration.
    ie:
    InputStream inputStream;
    while(working)
    Object waitObject = new Object();
    int readCount = 0;
    int availableBytes = 0;
    int  totalBytes = 10;
       while(readCount < totalBytes)
          if((availableBytes = inputStream.available())!=0)
              read() (the # of Bytes available)
          else
              synchronized(waitObject)
                   waitObject.wait(200);        // 5X per second poll
                    waitObject.notifyAll();
    Using wait() removes the current thread from being scheduled; Thread.sleep()
    leaves the Thread on the schedule list. wait() releases all monitors allow other
    threads to have them; THread.sleep() does not.
    The 100% CPU issue is especially bad under NT BTW.
    If you do this not only will your CPU usage go to negligible, but you
    will never again lock your system because of it.
    Good Luck!
    (T)

  • Wireless usage

    I have a wireless router at home that allows me to access the internet. And depending where I am at outside my home, my Macbook can hook up to a wireless network. But is there a device I can plug into my computer that allows me to use the internet even if I can't connect to a network? I thought I saw someone with a Macbook and had a device that might have allowed her to access the ATT Edge network?
    I'm going to have to be in a building that will have no possibility of being able to access routers for networks (a U.S. courthouse). But I still would like to have internet access with my laptop.
    What are my choices here?
    Thanks!
    Lindsay

    Lindsay,
    There are basically two ways to access the internet using cell phone technology. First, one can use a dedicated "connection card" from one of the cellular providers. There are Expresscard-34 connection cards, and there are USB connection cards. Choose your poison. You must first subscribe to a carrier's data plan, and pay for the card. The unlimited-usage plans run $60/month if used in conjunction with a voice plan from that carrier, and $80/month without a voice plan.
    Another method s to use your cell phone as a modem, connected to your Mac either via USB or Bluetooth. This requires a phone that will be capable of making the various connections (including the data connection to the carrier). For example, I use my Samsung A900M on Sprint's network for a broadband connection. The benefit, for me, in using my phone as a modem is that the unlimited "phone-as-modem" data plan from Sprint is only $40/month (in addition to my voice plan, of course).
    But, all this may be moot for you. These connection cards represent a cellular connection, and if I am not mistaken, any cellular devices are banned in Federal courthouses. In fact, I am not certain that laptop computers wouldn't also be banned. Before you decide to pay for a plan and a device, I recommend you insure anything you get isn't forbidden in the courthouse.
    Scott

  • I have been recently trying to get the update for the new iOS 7.1 and it keeps coming up as too much data for update. It says to check your storage and or usage and edit it them, but when I go check I have over 7.8GB of messages "saved" on my phone.  why?

    I went to my data after this message kept coming up and unlike the rest of the usage data you cannot delete your "saved" message data. I tried deleting some photos (which I don't have a lot to begin with; now I only have 40) still nothing. I then went to to my local apple store in the mall and the two guys I talked to didn't help. They said to delete the threads which I did, then delete the pictures which I also did and that should help. They were wrong they I'd say however to reset your phone if all else fails and that will deffinelty do it. But I don't want to lose all of my data so I am trying to save my things on iCloud and it won't let me do to my storage. There have been similar situations like mine on here but the backup bot isn't working on my computer. At this point I am just so lost and confused I don't know what to do. Someone please help

    Snowden has already commented on this. Messages are stored on Apple devices until they are uploaded for screening to the NSA. Apple holds these messages on your device and on the cloud service. Once the information has been uploaded to NSA, the messages then delete off your device. In order to not arouse suspecion, the device will always show you some amount to data as space being occupied on your device. Theorecically this data could be over written and not protected if they were on hidden sectors of your memory. The information stored on this "messages" partition is actually more than messages, thats why this space commitment can easily reach 3 gigs. Any computer science specialist will tell you that ASCII characters only use minimal kilobytes of data. Apple complies with this request to upload your personal data as outlined in the Patriot Act. The only way to delete this "messages" data hold is by doing a complete wipe of your device and not conducting a restore. It will clear the space off your device, but NSA actually has the information from the cloud service regardless.

  • Configuring the iPhone and your environment for wireless corporate email

    I'm posting this as a top level thread, because I'm certain that there are others out there, who like me, are trying to figure this out.
    Configuring the iPhone for Enterprise Use
    With Apple’s release of the iPhone, IT organizations are presented with an interesting challenge. Senior execs, gadget heads, and technoratti are all flocking to this device, heralded as the be all and end all of smartphone telecommunications technology. As these devices begin to flood into our organizations, we are met with the challenge to ‘make it work’.
    After much explaining that the iPhone is not intended for Enterprise integration, and many discussions surrounding the technical feasibility of bringing said devices into the fold, and being the resident Mac and Linux head with an iPhone in hand, I decided to embark on the mission of making one ‘work’. I succeeded in part, however it’s not the kind of ‘work’ that is going to be viable for most end users.
    First of all, it’s important to understand that the email client for the iPhone is a modified version of Mac’s Mail program. Not the best client in the world, but it does support Exchange integration. It also does external email sources, such as Yahoo and gMail, very well. For my interest though, I’m focusing on the Exchange integration functionality, as that is just about everyone’s corporate standard.
    Bringing this task to fruition requires some understanding about the limitations of the iPhone, as well as some of its current quirks. Wireless802.11x, EDGE, VPN and Mail are all components necessary to provide a serviceable solution for mobile email access, and each of these things has some peculiarities that don’t appear to be fully worked out by Apple at this time.
    For instance, within my organization, we have a secured wireless connectivity option available within our building; however, the SSID of this network is not broadcast, for the obvious reasons. SO, connecting the iPhone to it is a manual process of defining the network, and automatic reconnection seems to be very hit or miss, so it becomes far less of an option for any form of direct network access to your Exchange environment. (As an example, I had to redefine that network, on the iPhone, at least half a dozen times during this process.)
    The other components have equally quirky issues, and I will discuss the how’s to get around them below.
    In coordinating this into a cohesive plan however, I will break this into three sections;
    1. Wireless and EDGE connectivity
    2. VPN access to your network
    3. Connecting to Exchange
    So, without further ado;
    Wireless and EDGE Connectivity
    The wireless capabilities of the iPhone are, on the surface at least, excellent. It connects seamlessly to unsecured networks, offers the option of prompted or unprompted automatic connectivity, and is capable of 802.11G performance. Not bad for such a small package. However, it is very limited in the forms of secure network access it supports. These are, to quote Apple’s website; (and my iPhone)
    WEP Password
    WEP hex or ASCII
    WPA (personal)
    WPA2 (personal)
    Now, due to the obvious security problems in implementing WEP security, it’s likely that any network you run into is going to be WPA or WPA2. The iPhone ONLY supports the personal versions of these protocols, so be aware of this going into the situation. If you’re not connecting to your work or school wireless, and you’re entering the information correctly, then it’s probably because they have the Enterprise version of one of the protocols enabled. If that is the case, then you’re either hunting for unsecured hotspots, or else depending on EDGE.
    In my case, I did have access to a WPA2 (Personal) enabled wireless signal to connect to my internal network. I thought my problem was half solved! I defined the connection, the wireless capability of the phone worked perfectly, and I was connected. I was wrong. Apparently, and judging from the Mac forums I’m not alone in this, the iPhone does not do a very good job of RE-connecting to a secured wireless network. It does an even worse job, when this is coupled with the fact that it doesn’t do a very good job reconnecting to a wireless network with an unpublished SSID.
    After much fiddling and research into this, I determined that this simply was not the way to go, and I abandoned the idea. I wasn’t about to compromise my network security in order to get this silly phone working! So, that left me with either unsecured WiFi, or EDGE.
    Either one of these connects pretty seamlessly, and gives me a relatively decent Internet connection. There are some issues being reported of the iPhone swapping between EDGE and WiFi for not apparent reason, but that said, it can still be made to work.
    Now that I had this connection outside of my network, I obviously had to consider options for getting a secured connection into my network, which of course leads us to;
    VPN Access Into Your Network
    Being that this device was touted as the ‘real internet’ I was very excited to see if I could achieve this connection through my SSL VPN appliance. To make a long story short, I could not. Because Apple’s idea of the ‘Real Internet’ apparently does not include those wacky concepts like Java support, this proved to be impossible. My Apple cohorts will scream that it does support JavaScript, but we all know that that and 2 bucks will get you a small coffee at Starbucks… and not much more.
    (The iPhone also does not support Flash, but that’s a topic for another conversation. I know, how could they leave that out? I’m amazed too, but then Steve Jobs always has been a bit too arrogant for his own good… I mean what does he expect, we’re all going to rewrite everything into QuickTime??? Please.)
    Since that option didn’t work, I was left with the wide selection of two possibilities provided within the iPhone software. Either, a PPTP or L2TP VPN tunnel.
    We went ahead and configured a PPTP connection on one of our Cisco routers in order to test this. It didn’t work. I couldn’t connect to it. Tried and tried. Nada. SOOOO, we said OK, and configured a L2TP connection on one of our Cisco routers, with similar results.
    Figuring that this was something in the config, we called Cisco, and did the technical support dance with them for several days, trying one thing after another to get this connection to actually work. Nothing helped, and it never worked using either protocol. Then, I noticed an obscure article somewhere on some website that said something to the effect that getting one of these tunnels to work from the iPhone to Cisco was nigh on impossible.
    About the same time, my senior network guy said screw it, let’s put this on a Microsoft server. And so we did. Now, this is interesting in it’s own right, because configuring out of the box L2TP or PPTP on a Microsoft server results in a default authentication method of Windows Authentication. This does not work for the iPhone, because it has no idea what to do with the Windows security token it receives. So, you authenticate, and then are immediately dropped due to an inability to communicate with the PPP server.
    Fortunately, we (as do most organizations) have a Radius server. We selected Radius authentication, configured both sides of the Radius authentication setup properly, and launched the PPTP tunnel…. AND…. EUREKA!!! The iPhone’s VPN software connected, authenticated, got an IP, and I was on the network! Well, no.
    After about 2 seconds, I realized that while I did indeed have a connection, I couldn’t do anything with it. Couldn’t even browse to an internal site via IP address. The connection was up, the connection was working, the connection was useless.
    So, we decided to give L2TP a shot. Configured it pretty much identically to the PPTP setup, used Radius, launched the iPhone client, and finally, after many days of screwing around, it worked. Now all I needed was to get my email working, so I started working on;
    Connecting to Exchange
    In the Mail program on the iPhone, the first time you launch it, you’re presented with the ability to configure an email source. However on subsequent or additional accounts, you must go under Settings, Mail to get to this functionality.
    Going into the Mail configuration, I selected an additional account, the account type is, of course, Exchange. The configuration components are pretty obvious, however some things of note are;
    Do NOT include your domain information in the User Name field
    For all Host Names, use the fully qualified domain name of the server, or else IP
    You WILL need to have SMTP enabled somewhere in order to send email
    Anyway, I set all this up, and nothing happened. It said that my server was not responding. Did a little research, and it turns out that the only way to connect to Exchange is through an IMAP4 connection, and just in case you didn’t know, IMAP4 is disabled by default, so you have to enable and configure it.
    Went onto the Exchange server, set the service to Auto, Started the listener, and finally, at long last, EUREKA! I finally had Corporate email on my iPhone, connecting securely, and not sending anything plain text anywhere. Hooray!
    Now for the problems with this solution;
    First of all, it depends upon VPN access into your environment, something that you may or may not be comfortable with. One good thing is that the iPhone does prompt for password to reconnect, and will tie the continuity of the VPN connection into the general phone lock security, such that an inability to provide the appropriate access code to a locked phone results in the VPN not being accessible.
    The VPN of course is dependant upon a reliable network connection. I’ve noticed that it’s somewhat graceful in switching between WiFi and EDGE, however it’s not totally graceful, and you can experience some hinky things, like being able to send and not receive, or the mail client saying ‘Connecting’ for about 5 minutes before it figures things out.
    The best cure for this is to simply stop and restart the VPN connection. Note that when you reconnect, the first attempt will prompt you for a numeric password, this is meaningless unless you have the device lock turned on. Just enter anything. (I think this is another bug) THEN it will re-prompt you for your real VPN password.
    This solution for email delivery is obviously dependant upon the VPN connection being active. I’ve noticed that at times the iPhone will disconnect the VPN (probably when service switching) and not bother to mention it. When that happens, of course the VPN must be restarted.
    For the lazy, this is an inconvenient solution because while it would appear that the iPhone will cache the VPN password, in fact it will not. That means that each re-launch requires that you re-enter your password. Not terrible for me, but I could see it being very tedious for the average corporate user.
    The OSX Mail client has several little deficiencies, which may or may not impact your use of the device in this manner. For instance, if you have subfolders defined for your inbox, and server side rules to move mail into them, then you will not see any synchronization of that mail until you actually select the subfolder. Also, since there is such poor management of attachments and downloads, moving anything around via email on this device is nigh on impossible.
    EDGE access to your corporate email, via a VPN, is a bit sloooooow. It works, it’s certainly fast enough for my purposes, but it’s not the slick quick access that we’ve all become accustomed to with Blackberry and Good devices. The lack of 3G support becomes a very noticeable shortcoming here.
    (Why Apply didn’t simply partner with Good Technologies to crank out a client for this thing, I’ll never understand, but I guess you can refer to my comment above about certain people’s arrogance.)
    The biggest problem of all of course is that it’s simply klugey. I hate klugey. But, with the capabilities at this device’s disposal, and given Apple’s ambitious, if a bit idiotic, stance that no third party will develop software for the iPhone, then this is about as good as it’s going to get for now.
    It is my understanding that overseas there is some initiative underway to provide a more seamless Visto or Synchronica integration for enterprise email. However, given Apple’s unbelievably restrictive agreement with ATT regarding this device and the OTA necessity of delivering the client, I seriously doubt if we’ll see this in the near future in the US.
    But I digress, so…
    In Conclusion
    This solution is not for the faint of heart, it doesn’t work all that well, and it has way too many moving parts that are subject to failure. However, I would say that this solution is serviceable for the corporate technology professional who needs email, and really, REALLY wants the other features of the iPhone. (ie, phone whores such as me.) It requires patience, it requires an understanding that this is not a 100% thing, and there definitely needs to be a prebuilt expectation that this device will not serve your email in anything approaching the manner to which you’ve become accustomed.
    As long as all of that is okay though, then go right ahead, set it up, and enjoy!
    The Short Version;
    (I put this at the end because I want everyone to feel my pain!)
    Wireless:
    Use unsecured wireless or EDGE. Secured wireless may be serviceable as long as the SSID is broadcast, but there are known issues with this.
    VPN:
    L2TP, shared secret, running on Microsoft server, with Radius. (May work elsewhere, but doesn’t seem to run on Cisco at all) Accounts enabled for external access.
    Exchange:
    Configure IMAP4 Virtual Server on your Exchange environment, ensure that you have some SMTP resource for outbound email, use fully qualified domain names for all servers (or IP) in the mail config and do not include any domain prefix or suffix for user accounts.
    The BIG Disclaimer at the End
    Please note that all of this is provided ‘as is’. It worked for me, and I hope it works for you. To my knowledge, it’s not endorsed by Apple, and I’m not in the business of providing support for this thing. If it breaks something, if it doesn’t work, or if you simply don’t like it or me, I don’t care. However, if you have a question, and I’m not busy, and I feel like answering, I may lend a hand. You can email me at
    Matthew dot Yotko at mac dot com
    Don’t be surprised or offended if I don’t answer. Also, understand that I don’t check this address every day… Maybe a couple times a week.
    Macbook Pro   Mac OS X (10.4.10)   iphone

    Thanks, now I understand why the wifi keeps dropping. On my personal wireless network, it also seems the distance from the access point is not good compared to my laptop. At work our network & exchange teams don't seem to have the desire to struggle with this "toy" until customers start forcing its adoption. I am using OWA and it works fine over EDGE. I will share your posting with them.
    Thank you again.
    Dell   Windows XP Pro

  • How do you have more than 1 ipod in your family and only 1 computer to be able to each have a separate account?

    HOw do you have more than 1 ipod int he family and be able to have your own itunes on 1 computer?

    Did you read the support document at the other end of the link? What additional information do you desire?
    The Apple support document How to use multiple iPods with one computer (n.b. same link as above!) suggests a number of ways for managing the media content. I use method two (Sync with selected playlists) with a slight twist. Rather than regular playlists I set the grouping field to indicate which users should receive which tracks and create smart playlists based on the content of this field.
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    etc.
    I currently manage our family's five iDevices using this system, each getting a different selection to suit their tastes and the capacity of their device. An advantage of using the grouping field is that it is stored in file tags (for non-wav audio files anyway) so that it is relatively easy to recreate the playlists should the iTunes library get trashed and need rebuilding. Also useful if you move files about manually as playlist membership is preserved when you delete & re-import the tracks.
    tt2

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